2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2012.02.012
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The X-ray Crystal Structure of Full-Length Human Plasminogen

Abstract: Plasminogen is the proenzyme precursor of the primary fibrinolytic protease plasmin. Circulating plasminogen, which comprises a Pan-apple (PAp) domain, five kringle domains (KR1-5), and a serine protease (SP) domain, adopts a closed, activation-resistant conformation. The kringle domains mediate interactions with fibrin clots and cell-surface receptors. These interactions trigger plasminogen to adopt an open form that can be cleaved and converted to plasmin by tissue-type and urokinase-type plasminogen activat… Show more

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Cited by 198 publications
(258 citation statements)
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“…Disorder in kringle domains and connecting linkers has been documented in plasminogen, where four linkers connect the five kringles that fold together in a "resting" conformation that shields the activation domain from unwanted proteolysis. Two of these linkers are very short and clearly visible in the structure, but the linkers connecting kringles 3 and 4 and kringles 4 and 5 are more than 20 residues long and cannot be traced in the electron density map (46). Kringle-3 is completely missing in a low resolution structure of type I plasminogen (46), but also in the high resolution structure of angiostatin corresponding to the first three kringles of plasminogen (47).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Disorder in kringle domains and connecting linkers has been documented in plasminogen, where four linkers connect the five kringles that fold together in a "resting" conformation that shields the activation domain from unwanted proteolysis. Two of these linkers are very short and clearly visible in the structure, but the linkers connecting kringles 3 and 4 and kringles 4 and 5 are more than 20 residues long and cannot be traced in the electron density map (46). Kringle-3 is completely missing in a low resolution structure of type I plasminogen (46), but also in the high resolution structure of angiostatin corresponding to the first three kringles of plasminogen (47).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two of these linkers are very short and clearly visible in the structure, but the linkers connecting kringles 3 and 4 and kringles 4 and 5 are more than 20 residues long and cannot be traced in the electron density map (46). Kringle-3 is completely missing in a low resolution structure of type I plasminogen (46), but also in the high resolution structure of angiostatin corresponding to the first three kringles of plasminogen (47). The bent conformation of Gla-domainless prothrombin with the domains not vertically stacked is a snapshot of the highly mobile kringle-1 frozen by crystal packing while sampling the ensemble of alternative arrangements relative to kringle-2 and the rest of the prothrombin molecule allowed by the flexible linker.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Protection of the zymogen form from autoproteolytic or proteolytic cleavage is a common theme among proteins with modular assembly. Plasminogen assumes a closed form stabilized by intramolecular interaction of the protease domain with kringles that keeps the zymogen in an activation-resistant conformation (6). Binding of kringles to fibrin clots and cell surface receptors is assumed to induce a transition to an open form that can be cleaved and converted to plasmin by physiological activators.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resolving the spatial organization of these zymogens has long posed a challenge for structural biology. Successes have been few but highly significant (3)(4)(5)(6)(7). In some cases, multiple relative arrangements of individual domains have been detected from x-ray analysis, underscoring both the plasticity of the fold and the need for validation from solution studies where the protein is unconstrained by crystal packing.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plasminogen is a 92-kDa zymogen that includes a PNA-apple N-terminal domain, five kringle domains (K1-5), and a serine proteinase catalytic domain (23). The kringle domains mediate interactions with fibrin clots and surface receptors from both eukaryotic and bacterial cells (24,25).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%