1. Author's Information
    Gunilla Høyer-Hansen
    Finsen Laboratory, Rigshospitalet, Strandboulevarden 49, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark

    Ulrich Pessara
    Roche Diagnostics GmbH, Pharma Research Penzberg, Nonnenwald 2, D-82372 Penzberg, Germany

    Arne Holm
    Chemical Institute, Royal Veterinary University, Thorvaldsensvej 40, DK-1871 Frederiksberg, Denmark

    Jesper Pass
    Finsen Laboratory, Rigshospitalet, Strandboulevarden 49, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark

    Ulrich Weidle
    Roche Diagnostics GmbH, Pharma Research Penzberg, Nonnenwald 2, D-82372 Penzberg, Germany

    Keld Danø
    Finsen Laboratory, Rigshospitalet, Strandboulevarden 49, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark

    Niels Behrendt
    Finsen Laboratory, Rigshospitalet, Strandboulevarden 49, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark

  2. Abstract
    Urokinase (uPA) has the striking ability to cleave its receptor, uPAR, thereby inactivating the binding potential of this molecule. Here we demonstrate that the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor of uPAR, which is attached to the third domain, is an important determinant in governing this reaction, even though the actual cleavage occurs between the first and second domains. Purified full-length GPI-anchored uPAR (GPI-uPAR) proved much more susceptible to uPA-mediated cleavage than recombinant truncated soluble uPAR (suPAR), which lacks the glycolipid anchor. This was not a general difference in proteolytic susceptibility since GPI-uPAR and suPAR were cleaved with equal efficiency by plasmin. Since the amino acid sequences of GPI-uPAR and suPAR are identical except for the C-terminal truncation, the different cleavage patterns suggest that the two uPAR variants differ in the conformation or the flexibility of the linker region between domains 1 and 2. This was supported by the fact that an antibody to the peptide AVTYSRSRYLE, amino acids 84–94 in the linker region, recognizes GPI-uPAR but not suPAR. This difference in the linker region is thus caused by a difference in a remote hydrophobic region. In accordance with this model, when the hydrophobic lipid moiety was removed from the glycolipid anchor by phospholipase C, low concentrations of uPA could no longer cleave the modified GPI-uPAR and the reactivity to the peptide antibody was greatly decreased. Naturally occurring suPAR, purified from plasma, was found to have a similar resistance to uPA cleavage as phospholipase C-treated GPI-uPAR and recombinant suPAR.
    Keywords
    glycosyl phosphatidyl inositol, linker region, phospholipase C treatment, plasminogen activator, proteolytic cleavage

    ADLID: 64822-v4
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  1. Keywords
    glycosyl phosphatidyl inositol linker region phospholipase C treatment plasminogen activator proteolytic cleavage
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