Abstract

Two crude fractions of acid-resistant trypsin inhibitors (apparent molecular masses 44 and 20 kDa, respectively) were prepared from human urine by gel permeation chromatography. From both preparations the pure inhibitors were isolated by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Their N-terminal amino-acid sequences were determined and compared with those of HI-30 and HI-14 as isolated by reversible binding to either immobilized trypsin or immobilized chymotrypsin. The N-terminal amino-acid sequence of the high-molecular mass inhibitor UI-I isolated by HPLC was identical with those of HI-30 and UI-C-I isolated via immobilized trypsin or chymotrypsin, respectively. The low-molecular mass inhibitors UI-II and UI-C-II differ from HI-14 by the N-terminal extension Glu-Val-Thr-Lys-when obtained by HPLC or by the extension Thr-Lys-when obtained via immobilized chymotrypsin, respectively. The comparison of these N-termini with the amino-acid sequence of HI-30 (Ala1-...-Val16-Thr-Glu-Val-Thr-Lys-HI-14) defines the low molecular urinary trypsin inhibitors as proteolytic degradation products of the high-molecular urinary inhibitor. Proteolysis may occur at different bonds. The existing discrepancies in molecular architecture and in molecular masses of the urinary trypsin inhibitors are discussed.

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