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1.
2.
Kinetics of coagulation factor X activation by platelet-bound factor IXa   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Thrombin-activated human platelets, in the presence of factors VIIIa and X, have specific, high-affinity (Kd approximately 0.5 nM), saturable binding sites for factor IXa that are involved in factor X activation [Ahmad, S.S., Rawala-Sheikh, R., & Walsh, P.N. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 3244-3251]. To determine the functional consequences of factor IXa binding to platelets, a detailed kinetic analysis of the effects of platelets, phospholipids, and factor VIII on factor IXa catalyzed factor X activation was done. In the absence of platelets, phospholipids, or factor VIII, the Michaelis constant (Km = 81 microM) was greater than 500-fold higher than the factor X concentration in human plasma. Unactivated platelets and thrombin-activated factor VIII, alone or in combination, had no effect on the kinetic parameters, whereas thrombin-activated platelets caused a major decrease in Km (0.39 microM) with no significant effect on kcat (0.052 min-1) and allowed factor VIIIa to decrease the Km further to a concentration (0.16 microM) near that of factor X in plasma and to increase the kcat 24,000-fold to 1240 min-1. Sonicated mixed phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine vesicles (25/75, mol/mol) had kinetic effects similar to those of activated platelets. When factor IXa binding to thrombin-activated platelets and rates of factor X activation were measured simultaneously at saturating concentrations of factor X and factor VIIIa, the kcat was independent of factor IXa concentration, and the mean kcat value was 2391 min-1. The increase in catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) in the presence of thrombin-activated platelets and factor VIIIa was (17.4 x 10(6))-fold.  相似文献   

3.
The published activation site sequences of bovine factors IX and X have been utilized to synthesize a number of peptides specifically designed respectively as substrates for bovine factors XIa and IXa beta. The substrates contain a fluorophore (2-aminobenzoyl group, Abz) and a quenching group (4-nitrobenzylamide, Nba) that are separated upon enzymatic hydrolysis with a resultant increase in fluorescence that was utilized to measure hydrolysis rates. Factor XIa cleaved all of the peptides bearing factor IX activation site sequences with Abz-Glu-Phe-Ser-Arg-Val-Val-Gly-Nba having the highest kcat/KM value. The kinetic behavior of factor XIa toward the synthetic peptide substrate indicates that it has a minimal extended substrate recognition site at least five residues long spanning S4 to S1' and has favorable interactions over seven subsites. The hexapeptide Abz-Glu-Phe-Ser-Arg-Val-Val-Nba was the most specific factor XIa substrate and was not hydrolyzed by factors IXa beta or Xa beta or thrombin. Factor IXa beta failed to hydrolyze any of the synthetic peptides bearing the activation site sequence of factor X. This enzyme slowly cleaved four hexa- and heptapeptide substrates with factor IX activation site sequences extending from P4 or P3 to P3'. Factor Xa beta poorly hydrolyzed all but one of the factor XIa substrates and failed to cleave any of the factor IXa beta substrates. Thrombin failed to hydrolyze any of the peptides examined while trypsin, as expected, was highly reactive and not very specific. Phospholipids had no effect on the reactivity of either factors IXa beta or Xa beta toward synthetic substrates. Both factor IXa beta and Xa beta cleaved the peptide substrates at similar rates to their natural substrates under comparable conditions. However the rates were substantially lower than optimum activation rates observed in the presence of Ca2+, phospholipids, and protein cofactors. In the future, it may be useful to investigate synthetic substrates that can bind to phospholipid vesicles in the same manner as the natural substrates for factors IXa beta and Xa beta.  相似文献   

4.
The role of the cofactors Ca2+ and phospholipid in the activation of human Factor X by Factor IXa was investigated. By use of a sensitive spectrophotometric Factor Xa assay, it was demonstrated that human Factor IXa can activate Factor X in the absence of cofactors. The presence of Ca2+ as the only cofactor resulted in a 7-fold stimulation of the Factor Xa formation. Kinetic analysis of the Ca2+-stimulated reaction showed that the apparent Km of Factor X was 4.6 microM, whereas the apparent Vmax. for Factor Xa formation was 0.0088 mol of Xa/min per mol of IXa. The presence of phospholipid as the only cofactor had no effect on the rate of Factor Xa formation. However, a several-hundred-fold stimulation was observed when Ca2+ and phospholipid were present in combination. The activation of Factor X in the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid was found to be kinetically heterogeneous, involving both phospholipid-bound and free reactants. Quantitative data concerning the phospholipid binding of Factors IXa and X were used to study the relation between the rate of Factor Xa formation and the binding of enzyme and substrate to the phospholipid membrane. The results support the hypothesis that phospholipid-bound Factor X is the substrate in the phospholipid-stimulated reaction; however, phospholipid-bound and free Factor IXa seem to be equally efficient in catalysing the activation of phospholipid-bound Factor X.  相似文献   

