The serpin alpha2-antiplasmin (a2AP) has a major role in regulating fibrinolysis. This proposal's goal is to (1) define interactions that determine how much a2AP becomes clot-bound for inhibiting plasmin; and (2) identify means of regulating a2AP so that plasmin activity might be enhanced long-term in diseases where fibrin deposition is a major factor. a2AP is secreted mainly from liver into blood as a polypeptide of 464 amino acids. While circulating, the secreted form (""""""""pro""""""""-a2AP) is cleaved at Pro12-Asn13 to give """"""""activated""""""""- a2AP (a2APact) which is crosslinked to fibrin by FXlIla approximately 5-fold quicker than a2APpro and provides about 80% of fibrin's resistance to plasmin. The proteinase that makes this cleavage is unknown, but our findings suggest it is a proline-specific serine proteinase similar to cell membrane fibroblast activating proteinase (mFAP), which has no known physiologic substrate and does not circulate in blood, whereas the one we have found does, and is termed cFAP by us. Studies will be done to determine if cFAP, which lacks the N-terminal 23 residues of mFAP, is a proteolytic derivative of mFAP. mFAP and cFAP will be purified from human plasma or recombinant cell cultures and their kinetic efficiencies assessed with a2APpro or a fluorogenic peptide as substrate. Substrate specificity and subsite preferences of cFAP will be sought using a synthetic peptide library of sequences surrounding the Pro12-Asn13 bond cleaved by cFAP. A phage display library of random peptide sequences will be used to determine kinetic efficiency of cFAP for each peptide and those with high efficiency will be used in database searches to identify other physiological substrates. Efforts will be made to enhance cFAP inhibitory properties of selected peptides by substituting specific residues based on subsite preferences. Selected domains of cFAP recombinant variants and FAP-inhibitor complex(es) will be subjected to crystallization for x-ray structural analyses. Our pilot data indicate that a2APpro has an Arg6Trp polymorphism, and that Arg6-form is cleaved by cFAP approximately 8x faster than Trp6-form. This fits with our initial findings that a2APact/a2APpro ratios are higher in human plasma containing Arg6-form. Comparisons will be made between a2APpro(Arg6), a2APpro(Trp6) and a2APact as factor XIIla substrates and plasmin inhibitors. Lastly, allelic frequencies of the CGG(Arg6) and TGG(Trp6) polymorphisms will be examined in a normal population for correlation with plasma ratios of a2APact/a2APpro and endogenous fibrinolytic activity.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL072995-02
Application #
6730009
Study Section
Hematology Subcommittee 2 (HEM)
Program Officer
Hasan, Ahmed AK
Project Start
2003-05-01
Project End
2007-04-30
Budget Start
2004-05-01
Budget End
2005-04-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2004
Total Cost
$366,250
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
878648294
City
Oklahoma City
State
OK
Country
United States
Zip Code
73117
Christiansen, Victoria J; Jackson, Kenneth W; Lee, Kyung N et al. (2013) Targeting inhibition of fibroblast activation protein-? and prolyl oligopeptidase activities on cells common to metastatic tumor microenvironments. Neoplasia 15:348-58
Lee, K N; Jackson, K W; Christiansen, V J et al. (2011) Enhancement of fibrinolysis by inhibiting enzymatic cleavage of precursor ?2-antiplasmin. J Thromb Haemost 9:987-96
Tsurupa, Galina; Yakovlev, Sergiy; McKee, Patrick et al. (2010) Noncovalent interaction of alpha(2)-antiplasmin with fibrin(ogen): localization of alpha(2)-antiplasmin-binding sites. Biochemistry 49:7643-51
Lee, Kyung N; Jackson, Kenneth W; Terzyan, Simon et al. (2009) Using substrate specificity of antiplasmin-cleaving enzyme for fibroblast activation protein inhibitor design. Biochemistry 48:5149-58
Mosesson, M W; Siebenlist, K R; Hernandez, I et al. (2008) Evidence that alpha2-antiplasmin becomes covalently ligated to plasma fibrinogen in the circulation: a new role for plasma factor XIII in fibrinolysis regulation. J Thromb Haemost 6:1565-70
Christiansen, Victoria J; Jackson, Kenneth W; Lee, Kyung N et al. (2007) Effect of fibroblast activation protein and alpha2-antiplasmin cleaving enzyme on collagen types I, III, and IV. Arch Biochem Biophys 457:177-86
Narra, Kalyani; Mullins, Stefanie R; Lee, Hyung-Ok et al. (2007) Phase II trial of single agent Val-boroPro (Talabostat) inhibiting Fibroblast Activation Protein in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer. Cancer Biol Ther 6:1691-9
Lee, K N; Jackson, K W; Christiansen, V J et al. (2007) Why alpha-antiplasmin must be converted to a derivative form for optimal function. J Thromb Haemost 5:2095-104
Christiansen, Victoria J; Jackson, Kenneth W; Lee, Kyung N et al. (2007) The effect of a single nucleotide polymorphism on human alpha 2-antiplasmin activity. Blood 109:5286-92
Lee, Kyung N; Jackson, Kenneth W; Christiansen, Victoria J et al. (2004) Alpha2-antiplasmin: potential therapeutic roles in fibrin survival and removal. Curr Med Chem Cardiovasc Hematol Agents 2:303-10

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