Assembly and Enzymatic Properties of the Catalytic Domain of Human Complement Protease C1r

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Abstract

The catalytic properties of C1r, the protease that mediates activation of the C1 complex of complement, are mediated by its C-terminal region, comprising two complement control protein (CCP) modules followed by a serine protease (SP) domain. Baculovirus-mediated expression was used to produce fragments containing the SP domain and either 2 CCP modules (CCP1/2-SP) or only the second CCP module (CCP2-SP). In each case, the wild-type species and two mutants stabilized in the proenzyme form by mutations at the cleavage site (R446Q) or at the active site serine residue (S637A), were produced. Both wild-type fragments were recovered as two-chain, activated proteases, whereas all mutants retained a single-chain, proenzyme structure, providing the first experimental evidence that C1r activation is an autolytic process. As shown by sedimentation velocity analysis, all CCP1/2-SP fragments were dimers (5.5-5.6 S), and all CCP2-SP fragments were monomers (3.2-3.4 S). Thus, CCP1 is essential to the assembly of the dimer, but formation of a stable dimer is not a prerequisite for self-activation. Activation of the R446Q mutants could be achieved by extrinsic cleavage by thermolysin, which cleaved the CCP2-SP species more efficiently than the CCP1/2-SP species and yielded enzymes with C1s-cleaving activities similar to their active wild-type counter-parts. Clr and its activated fragments all cleaved C1s, with relative efficiencies in the order C1r < CCP2-SP, indicating that CCP1 is not involved in C1s recognition.

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Lacroix, M., Ebel, C., Kardos, J., Dobó, J., Gál, P., Závodszky, P., … Thielens, N. M. (2001). Assembly and Enzymatic Properties of the Catalytic Domain of Human Complement Protease C1r. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276(39), 36233–36240. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M105688200

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