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Human Progelatinase A Can Be Activated by Autolysis at a Rate That is Concentration-dependent and Enhanced by Heparin Bound to the C-terminal Domain

Overview
Journal Eur J Biochem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1993 Dec 1
PMID 8269931
Citations 19
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Abstract

Activation of the latent precursor of human gelatinase A (progelatinase A) was investigated using recombinant proenzyme purified from culture medium conditioned by transfected mouse myeloma cells. A 4.0 microM progelatinase A solution was activated to a maximum of 48% of the activity produced by 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate (APMA) simply by its incubation at 37 degrees C for 12 h, though at lower starting concentrations the rate and extent of activation were reduced. Activation was shown to be the result of a single autolytic cleavage at the Asn80-Tyr81 peptide bond that removes the propeptide and converts the M(r) = 72,000 proenzyme into the M(r) = 66,000 active species also produced by APMA activation. It is proposed that this cleavage is a bimolecular event catalysed by previously activated gelatinase A. The addition of heparin increased by approximately eightfold the initial rate of progelatinase A autolytic activation but did not affect the activation of a deletion mutant that lacked the C-terminal domain [des-(418-631)progelatinase A]. The inference that this increase resulted from an interaction between heparin and the C-terminal domain was supported by the finding that, unlike des-(418-631)gelatinase A, both full-length gelatinase A and the isolated C-terminal domain were able to bind to heparin-Sepharose CL-6B and that, at NaCl concentrations sufficient to abolish this binding, heparin had no effect. We conclude that heparin is able to enhance autolytic activation by acting as a template that approximates active-->latent gelatinase A and suggest that a similar mechanism may account for the cell-surface activation of this enzyme.

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