Spontaneous conformational changes in PAI-1

The serpin plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) folds into an active
structure then converts slowly to a more stable, but low activity,
"latent" conformation [Hekman, C. M. and Loskutoff, D. J. (1985)
J. Biol. Chem. 260, 11581-11587]. Thus, the folding of PAI-1 is apparently
under kinetic control. We have determined the urea denaturation and refolding
transitions of both latent and active PAI-1 proteins by using intrinsic
tryptophan fluorescence. While folding of active PAI-1 is reversible, the
denaturation and refolding of latent PAI-1 is not. Instead, denatured latent
PAI-1 refolds in lower concentrations of urea to give the active protein.
Thus, the high stability latent conformation is kinetically inaccessible
over a range of urea concentrations. Complete denaturation of latent PAI-1
occurs at 5.5 M urea (G(H2O) ~ 21kcal) whereas active PAI-1 denatures in
only 3.8 M urea (G(H2O) ~12 kcal). The fluorescence emission profile, as
a function of urea of both the active and latent forms of the protein, reveals
intermediates with partial structure. Circular dichroism measurements and
limited protease digestion with Lys-C suggest that the intermediate in the
denaturation of latent PAI-1 retains most of the secondary structure of the
fully-folded protein, whereas the intermediate in the denaturation of active
PAI-1 exhibits significant loss of secondary structure. The Lys-C digestion
patterns show that the active protein is more susceptible to proteolysis near
sheet A than is the latent form. The studies suggest a model for the
kinetically controlled folding pathway of PAI-1.
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