Abstract

Proteinase 3 (PR3), the target antigen of antineutrophil cytoplasm autoantibodies, which are found in patients with Wegener granulomatosis, is a neutrophil serine protease localized within cytoplasmic granules. Recently, the human neutrophil antigen NB1 was identified as a specific neutrophil cell surface receptor of PR3. We hypothesized that the unique hydrophobic cluster of PR3 that is not present on human neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G and presumably is also missing in other human PR3 homologs accounts for its binding to the NB1 receptor expressed on the cellular surface of NB1 cells. Instead of generating and testing various artificial human PR3 mutants, we cloned and expressed the very closely related gibbon (Hylobates pileatus) PR3 homolog, which did not bind to the human NB1 receptor. Moreover, a human-gibbon hybrid constructed from the N- and C-terminal half of the human and gibbon PR3, respectively, also did not interact with human NB1. The C-terminal half of gibbon PR3 differs only by 9 residues from human PR3, among which four closely spaced hydrophobic residues are substituted in a nonconservative manner (F166L, W218R, G219A, and L223H). The NB1-bound PR3 was active and was cleared from the surface by alpha-1-protease inhibitor. Conformational distortion of the hydrophobic 217-225 loop by alpha-1-protease inhibitor most likely triggers rapid solubilization.

Highlights

  • Proteinase 3 (PR3), initially described as an elastin-degrading protease, is known as the principal target antigen of antineutrophil cytoplasm autoantibodies (c-ANCA) that are formed in Wegener granulomatosis patients

  • GPR3 (Leu-166, Arg-218, His-223) did not adhere to lipid membranes and to the human NB1 receptor, a human-gibbon hybrid carrying the respective hydrophobic residues of human PR3 (hPR3) was capable of binding to cells that stably expressed the human NB1 receptor

  • We examined whether N-linked carbohydrates were involved in membrane and receptor interactions. hPR3 from the culture supernatant of HEK293 cells is highly glycosylated in contrast to naturally occurring hPR3 from PMNs, which carries only few carbohydrate moieties [22]

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Summary

Introduction

GPR3 (Leu-166, Arg-218, His-223) did not adhere to lipid membranes and to the human NB1 receptor, a human-gibbon hybrid carrying the respective hydrophobic residues of hPR3 was capable of binding to cells that stably expressed the human NB1 receptor. The presence of the NB1 receptor on stably transfected CHO cells before and after incubation (1 h, room temperature) with hPR3

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