5.
Platelet receptor occupancy with factor IXa promotes factor X activation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
To investigate the activated platelet surface as a locus for factor X activation, the functional consequences of factor IXa binding to platelets were studied. The concentration of factor IXa required for half-maximal rates of factor X activation in the presence of factor VIIIa and thrombin-activated platelets was 0.53 nM, which is close to the Kd (0.56 nM) for factor IXa binding to platelets under identical conditions, determined from equilibrium binding studies. In direct comparative experiments, there was a close correspondence between equilibrium binding of factor IXa to thrombin-activated platelets in the presence of factor VIIIa and kinetic determinations of factor X activation rates. Analysis by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that 125I-labeled factor IXa bound to platelets was structurally intact and did not form covalent complexes with platelet proteins. Factor IXa active site-inhibited by 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl glutamyl-glycylarginyl chloromethyl ketone was shown to be a competitive inhibitor of factor IXa binding in the absence (Ki = 2.3 nM) and presence (Ki = 0.43 nM) of factor VIIIa and factor X and of factor X activation (Ki = 0.4 nM) by factor IXa in the presence of factor VIIIa, indicating that the generation of factor Xa is not required for factor IXa binding and that factor IXa bound to activated platelets in the presence of factor VIIIa is closely coupled with rates of factor X activation. We conclude that factor IXa bound tightly to a platelet receptor in the presence of factor VIIIa is the enzyme active in factor X activation.  相似文献   

6.
Factor IX is a vitamin K-dependent zymogen of a serine protease. The NH2-terminal half of the molecule consists of a Ca(2+)-binding gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla)-containing module and two modules homologous to the epidermal growth factor (EGF) precursor. To elucidate the role of these non-catalytic modules of factor IXa beta in factor X activation, we have isolated and characterized fragments of bovine factor IX, containing one or both of the EGF-like modules as well as these modules linked to the Gla module. The fragments were used as inhibitors of factor IXa beta-mediated factor X activation in a plasma clotting system and in systems with purified components of the Xase complex. Fragments consisting of either the two EGF-like modules of factor IX linked together or the NH2-terminal EGF-like module alone were found to inhibit factor Xa generation both in the presence and absence of the cofactor, factor VIIIa. Moreover, a fragment consisting of the corresponding modules of factor X had a similar effect. We therefore propose that factor IXa beta and factor X interact directly through their EGF-like modules on or in the vicinity of a phospholipid surface. We have also found that the isolated Gla module of factor IX inhibits the formation of factor Xa both in the presence and absence of phospholipid but not in the absence of factor VIIIa. Our results are compatible with a model of the Xase complex, in which both the serine protease part and the Gla module of factor IXa beta interact with factor VIIIa.  相似文献   

7.
A murine monoclonal antibody (IgG1k, Kd approximately 10(-8) M) specific for an epitope located on the heavy chain of human factor IXa was used to study structure-function relationships of factor IX. The antibody inhibited factor IX clotting activity but did not impair activation of factor IX either by factor XIa/calcium or by factor VIIa/tissue factor/calcium. The antibody also did not impair the binding of factor IXa to antithrombin III. Moreover, the antibody did not prevent calcium and phospholipid (PL) from inhibiting the binding of factor IXa to antithrombin III. The antibody also failed to impair activation of factor VII by factor IXa/calcium/PL. Furthermore, the antibody did not interfere with the very slow activation of factor X by factor IXa/calcium/PL. In contrast, the antibody did interfere with factor X activation when reaction mixtures also contained factor VIII:Ca/von Willebrand factor. The marked acceleration of factor X activation observed in control mixtures was not observed in mixtures containing the antibody. Similar results were obtained in reaction mixtures containing the Fab portion of the antibody and factor VIII:Ca free of von Willebrand factor. In additional experiments, factor VIII:Ca/von Willebrand factor was found to inhibit the binding of the antibody to 125I-factor IXa as determined using an immunosorbent assay. Moreover, the antibody displaced factor VIII:Ca from the factor X activator complex (IXa/calcium/PL/VIII:Ca) as evidenced by an altered elution pattern on gel filtration chromatography. From these observations, we conclude that the antibody impairs the clotting activity of factor IXa through interference with its binding of factor VIII:Ca. This suggests a significant role for the heavy chain (residues of 181-415) of factor IXa in binding factor VIII:Ca.  相似文献   

