Literature DB >> 1392615

Characterization of recombinant antistasin secreted by Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

C T Przysiecki1, J G Joyce, P M Keller, H Z Markus, C E Carty, A Hagopian, M K Sardana, C T Dunwiddie, R W Ellis, W J Miller.   

Abstract

Secretion from recombinant yeast was used as a potential source of large quantities of the leech protein antistasin (ATS), a potent and highly specific inhibitor of the serine protease coagulation factor Xa. Mature recombinant ATS (r-ATS) is obtained after intracellular cleavage by the yscF protease of the mating factor alpha-1 pre-proleader from the fusion protein at the Lys-Arg sequence junction. Production levels are relatively low (ca. 1 mg/liter). Purification of the secreted product from a complex growth medium involved cell removal by microfiltration and diafiltration, cation-exchange capture and concentration on S-Sepharose Fast Flow, C-4 reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), and HPLC cation-exchange chromatography step, and RP-HPLC concentration and desalting. The process was scaled up from the 16- to the 250-liter level with a corresponding increase in amount of r-ATS. From the 250-liter fermentation two major forms, r-ATS-I and r-ATS-II, distributed approximately 60:40, and a minor form, r-ATS-minor (ca. 1% of the purified r-ATS), were characterized. Limited N-terminal sequence analysis by Edman degradation indicated that r-ATS-I has the predicted mature N-terminus starting with Gln, that r-ATS-II is N-terminally blocked with pyroglutamate, and that r-ATS-minor is an incompletely processed form. RP-HPLC, hydrophilic-interaction HPLC, cation-exchange HPLC analysis, and electrophoresis results are consistent with the differences observed by sequencing. Preliminary in vitro characterization by intrinsic Ki determination for factor Xa inhibition indicated that the yeast r-ATS forms are indistinguishable from each other as well as from r-ATS expressed by the insect baculovirus host-vector system. Nevertheless, r-ATS-I and r-ATS-II appear less potent than insect-derived r-ATS in the activated partial thromboplastin time clotting assay. Further characterization indicated that C-terminal cleavage at Pro-116 had occurred in r-ATS-I and r-ATS-II as well as oxidation of methionine residues to methionine sulfoxide. The possible role of the C-terminus in inhibition of the prothrombinase complex is discussed.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1392615     DOI: 10.1016/1046-5928(92)90014-n

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Protein Expr Purif        ISSN: 1046-5928            Impact factor:   1.650


  3 in total

Review 1.  Degradative covalent reactions important to protein stability.

Authors:  D B Volkin; H Mach; C R Middaugh
Journal:  Mol Biotechnol       Date:  1997-10       Impact factor: 2.695

2.  Site-directed mutagenesis of the leech-derived factor Xa inhibitor antistasin. Probing of the reactive site.

Authors:  K J Hofmann; E M Nutt; C T Dunwiddie
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1992-11-01       Impact factor: 3.857

3.  Isolation and Characterization of Poecistasin, an Anti-Thrombotic Antistasin-Type Serine Protease Inhibitor from Leech Poecilobdella manillensis.

Authors:  Xiaopeng Tang; Mengrou Chen; Zilei Duan; James Mwangi; Pengpeng Li; Ren Lai
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2018-10-26       Impact factor: 4.546

  3 in total

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