Abstract
The high-affinity receptor that binds human urokinase-type plasminogen activator (hu-PAR) is a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored cell-surface glycoprotein that belongs to the Ly-6 superfamily of T- cell-activating receptors. Binding of urokinase (u-PA) to u-PAR is species-specific, since neither murine (mu-PAR) nor hu-PAR binds u-PA from the other species. I designed and analyzed a series of exchanges between hu-PAR and mu-PAR in the N-terminal first domain to which ligand-binding function had been independently mapped. Introduction of as few as 13 murine residues (six of 13 variables) into the N-terminal region of hu-PAR abrogated binding to recombinant human pro-u-PA, whereas the opposite chimera, a mu-PAR carrying six of 13 human residues, was positive for binding. Within this region, the mu-PAR domain 1 could be minimally humanized to bind human pro-u-PA by a substitution of as few as four of the six nonconserved residues, thereby identifying the residues arginine-2, lysine-7, threonine-8, and glycine-10 as important in determining binding specificity. By alanine- scanning mutagenesis, a second recognition site within domain 1 was discovered between residues 47 and 53, a segment that is fully conserved between the human and the mouse receptors. Taken together, these results provide identification of two confined subregions within the N-terminal domain of hu-PAR critically involved in pro-u-PA recognition.