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Research Article

Inactivation of human gamma interferon by Pseudomonas aeruginosa proteases: elastase augments the effects of alkaline protease despite the presence of alpha 2-macroglobulin.

R T Horvat, M Clabaugh, C Duval-Jobe, M J Parmely
R T Horvat
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M Clabaugh
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C Duval-Jobe
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M J Parmely
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ABSTRACT

Pseudomonas aeruginosa alkaline protease (AP) has recently been shown to produce limited proteolysis of human gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) and thereby destroy the antiviral and macrophage-activating activities of the lymphokine. In the present study we describe some of the characteristics of Pseudomonas elastase (E) with regard to inactivation of human IFN-gamma. The inhibitory effect of E on IFN-gamma bioactivity differed from that of AP in that the direct effects of E were reduced in the presence of human serum. That this property of human serum was in large part attributable to the protease inhibitor alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2-M) was suggested by the following observations: (i) methylamine treatment of serum reduced its effect on E, (ii) E interacted directly with alpha 2-M to induce a characteristic conformational change in the protease inhibitor, and (iii) preformed E-alpha 2-M complexes lacked IFN-gamma-degrading activity. Despite these findings, anti-E antiserum partially neutralized the effect that a Pseudomonas filtrate showed on IFN-gamma, suggesting that E contributes to the activity of bacterial filtrates. Treatment of IFN-gamma with E in the presence of a suboptimal concentration of AP resulted in an E dose-dependent inactivation of the lymphokine. Preformed E-alpha 2-M complexes, although ineffective by themselves at cleaving IFN-gamma, degraded the lymphokine, providing AP was also present in the reaction mixture. These data demonstrate that the destruction of small, biologically significant peptides by Pseudomonas proteases can involve protease-protease synergy that acts even in the presence of the serum protease inhibitor alpha 2-M.

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Inactivation of human gamma interferon by Pseudomonas aeruginosa proteases: elastase augments the effects of alkaline protease despite the presence of alpha 2-macroglobulin.
R T Horvat, M Clabaugh, C Duval-Jobe, M J Parmely
Infection and Immunity Jun 1989, 57 (6) 1668-1674; DOI:

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Inactivation of human gamma interferon by Pseudomonas aeruginosa proteases: elastase augments the effects of alkaline protease despite the presence of alpha 2-macroglobulin.
R T Horvat, M Clabaugh, C Duval-Jobe, M J Parmely
Infection and Immunity Jun 1989, 57 (6) 1668-1674; DOI:
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