4.6 Article

α2-Macroglobulin Capture Allows Detection of Mast Cell Chymase in Serum and Creates a Reservoir of Angiotensin II-Generating Activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 182, Issue 9, Pages 5770-5777

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.0900127

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL024136]

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Human chymase is a highly efficient angiotensin II-generating serine peptidase expressed by mast cells. When secreted from degranulating cells, it can interact with a variety of circulating antipeptidases, but is mostly captured by alpha(2)-macroglobulin, which sequesters peptidases in a cage-like structure that precludes interactions with large protein substrates and inhibitors, like serpins. The present work shows that alpha(2)-macroglobulin-bound chymase remains accessible to small substrates, including angiotensin I, with activity in serum that is stable with prolonged incubation. We used alpha(2)-macroglobulin capture to develop a sensitive, microtiter plate-based assay for serum chymase, assisted by a novel substrate synthesized based on results of combinatorial screening of peptide substrates. The substrate has low background hydrolysis in serum and is chymase-selective, with minimal cleavage by the chymotryptic peptidases cathepsin G and chymotrypsin. The assay detects activity in chymase-spiked serum with a threshold of similar to 1 pM (30 pg/ml), and reveals native chymase activity in serum of most subjects with systemic mastocytosis. alpha(2)-Macroglobulinbound chymase generates angiotensin 11 in chymase-spiked serum, and it appears in native serum as chymostatin-inhibited activity, which can exceed activity of captopril-sensitive angiotensin-converting enzyme. These findings suggest that chymase bound to alpha(2)-macroglobulin is active, that the complex is an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor-resistant reservoir of angiotensin II-generating activity, and that alpha(2)-macroglobulin capture may be exploited in assessing systemic release of secreted peptidases. The Journal of Immunology, 2009, 182: 5770-5777.

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