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Blood, 15 May 2005, Vol. 105, No. 10, pp. 3893-3901.
Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on February 8, 2005; DOI 10.1182/blood-2003-10-3501.
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HEMOSTASIS, THROMBOSIS, AND VASCULAR BIOLOGY
Urokinase-type plasminogen activator is a preferred substrate of the human epithelium serine protease tryptase /PRSS22
Shinsuke Yasuda,
Nasa Morokawa,
G. William Wong,
Andrea Rossi,
Mallur S. Madhusudhan,
Andrej ali,
Yuko S. Askew,
Roberto Adachi,
Gary A. Silverman,
Steven A. Krilis, and
Richard L. Stevens
From the Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; the Departments of Biopharmaceutical Sciences and Pharmaceutical Chemistry, California Institute for Quantitative Biomedical Research, University of California, San Francisco, CA; the Department of Pediatrics, Magee-Women's Research Institute, and University of Pittsburg, Pittsburg, PA; the Department of Pulmonary Medicine, University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; and the Department of Immunology, Allergy, and Infectious Disease, St George Hospital and University of New South Wales, Kogarah, Sydney, Australia.
Tryptase is a member of the chromosome 16p13.3 family of human serine proteases that is preferentially expressed by epithelial cells. Recombinant protryptase was generated to understand how the exocytosed zymogen might be activated outside of the epithelial cell, as well as to address its possible role in normal and diseased states. Using expression/site-directed mutagenesis approaches, we now show that Lys20, Cys90, and Asp92 in the protease's substrate-binding cleft regulate its enzymatic activity. We also show that Arg-1 in the propeptide domain controls its ability to autoactivate. In vitro studies revealed that recombinant tryptase possesses a restricted substrate specificity. Once activated, tryptase cannot be inhibited effectively by the diverse array of protease inhibitors present in normal human plasma. Moreover, this epithelium protease is not highly susceptible to 1-antitrypsin or secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor, which are present in the lung. Recombinant tryptase could not cleave fibronectin, vitronectin, laminin, single-chain tissue-type plasminogen activator, plasminogen, or any prominent serum protein. Nevertheless, tryptase readily converted single-chain prourokinase-type plasminogen activator (pro-uPA/scuPA) into its mature, enzymatically active protease. Tryptase also was able to induce pro-uPAexpressing smooth muscle cells to increase their migration through a basement membranelike extracellular matrix. The ability to activate uPA in the presence of varied protease inhibitors suggests that tryptase plays a prominent role in fibrinolysis and other uPA-dependent reactions in the lung.

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