Abstract

Cardiac troponin I (cTnI) is the inhibitory subunit of the troponin complex and is a biochemical marker for myocardial infarction (MI). It is found in human serum within 4-6 h following MI. One of us has shown [Morjana (1998) Biotechnol. Appl. Biochem. 28, 105-111] that MI patient serum TnI is cleaved at the N- and C-terminals and that the TnI fragments exist as a complex with tropinin C (TnC) and troponin T (TnT). In the present study, we have generated C-terminal truncated TnI fragments and studied their immunological and biochemical properties. Human recombinant TnI (rTnI) expressed in Escherichia coli is cleaved into a major fragment with a molecular mass of 17500 Da using CNBr. The major CNBr fragment contains the first 153 amino acids of human cTnI (TnI153). Cleavage of the rTnI with the endoproteinase Asp-N generates a smaller TnI fragment (TnI88, residues 6-96). TnI153 has higher immunological activity than that of rTnI and lower activity than that of TnI88, as judged by the Stratus II TnI Immunoassay. TnI153 exhibits biochemical and immunological properties similar to those of intact TnI. It binds TnC at a molar ratio of 1:1 and forms a ternary complex with TnC and TnT. TnC enhances the immunological activity of TnI153, but has little effect on the activity of TnI88. The TnI153-TnC complex exhibits higher immunological activity than rTnI-TnC and TnI88-TnC, and much higher activity than free rTnI, TnI153 and TnI88. The presence of TnT has no effect on the immunological activity of the TnI153-TnC complex, suggesting that the addition of TnT does not interfere with TnI153 recognition by TnI monoclonal antibodies. Free TnI153 and TnI88 degrade rapidly in human serum. TnC protects TnI153 from proteolytic degradation, but offers less protection for TnI88. The TnI88-TnC complex lost 80% of its immunological activity after incubation for 2 days in human serum at 37 degrees C. However, there was no loss in the immunological activity of the TnI153-TnC complex under the same conditions. A cTnI fragment (TnI80, residues 1-80), expressed in E. coli as a fusion protein, exhibits immunological activity and stability similar to that of TnI88.

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