| Literature DB >> 27535802 |
József Dobó1, Dávid Szakács2, Gábor Oroszlán1, Elod Kortvely3, Bence Kiss2, Eszter Boros2, Róbert Szász4, Péter Závodszky1, Péter Gál1, Gábor Pál2.
Abstract
MASP-3 was discovered 15 years ago as the third mannan-binding lectin (MBL)-associated serine protease of the complement lectin pathway. Lacking any verified substrate its role remained ambiguous. MASP-3 was shown to compete with a key lectin pathway enzyme MASP-2 for MBL binding, and was therefore considered to be a negative complement regulator. Later, knock-out mice experiments suggested that MASP-1 and/or MASP-3 play important roles in complement pro-factor D (pro-FD) maturation. However, studies on a MASP-1/MASP-3-deficient human patient produced contradicting results. In normal resting blood unperturbed by ongoing coagulation or complement activation, factor D is present predominantly in its active form, suggesting that resting blood contains at least one pro-FD activating proteinase that is not a direct initiator of coagulation or complement activation. We have recently showed that all three MASPs can activate pro-FD in vitro. In resting blood, however, using our previously evolved MASP-1 and MASP-2 inhibitors we proved that neither MASP-1 nor MASP-2 activates pro-FD. Other plasma proteinases, particularly MASP-3, remained candidates for that function. For this study we evolved a specific MASP-3 inhibitor and unambiguously proved that activated MASP-3 is the exclusive pro-FD activator in resting blood, which demonstrates a fundamental link between the lectin and alternative pathways.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27535802 PMCID: PMC4989169 DOI: 10.1038/srep31877
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Development of the MASP-3 specific inhibitor, TFMI-3.
(A) The TFPI-1 domain 2 (TFPI-D2) sequence around the P1 (135) position. The numbering corresponds to the full length protein sequence from the UniProt database. (B) Codon-bias normalized sequence logo of MASP-3-selected unique clones from the TFPI-D2 phage library. Position heights represent the degree of conservation. The nonrandomized Cys residue shows the maximum height. Letter heights indicate normalized amino acid frequencies. Colors reflect chemical properties.
Equilibrium inhibitory constants (KI) of TFMI-3 and the parent molecule TFPI-D2 on MASPs.
| Protease | KI(nM) | |
|---|---|---|
| TFMI-3 | TFPI-D2 | |
| active MASP-1cf | no inhibition | no inhibition |
| active MASP-2cf | *75 000 ± 3 000 | *318 ± 11 |
| active MASP-3cf | *11.1 ± 1.4 | no inhibition |
*Average of 3 repeats (±SD).
Figure 2Interaction of TFMI-3 and MASP-3 determined by Surface Plasmon Resonance.
MASP-3cf was injected over TFMI-3_HA immobilized on anti-HA antibody-coated GLM sensor chip as described in “Experimental Procedures”. Result of one of the three independent runs is shown as sensograms corresponding to five parallel analyte injections of different MASP-3cf concentrations. Smooth lines represent global fit of the experimental data to a 1:1 Langmuir model.
Figure 3Lack of inhibitory effect of TFMI-3 on the three complement pathways.
TFMI-3 was applied in 0–3.5 μM in standard complement activation assays (Wieslab). No significant inhibition of any of the three pathways, CP (■), LP (●) or AP (▲) was observed in normal human serum. Typical curves from 3 parallel assays are shown where each data point represents the mean of 3 repeats. SD bars are not shown to allow distinction of the symbols.
Proteins identified with affinity purification using TFMI-3_HA.
| Protein | UniProt ID | Number of unique tryptic peptides found by MS | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beads only | TFMI-3_K135E_HA | TFMI-3_HA | |||||
| 5′ elution | 90′ elution | 5′ elution | 90′ elution | 5′ elution | 90′ elution | ||
| Ficolin-3 | O75636-1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 7 |
| MASP-3 | P48740-2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
Figure 4Inhibition of pro-FD activation by TFMI-3.
Conversion of Cy3-labeled pro-FD to Cy3-FD (referred to as activation) in different types of normal human blood preparations was detected by reducing SDS-PAGE followed by fluorimetric scanning and densitometry. Representative gels out of at least 2 parallels are shown on the left side. On the right side of each panel densitometric analysis of the pro-FD and the FD bands of the same gel is shown. The intersection point of the dashed trend lines gives the half-life of pro-FD. Calculated half-lives are found in s 3. (A) Activation of Cy3-pro-FD in citrated normal human plasma. (B) Lack of significant activation of Cy3-pro-FD in citrated normal human plasma in the presence of 1000 nM TFMI-3. (C) Activation of Cy3-pro-FD in normal human EDTA plasma. (D) Lack of significant activation of Cy3-pro-FD in normal human EDTA plasma in the presence of 1000 nM TFMI-3. (E) Activation of Cy3-pro-FD in hirudin-treated normal human plasma. (F) Lack of significant activation of Cy3-pro-FD in normal human hirudin plasma in the presence of 1000 nM TFMI-3. (G) Activation of Cy3-pro-FD in normal human serum. (H) Delayed activation of Cy3-labelled pro-FD in normal human serum in the presence of 1000 nM TFMI-3.
Half-life and cleavage ratio of labeled pro-FD in the absence or presence of TFMI-3.
| Sample | TFMI-3 concentration (nM) | half-life | cleavage ratio at 24 h |
|---|---|---|---|
| citrated plasmaa | 0 | 4.3 ± 0.3 h | ≥95% |
| 100 | ≥2 days | ~25% | |
| 1000 | ≥1 week | ≤10% | |
| EDTA plasmaa | 0 | 3.8 ± 0.3 h | ≥95% |
| 1000 | ≥1 week | ≤10% | |
| hirudin plasmaa | 0 | 2.3 ± 0.3 h | ≥95% |
| 1000 | ≥1 week | ≤10% | |
| serum | 0 | 2.2 ± 0.3 h | ≥95% |
| 1000 | ~40 h | ~35% |
aPooled sample from 10 individuals.
bAverage of 3 repeats (±SD).
cCalculated from the cleavage ratio at 24 h assuming exponential decay. These experiments were also carried out multiple times, but these values can be considered only as estimates because of the 24-h end-point of the experiments.
dEstimated from the band intensities determined by densitometry.