Polymerization of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1

2001 
Next Section Abstract The activity of the serine proteinase inhibitor (serpin) plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) is controlled by the intramolecular incorporation of the reactive loop into β-sheet A with the generation of an inactive latent species. Other members of the serpin superfamily can be pathologically inactivated by intermolecular linkage between the reactive loop of one molecule and β-sheet A of a second to form chains of polymers associated with diverse diseases. It has long been believed that PAI-1 is unique among active serpins in that it does not form polymers. We show here that recombinant native and latent PAI-1 spontaneously form polymers in vitro at low pH although with distinctly different electrophoretic patterns of polymerization. The polymers of both the native and latent species differ from the typical loop-A-sheet polymers of other serpins in that they readily dissociate back to their original monomeric form. The findings with PAI-1 are compatible with different mechanisms of linkage, each involving β-strand addition of the reactive loop to s7A in native PAI-1 and to s1C in latent PAI-1. Glycosylated native and latent PAI-1 can also form polymers under similar conditions, which may be of in vivo importance in the low pH environment of the platelet.
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