Prolylcarboxypeptidase independently activates plasma prekallikrein (fletcher factor).

Pubmed ID: 25324000

Pubmed Central ID: PMC4369925

Journal: Current molecular medicine

Publication Date: Jan. 1, 2014

Affiliation: Department of Pharmacology, The University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677- 1848, USA. madar@olemiss.edu.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Cell Line, Amino Acid Sequence, Molecular Sequence Data, Carboxypeptidases, Prekallikrein, Kinetics, Catalytic Domain, Enzyme Activation, Enzyme Assays, Proteolysis, Substrate Specificity

Grants: R21 HL112666, R01 HL052779, HL052779-17, HL112666-02, R01 HL058837, R01 HL081326

Authors: Mahdi F, Schmaier AH, Shariat-Madar Z, Wang J, Matafonov A, Madkhali H, Watson D, Gailani D

Cite As: Wang J, Matafonov A, Madkhali H, Mahdi F, Watson D, Schmaier AH, Gailani D, Shariat-Madar Z. Prolylcarboxypeptidase independently activates plasma prekallikrein (fletcher factor). Curr Mol Med 2014;14(9):1173-85.

Studies:

Abstract

Prolylcarboxypeptidase isoform 1 (PRCP1) is capable of regulating numerous autocrines and hormones, such as angiotensin II, angiotensin III, αMSH1-13, and DesArg(9) bradykinin. It does so by cleaving a C-terminal PRO-X bond. Recent work also indicates that the human PRCP1 activates plasma prekallikrein (PK) to kallikrein on endothelial cells through an uncharacterized mechanism. This study aims to identify PRCP1 binding interaction and cleavage site on PK. Recently, a cDNA encoding a novel splice variant of the human PRCP1 was identified. This isoform differed only in the N-terminal region of the deduced amino acid sequence. Using structural and functional studies, a combination of peptide mapping and site-directed mutagenesis approaches were employed to investigate the interaction of PRCP1 with PK. Three PRCP peptides, in decreasing order of potency, from 1) the N-terminus of the secreted protein, 2) spanning the opening of the active site pocket, and 3) in the dimerization region inhibit PRCP activation of PK on endothelial cells. Investigations also tested the hypothesis that PRCP cleavage site on PK is between its C-terminal Pro 637 (P(637)) and Ala 638 (A(638)). Recombinant forms of PK with C-terminal alanine mutagenesis or a stop codon is activated equally as wild type PK by PRCP. In conclusion, PRCP1 interacts with PK at multiple sites for PK activation. PRCP1 also enhances FXIIa activation of PK, suggesting that its activation site on PK is not identical to that of FXIIa.