Abstract

Limited cleavages of human C1r by extrinsic proteases of various specificity (plasmin, elastase, chymotrypsin, thermolysin) yield dimeric associations of two globular domains, each comprised of the intact B chain disulfide linked to gamma, the C-terminal fragment of the A chain. These (gamma-B)2 domains, which are homologous to those obtained from C1r by autolytic cleavage [Villiers, C. L., Arlaud, G. J., & Colomb, M. G. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 82, 4477-4481], represent the core of the C1r molecule and are associated with the catalytic properties of the serine active site. V8 protease also yields (gamma-B)2 associations, although additional cleavages occur in the B chain. Sequence analysis shows that all cleavages generating the gamma fragments occur within a 13-residue sequence extending from positions 274 to 286 of the C1r A chain. Chemical cross-linking with 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide of the (gamma-B)2 catalytic domains obtained from C1r autolytic cleavage indicates that each gamma-B domain interacts with its neighbor in a "head to tail" configuration, the gamma region of one domain interacting with the B chain of the other domain, and conversely. No evidence is found of gamma-gamma or B-B interactions. Such a head to tail configuration, placed in the context of the model proposed for the C1s-C1r-C1r-C1s catalytic subunit of C1 [Colomb, M. G., Arlaud, G. J., & Villiers, C. L. (1984) Philos. Trans. R. Soc. London, B 306, 283-292], is compatible with autolytic activation of C1r through an intramolecular cross-mechanism and with subsequent activation of C1s by activated C1r.

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