8.
We have recently shown that thrombin-stimulated human platelets have specific, saturable receptors for factor IXa, occupancy of which promotes factor X activation (Ahmad, S. S., Rawala-Sheikh, R., and Walsh, P. N. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264: 3244-3251, 20012-20016; Rawala-Sheikh, R., Ahmad, S. S., and Walsh, P. N. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 2606-2611). To study the structural requirements for factor IXa binding to platelets, equilibrium binding studies and kinetic studies of factor X activation were carried out with normal factor IXa and with two variant proteins: factor IXaAlabama (FIXaAL; Asp47----Gly substitution) and factor IXaChapel Hill (FIXaCH; Arg145----His substitution). In the absence of factors VIIIa and X, there were 331 binding sites/platelet for FIXaCH (Kdapp = 2.8 nM), and 540 sites/platelet for FIXaAL (Kdapp = 3.2 nM), compared with 540 sites/platelet (Kdapp = 2.3 nM) for normal factor IXa. The addition of factors VIIIa and X, both at saturating concentrations, had no effect on the number of binding sites for either normal or variant factor IXa, resulted in a decrease in the Kd for normal factor IXa to 0.67 nM, resulted in a suboptimal decrease in Kd for FIXaAL (1.4 nM), and had no effect on the Kd for FIXaCH. Kinetic studies of factor X activation at variable factor IXa concentration confirmed these values of Kd in the presence of factors VIIIa and X. Determination of rates of factor X activation at variable substrate concentrations yielded normal values of catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) for the variant proteins, thereby indicating that the abnormally low rates of factor X activation obtained were a consequence of the low affinity binding of FIXaAL and FIXaCH to thrombin-activated platelets in the presence of factors VIIIa and X. These studies suggest that the presence of Asp47 and the cleavage of factor IX at Arg145-Ala146 are important structural features required for specific, high affinity factor IXa binding to platelets in the presence of factors VIIIa and X.  相似文献   

9.
Activation of coagulation factor X via the intrinsic pathway requires the assembly of factors IXa and VIII on lipid membranes. It is known that the platelet expresses membrane sites for assembly of factors IXa/VIII and promotes efficient factor X activation. We now show that human blood monocytes, but not lymphocytes or polymorphonuclear leukocytes, also express appropriate sites for factors IXa/VIII assembly. The maximal rate of factor X activation by factors IXa (0.75 nM) and VIII (1 unit/ml) assembled on monocytes is similar to the maximal rate on platelets. This rate, adjusted per micromole of lipid phosphorus, is 1636 +/- 358 nM factor Xa/min on monocyte, and 1569 +/- 54 nM factor Xa/min on platelets. At physiologic concentrations of factors X and VIII, the activation rate increases with factor IXa concentration asymptotically approaching a maximum. Half-maximal rate is achieved with 1.0 +/- 0.16 nM factor IXa. Monocytes and macrophages, but not platelets, can express membrane tissue factor and thus promote simultaneous assembly of two distinct factor X-activating protease complexes. In these studies, blood monocytes and alveolar macrophages are used as membrane sources in kinetic experiments comparing factor X activation by intrinsic (factor IXa/VIII) versus extrinsic (factor VII/tissue factor) protease complexes. At plasma concentration of factors VIII and VII, apparent Km on the monocyte is 14.6 +/- 1.4 nM for intrinsic and 117.0 +/- 10.1 nM for extrinsic activation. The apparent Km on alveolar macrophages is 12.1 +/- 1.9 and 90.6 +/- 10.2 nM for intrinsic and extrinsic activation, respectively. Maximal rates on monocytes at saturating concentration of factors IXa, VIII, and VII are 48.0 +/- 11.2 nM factor Xa/min, for intrinsic activation, and 16.5 +/- 5.5 nM factor Xa/min, for extrinsic activation. These data show that the monocyte/macrophage is the only blood-derived cell type with membrane sites for both intrinsic and extrinsic pathway assembly. We have exploited this characteristic of the monocyte/macrophage membrane to demonstrate that factor X activation by the intrinsic pathway protease is more efficient than activation via the extrinsic pathway protease complex.  相似文献   

