Abstract

Neutrophil elastase (HNE), like other members of the so-called GASPIDs (Granule-Associated Serine Peptidases of Immune Defense), is activated during protein biosynthesis in myeloid precursors and stored enzymatically active in cytoplasmic granules of resting neutrophils until secreted at sites of host defense and inflammation. Inhibitors thus could bind to the fully formed active site of the protease intracellularly in immature progenitors, in circulating neutrophils, or to HNE secreted into the extracellular space. Here, we have compared the ability of a panel of diverse inhibitors to inhibit HNE in the U937 progenitor cell line, in human blood-derived neutrophils, and in solution. Most synthetic inhibitors and, surprisingly, even a small naturally occurring proteinaceous inhibitor inhibit HNE intracellularly, but the extent and dynamics differ markedly from classical enzyme kinetics describing extracellular inhibition. Intracellular inhibition of HNE potentially affects neutrophil functions and has side effects, but it avoids competition of inhibitors with extracellular substrates that limit its efficacy. As both intra- and extracellular inhibition have advantages and disadvantages, the quantification of intracellular inhibition, in addition to classical enzyme kinetics, will aid the design of novel, clinically applicable HNE inhibitors with targeted sites of action.

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