Journal article

Contribution of conserved lysine residues in the α2- antiplasmin C terminus to plasmin binding and inhibition

BGC Lu, T Sofian, RHP Law, PB Coughlin, AJ Horvath

Journal of Biological Chemistry | AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC | Published : 2011

Abstract

α2-Antiplasmin is the physiological inhibitor of plasmin and is unique in the serpin family due to N- and C-terminal extensions beyond its core domain. The C-terminal extension comprises 55 amino acids from Asn-410 to Lys-464, and the lysine residues (Lys-418, Lys-427, Lys-434, Lys-441, Lys-448, and Lys-464) within this region are important in mediating the initial interaction with kringle domains of plasmin. To understand the role of lysine residues within the C terminus of α2-antiplasmin, we systematically and sequentially mutated the C-terminal lysines, studied the effects on the rate of plasmin inhibition, and measured the binding affinity for plasmin via surface plasmon resonance. We de..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia.