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Mechanisms for the control of matriptase activity in the absence of sufficient HAI-1.

Authors :
Xu H
Xu Z
Tseng IC
Chou FP
Chen YW
Wang JK
Johnson MD
Kataoka H
Lin CY
Source :
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology [Am J Physiol Cell Physiol] 2012 Jan 15; Vol. 302 (2), pp. C453-62. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Oct 26.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Matriptase proteolytic activity must be tightly controlled for normal placental development, epidermal function, and epithelial integrity. Although hepatocyte growth factor activator inhibitor-1 (HAI-1) represents the predominant endogenous inhibitor for matriptase and the protein molar ratio of HAI-1 to matriptase is determined to be >10 in epithelial cells and the majority of carcinoma cells, an inverse HAI-1-to-matriptase ratio is seen in some ovarian and hematopoietic cancer cells. In the current study, cells with insufficient HAI-1 are investigated for the mechanisms through which the activity of matriptase is regulated. When matriptase activation is robustly induced in these cells, activated matriptase rapidly forms two complexes of 100- and 140-kDa in addition to the canonical 120-kDa matriptase-HAI-1 complex already described. Both 100- and 140-kDa complexes contain two-chain, cleaved matriptase but are devoid of gelatinolytic activity. Further biochemical characterization shows that the 140-kDa complex is a matriptase homodimer and that the 100-kDa complexes appear to contain reversible, tight binding serine protease inhibitor(s). The formation of the 140-kDa matriptase dimer is strongly associated with matriptase activation, and its levels are inversely correlated with the ratio of HAI-1 to matriptase. Given these observations and the likelihood that autoactivation requires the interaction of two matriptase molecules, it seems plausible that this activated matriptase homodimer may represent a matriptase autoactivation intermediate and that its accumulation may serve as a mechanism to control matriptase activity when protease inhibitor levels are limiting. These data suggest that matriptase activity can be rapidly inhibited by HAI-1 and other HAI-1-like protease inhibitors and "locked" in an inactive autoactivation intermediate, all of which places matriptase under very tight control.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1522-1563
Volume :
302
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22031598
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00344.2011