Summary
1. Structure-activity relationships for the inhibition of human plasmin were established
for a large series of aromatic diamidines. The compounds are reversible competitive
inhibitors and block the amidase and fibrinolytic activities of the enzym. The results
confirm pentamidine (4,4’-diamidino α ω-diphenoxy-pentane) as the leading inhibitor
(Ki = 3.3 (μM) and show distinct differences in the inhibitory spectrum of diamidines
against plasmin as compared with trypsin, pancreatic kallikrein and thrombin.
2. Diamidines are potent inhibitors of the SK-dependent activation of human plasminogen
and of the activation of bovine plasminogen by the SK-human plasmin activator complex.
Pentamidine is again the most powerful inhibitor of these systems.
3. In fibrinolytic assays of plasmin and in plasminogen activation tests the relative
strength of diamidines as compared with E-ACA is greatly influenced by the test conditions.
The decisive factor is the presence in the incubation mixtures of lesser or greater
amounts of plasma or serum proteins which bring about a fall in the absolute strength
of diamidines and an increase in the absolute strength of E-ACA. In the fibrinolytic
assay of plasmin, this modifying effect of added serum is based on a time- dependent
interaction with the enzyme, thereby presumably altering its susceptibility to inhibition.