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Divergent Inhibitor Susceptibility among Airway Lumen-Accessible Tryptic Proteases

Tryptic serine proteases of bronchial epithelium regulate ion flux, barrier integrity, and allergic inflammation. Inhibition of some of these proteases is a strategy to improve mucociliary function in cystic fibrosis and asthmatic inflammation. Several inhibitors have been tested in pre-clinical ani...

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Autores principales: Nimishakavi, Shilpa, Raymond, Wilfred W., Gruenert, Dieter C., Caughey, George H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4612780/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26485396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141169
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author Nimishakavi, Shilpa
Raymond, Wilfred W.
Gruenert, Dieter C.
Caughey, George H.
author_facet Nimishakavi, Shilpa
Raymond, Wilfred W.
Gruenert, Dieter C.
Caughey, George H.
author_sort Nimishakavi, Shilpa
collection PubMed
description Tryptic serine proteases of bronchial epithelium regulate ion flux, barrier integrity, and allergic inflammation. Inhibition of some of these proteases is a strategy to improve mucociliary function in cystic fibrosis and asthmatic inflammation. Several inhibitors have been tested in pre-clinical animal models and humans. We hypothesized that these inhibitors inactivate a variety of airway protease targets, potentially with bystander effects. To establish relative potencies and modes of action, we compared inactivation of human prostasin, matriptase, airway trypsin-like protease (HAT), and β-tryptase by nafamostat, camostat, bis(5-amidino-2-benzimidazolyl)methane (BABIM), aprotinin, and benzamidine. Nafamostat achieved complete, nearly stoichiometric and very slowly reversible inhibition of matriptase and tryptase, but inhibited prostasin less potently and was weakest versus HAT. The IC(50) of nafamostat’s leaving group, 6-amidino-2-naphthol, was >10(4)-fold higher than that of nafamostat itself, consistent with suicide rather than product inhibition as mechanisms of prolonged inactivation. Stoichiometric release of 6-amidino-2-naphthol allowed highly sensitive fluorometric estimation of active-site concentration in preparations of matriptase and tryptase. Camostat inactivated all enzymes but was less potent overall and weakest towards matriptase, which, however was strongly inhibited by BABIM. Aprotinin exhibited nearly stoichiometric inhibition of prostasin and matriptase, but was much weaker towards HAT and was completely ineffective versus tryptase. Benzamidine was universally weak. Thus, each inhibitor profile was distinct. Nafamostat, camostat and aprotinin markedly reduced tryptic activity on the apical surface of cystic fibrosis airway epithelial monolayers, suggesting prostasin as the major source of such activity and supporting strategies targeting prostasin for inactivation.
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spelling pubmed-46127802015-10-29 Divergent Inhibitor Susceptibility among Airway Lumen-Accessible Tryptic Proteases Nimishakavi, Shilpa Raymond, Wilfred W. Gruenert, Dieter C. Caughey, George H. PLoS One Research Article Tryptic serine proteases of bronchial epithelium regulate ion flux, barrier integrity, and allergic inflammation. Inhibition of some of these proteases is a strategy to improve mucociliary function in cystic fibrosis and asthmatic inflammation. Several inhibitors have been tested in pre-clinical animal models and humans. We hypothesized that these inhibitors inactivate a variety of airway protease targets, potentially with bystander effects. To establish relative potencies and modes of action, we compared inactivation of human prostasin, matriptase, airway trypsin-like protease (HAT), and β-tryptase by nafamostat, camostat, bis(5-amidino-2-benzimidazolyl)methane (BABIM), aprotinin, and benzamidine. Nafamostat achieved complete, nearly stoichiometric and very slowly reversible inhibition of matriptase and tryptase, but inhibited prostasin less potently and was weakest versus HAT. The IC(50) of nafamostat’s leaving group, 6-amidino-2-naphthol, was >10(4)-fold higher than that of nafamostat itself, consistent with suicide rather than product inhibition as mechanisms of prolonged inactivation. Stoichiometric release of 6-amidino-2-naphthol allowed highly sensitive fluorometric estimation of active-site concentration in preparations of matriptase and tryptase. Camostat inactivated all enzymes but was less potent overall and weakest towards matriptase, which, however was strongly inhibited by BABIM. Aprotinin exhibited nearly stoichiometric inhibition of prostasin and matriptase, but was much weaker towards HAT and was completely ineffective versus tryptase. Benzamidine was universally weak. Thus, each inhibitor profile was distinct. Nafamostat, camostat and aprotinin markedly reduced tryptic activity on the apical surface of cystic fibrosis airway epithelial monolayers, suggesting prostasin as the major source of such activity and supporting strategies targeting prostasin for inactivation. Public Library of Science 2015-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4612780/ /pubmed/26485396 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141169 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nimishakavi, Shilpa
Raymond, Wilfred W.
Gruenert, Dieter C.
Caughey, George H.
Divergent Inhibitor Susceptibility among Airway Lumen-Accessible Tryptic Proteases
title Divergent Inhibitor Susceptibility among Airway Lumen-Accessible Tryptic Proteases
title_full Divergent Inhibitor Susceptibility among Airway Lumen-Accessible Tryptic Proteases
title_fullStr Divergent Inhibitor Susceptibility among Airway Lumen-Accessible Tryptic Proteases
title_full_unstemmed Divergent Inhibitor Susceptibility among Airway Lumen-Accessible Tryptic Proteases
title_short Divergent Inhibitor Susceptibility among Airway Lumen-Accessible Tryptic Proteases
title_sort divergent inhibitor susceptibility among airway lumen-accessible tryptic proteases
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4612780/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26485396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141169
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