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CHROMOGENIC SUBSTRATES UNIVERSITY | IU AND ENZYME ACTIVITY | PROTEIN C
What is a chromogenic Substrate?
Protein Concentrations in Plasma
Theoretical Basis for Calculation
International Units and Enzyme Activity
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.
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