TY - JOUR
T1 - Homology of Kringle Structures in Urokinase and Tissue-Type Plasminogen Activator
T2 - The Phylogeny with the Related Serine Proteases
AU - Takahashi, Kei
AU - Naora, Hiroyuki
AU - Gojobori, Takashi
PY - 1985
Y1 - 1985
N2 - Twelve amino acid sequences of kringle-forming polypeptides were compiled from the known sequences of urokinase A-chain (human), a tissue-type plasminogen activator (human), prothrombin (human and bovine), and plasminogen (human). Their sequence homologies with maximum match were examined by a computer program. A homology alignment and graphic matrix analyses did show that they had a great degree of homology. All the cystein residues responsible for the kringle structures of urokinase and the tissue-type plasminogen activator were confidently preserved as well as other proteins. A phylogenetic tree was then reconstructed, and the A- and S-chain of bovine and human prothrombins were accounted for the measurement of the evolutionary time span. It was found that urokinase had a larger time span, as much as 60 million years (MY), than the tissue-type plasminogen activator. A common ancestral element of the kringle-related serine proteases was placed at around 500 MY ago, as old as the diversion of the α- and β-chains of hemoglobin. Thus, the kringle-families have undergone a substantial evolutionary divergence. Moreover, they can be subgrouped into three subfamilies: plasminogen activators, plasminogen, and prothrombin A-chains, the last being the most distantly diverged prothrombin S-chains.
AB - Twelve amino acid sequences of kringle-forming polypeptides were compiled from the known sequences of urokinase A-chain (human), a tissue-type plasminogen activator (human), prothrombin (human and bovine), and plasminogen (human). Their sequence homologies with maximum match were examined by a computer program. A homology alignment and graphic matrix analyses did show that they had a great degree of homology. All the cystein residues responsible for the kringle structures of urokinase and the tissue-type plasminogen activator were confidently preserved as well as other proteins. A phylogenetic tree was then reconstructed, and the A- and S-chain of bovine and human prothrombins were accounted for the measurement of the evolutionary time span. It was found that urokinase had a larger time span, as much as 60 million years (MY), than the tissue-type plasminogen activator. A common ancestral element of the kringle-related serine proteases was placed at around 500 MY ago, as old as the diversion of the α- and β-chains of hemoglobin. Thus, the kringle-families have undergone a substantial evolutionary divergence. Moreover, they can be subgrouped into three subfamilies: plasminogen activators, plasminogen, and prothrombin A-chains, the last being the most distantly diverged prothrombin S-chains.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0021972517&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=0021972517&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1247/csf.10.209
DO - 10.1247/csf.10.209
M3 - Article
C2 - 3930078
AN - SCOPUS:0021972517
SN - 0386-7196
VL - 10
SP - 209
EP - 218
JO - Cell Structure and Function
JF - Cell Structure and Function
IS - 3
ER -