Chromogenic Substrates

 

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CHROMOGENIC SUBSTRATES UNIVERSITY | IU AND ENZYME ACTIVITY | PROTEIN C


What is a chromogenic Substrate?

Proteolytic Enzymes

Serine Proteases

Proteolytic Mechanism

Specificity and Selectivity

Enzyme Kinetics

Substrates in Practice

Selectivity Tables

Kinetic Tables

Protein Concentrations in Plasma

Theoretical Basis for Calculation

International Units and Enzyme Activity

FAQ

Methods

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PROTEIN C

 

Protein C, a 62,000-dalton glycoprotein with approximately 28% carbohydrates, is synthetised in the liver. Activated protein C (APC) is a key anticoagulant enzyme in the down-regulation of coagulation. Protein C consists of two polypeptide chains with a heavy chain linked by a disulfide bond to a light chain. The heavy chain contains the serine active site and the activation peptide and it also contains proposed binding sites for factors Va and VIIIa. The light chain contains a region of g-carboxyglutamic acid residues (calcium ion and phospholipid binding region) and the epidermal growth factor region (proposed protein S-binding region). The average concentration of protein C in human plasma is 4 mg/mL and its half-life in plasma is 7 to 9 hours. One Unit of Protein C corresponds to the amount of Protein C contained in one mL of freshly pooled normal plasma. In order to facilitate comparison of results from analysis of protein C in plasma, an international standard has been prepared and with the assigned potency expressed in international units (IU). Thus 1 IU corresponds to about 4 mg of functional protein C.
A freeze-dried human plasma (denoted 86/622) has been established by the WHO Expert Committee on Biological Standardization as the 1st International Standard for protein C in plasma, which is available from
NIBSC.1 The assigned functional activity of this plasma is 0.82 IU/ampoule.
Protein C in plasma may be activated by the thrombin/thrombomodulin complex or, more conveniently, by a specific venom enzyme from the snake Agkistrodon controtrix contortrix (Southern Copperhead Snake).2 
The most suitable chromogenic substrate for the assay of APC described so far is chromogenic substrate S-2366.3-5 The Chromogenix protein c reagent (Art. No 82 20 98), which contains a purified preparation of the snake venom enzyme allows activation of protein C without interference from other coagulation factors. The amount of activated protein C is determined by the rate of hydrolysis of the chromogenic substrate S-2366. The activity of human APC, derived from the rate of hydrolysis of chromogenic substrate S-2366 in a purified system under properly standardized conditions (0.1 mol/L Tris-HCl pH 8.3, 0.26 mol/L CsCl, 4 mmol/L CaCl2 and with 0.2% BSA as bulking agent) is about 37 nkat / mg of active enzyme.
The corresponding activity obtained in a plasma containing system after snake venom activation, using Coamatic Protein C, is about 25 nkat / mg of active enzyme.

  1. Hubbard AR. Standardization of protein C in plasma: Establishment of an International Standard. Thromb Haemost 59, 464-467 (1988).
  2. Stocker K, Fischer H, Mejer J, Brogli M, Svendsen L. Protein C activators in snake venoms. Behring Inst Mitt 79, 37-47 (1986).
  3. Exner T, Vaasjoki R. Characterisation and some properties of the protein C activator from Agkistrodon Contortrix venom. Thromb Haemost 59, 40-44 (1988).
  4. Odegaard OR, Try K, Andersson TR. Protein C: an automated activity assay. Haemostasis 17, 109-113 (1987).
  5. McCall F, Conkie JA, Walker ID, Davidson JF. Measurement of protein C in plasma - a fully automated assay. Thromb Res 45, 681-685 (1987).
 

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