Abstract

A serine-protease inhibitor of plasma kallikrein was screened and purified from a native Korean leech species, Hirudo nipponia. The peptide, named piguamerin, potently inhibited plasma and tissue kallikreins, and trypsin. Sequence analyses by automated Edman degradation revealed 48 amino acid residues and a molecular mass for the peptide of 5090 Da. Piguamerin is similar to antistasin-type inhibitors with the same spacing of ten cysteine residues, but shows differences from hirustasin, antistasin and ghilanten at the residues surrounding Arg27, which is a common P1 reactive residue for these inhibitors. The purified inhibitor modulated plasma clotting in tests of activated partial thromboplastin time at nanomolar concentrations. The serine-protease inhibitor of this leech may be involved in leech hematophagia.

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