Abstract
Human plasma serine proteinase inhibitors (serpins) gradually lost activity when incubated with catalytic amounts of snake venom or bacterial metalloproteinases. Electrophoretic analyses indicated that antithrombin III, C1-inhibitor, and α2-antiplasmin had been converted by limited proteolysis into modified species which retained inhibitory activity. Further proteolytic attack resulted in the formation of inactivated inhibitors; α1-proteinase inhibitor (α1-antitrypsin) and α1-antichymotrypsin were also enzymatically inactivated, but active intermediates were not detected. Sequence analyses indicated that the initial, noninactivating cleavage occurred in the amino-terminal region of the inhibitors. Inactivation resulted in all cases from the limited proteolysis of a single bond near, but not at, the reactive site bond in the carboxy-terminal region of the inhibitors. The results indicate that the serpins have two regions which are susceptible to limited proteolysis—one near the amino-terminal end and another in the exposed reactive site loop of the inhibitor.

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