The serpin plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) folds into an active structure and then converts slowly to a more stable, but low-activity, "latent" conformation [Hekman, C. M., & Loskutoff, D. J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11581−11587]. Thus, the folding of PAI-1 is apparently under kinetic control. We have determined the urea denaturation and refolding transitions of both latent and active PAI-1 proteins by using intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence. While folding of active PAI-1 is reversible, the denaturation and refolding of latent PAI-1 are not. Instead, denatured latent PAI-1 refolds in lower concentrations of urea to give the active protein. Thus, the high-stability latent conformation is kinetically inaccessible over a range of urea concentrations. Complete denaturation of latent PAI-1 occurs at 5.5 M urea [ΔG(H2O) ∼ 21 kcal] whereas active PAI-1 denatures in only 3.8 M urea [ΔG(H2O) ∼12 kcal]. The fluorescence emission profile, as a function of urea of both the active and latent forms of the protein, reveals intermediates with partial structure. Circular dichroism measurements and limited protease digestion with Lys-C suggest that the intermediate in the denaturation of latent PAI-1 retains most of the secondary structure of the fully folded protein, whereas the intermediate in the denaturation of active PAI-1 exhibits significant loss of secondary structure. The Lys-C digestion patterns show that the active protein is more susceptible to proteolysis near sheet A than is the latent form. The studies suggest a model for the kinetically controlled folding pathway of PAI-1.
Vincent Lambert, Carine Munaut, Agnès Noël, Françis Frankenne, Khalid Bajou, Robert D. Gerard, Peter Carmeliet, Marie Paule Defresne, Jean‐Michel Foidart, Jean‐Marie Rakic
Laetitia Devy, Silvia Blacher, Christine Grignet‐Debrus, Khalid Bajou, Véronique Masson, Robert D. Gerard, Ann Gils, Geert Carmeliet, Peter Carmeliet, Paul Declerck, Agnès Noël, Jean-Michel Foidart
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