Abstract

A method is described for measuring relative binding constants of lysine and analogs of lysine to plasminogen and plasminogen 'kringle' fragments. Plasminogen or kringle fragments adsorbed to lysine-Sepharose are eluted with increasing concentrations of lysine or other ligands, the concentration of ligand required to elute 50% of the protein being taken as a measure of the binding constant. The method is simple and is not dependent on monitoring conformational changes. We confirm earlier reports that the best ligands for the lysine binding sites of plasminogen are omega-amino acids containing five or six carbons. We show further that both Glu-plasminogen (the native form with N-terminal glutamic acid) and Lys-plasminogen (a degraded form with N-terminal lysine), as well as the heavy chain fragments, kringle 4 and kringle 1+2+3, have very similar properties with regard to binding specificity for omega-amino acids. For all species optimal binding is observed when the distance between the amino and carboxyl carbon is about 0.68 nm. The finding of ligands is decreased by the presence of polar atoms on the alpha and beta positions of the carbon chain of amino acids. Arginine binds relatively weakly at the lysine site and there does not appear to be a separate arginine binding site in plasminogen.

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