Coordinate secretion and functional synergism of T cell‐associated serine proteinase‐1 (MTSP‐1) and endoglycosidase(s) of activated T cells

Abstract
Cell lysates and exocytosed soluble mediator(s) (ESM) released from CD8+ T cell lines (TCL) by receptor-triggered secretory exocytosis were tested for degradation of proteoglycahs associated with in vitro produced subendothelial extracellular matrix (ECM). ESM was found to release low-molecular weight (kav 0.5–0.6) fragments from the sulfated proteoglycans in ECM. In the presence of heparin, an inhibitor for endoglycosidase activity, only high-molecular-weight products (kav 0.2) were formed. Preincubation of ESM with HD-prolylphenylalanyl-arginyl-chloromethylketone (PFR-CK) an inhibitor for the T cell-associated serine proteinase-1 (MTSP-1) totally prevented release of high- and low-molecular weight proteoglycan fragments. Furthermore, it was shown that purified MTSP-1 is able to release from ECM high-molecular weight proteoglycans and that this process is inhibitable by PFR-CK but not by heparin. Further treatment of these soluble high-molecular weight sulfated proteoglycans with ESM from TCL 1.D9 led to appearance of low-molecular weight split products (kav 0.5–0.6). This conversion was inhibitable by heparin but not by PFR-CK. These findings indicate that activated T cells contain two enzymatic activities, i.e. MTSP-1 and at least one endoglycosidase, which after receptor-triggered secretion can synergize in the degradation of sulfated proteoglycans in subendothelial ECM.