Abstract

Maywood I is a dysfunctional plasminogen. It is described in a patient (W.Y.) with a reduced plasma functional activity and with a low normal antigen level. Plasminogen was isolated from the patients plasma by affinity chromatography with L-lysine-substituted Sepharose. The protein yield was 86 mg/l, which was 88% of the plasma Plg antigen level; the specific activity was 24.4 IU/mg protein compared to 28.5 IU/mg protein for the native molecule. The protein was the Glu-form determined by SDS-PAGE and by isoelectric focusing. Six major isoelectric forms were found with isoelectric points between pH's 6.40 and 5.45. Titration of the equimolar plasminogen.streptokinase complex with p-nitrophenyl-p-guanidinobenzoate gave 85% active-sites indicating a homogenous population of molecules; therefore, the propositus is a homozygote. Four different plasminogen activators: a) streptokinase, b) urokinase c) the plasmin-derived light (B) chain-streptokinase complex, and d) tissue plasminogen activator (with soluble fibrin/CNBr-fibrinogen fragments) generated little plasmin from the variant plasminogen (4.5 to 45 nM), 5% or less than that generated from normal plasminogen. At 45 nM plasminogen, the molar ratio of plasminogen:activator was 3.0 for streptokinase, 3.9 for urokinase, 7.1 for the light (B) chain-streptokinase complex, and 155 for tissue plasminogen activator. In the equimolar variant plasminogen.streptokinase complex, the active-site was slowly developed, to a maximum of 85% in 40 min; in the normal complex, 100% active-sites were developed in 15 min. The variant plasminogen forms two equimolar complexes with streptokinase (I and II), with different mobilities in PAGE, in about equal amounts.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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