10.
Heparin inhibits the intrinsic tenase complex (factor IXa-factor VIIIa) via interaction with a factor IXa exosite. To define the role of this exosite, human factor IXa with alanine substituted for conserved surface residues (R126, N129, K132, R165, N178) was characterized. Chromogenic substrate hydrolysis by the mutant proteases was reduced 20-30% relative to factor IXa wild type. Coagulant activity was moderately (N129A, K132A, K126A) or dramatically (R165A) reduced relative to factor IXa wild type. Kinetic analysis demonstrated a marked reduction in apparent cofactor affinity (23-fold) for factor IXa R165, and an inability to stabilize cofactor activity. Factor IXa K126A, N129A, and K132A demonstrated modest reductions ( approximately 2-fold) in apparent cofactor affinity, and accelerated decay of intrinsic tenase activity. In the absence of factor VIIIa, factor IXa N178A and R165A demonstrated a defective Vmax(app) for factor X activation. In the presence of factor VIIIa, Vmax(app) varied in proportion to the predicted factor IXa-factor VIIIa concentration. However, factor IXa R165A had a 65% reduction in the kcat for factor X, suggesting an additional effect on catalysis. The ability of factor IXa to compete for physical assembly into the intrinsic tenase complex was enhanced by EGR-chloromethylketone bound to the factor IXa active site or addition of factor X, and reduced by selected mutations in the heparin-binding exosite (N178A, K126A, R165A). These results suggest that the factor IXa heparin-binding exosite participates in both cofactor binding and protease activation, and cofactor affinity is linked to active site conformation and factor X interaction during enzyme assembly.  相似文献   

11.
The modification of human factor X by 2-sulfo-N-succinimidyl acetate was investigated and shown to produce a factor X species which, when activated, has no activity toward factor VIII. Acylation of factor X (0.9 microM) was carried out in the presence of 1 mM calcium at different reagent concentrations and pH values at 22 degrees C for time courses up to 1 h. Optimal modification was achieved using 0.3 mM reagent at pH 8.0 for 30 min. The modified zymogen, acetylated factor X, is activated at full rates by factor IXa/VIIIa and by the factor X-activating protein of Russell's viper venom. The activated product, acetylated Xa, has an enhanced amidolytic activity (110%) but has almost no detectable clotting activity (0.1%). More importantly, we have shown that acetylated Xa, in contrast to native Xa, does not activate factor VIII. This allows accurate quantitation of factor VIII activation without complications due to positive feedback reactions. We have demonstrated this in an examination of the activation of factor VIII by factor IXa.  相似文献   

12.
Activated platelets promote intrinsic factor X-activating complex assembly by presenting high affinity, saturable binding sites for factor IXa mediated by two disulfide-constrained loop structures (loop 1, Cys88-Cys99; loop 2, Cys95-Cys109) within the second epidermal growth factor (EGF2) domain. To identify amino acids essential for factor X activation complex assembly, recombinant factor IXa point mutants in loop 1 (N89A, I90A, K91A, and R94A) and loop 2 (D104A, N105A, and V107A) were prepared. All seven mutants were similar to the native factor IXa by SDS-PAGE, active site titration, and content of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues. Kinetic constants obtained by either titrating factor X or factor VIIIa on SFLLRN-activated platelets or phospholipid vesicles revealed near normal values of Km(app) and Kd(app)FVIIIa for all mutants, indicating normal substrate and cofactor binding. In a factor Xa generation assay in the presence of activated platelets and cofactor factor VIIIa, compared with native factor IXa (Kd(app)FIXa approximately 1.1 nm, Vmax approximately 12 nm min(-1)), N89A displayed an increase of approximately 20-fold in Kd(app)FIXa and a decrease of approximately 20-fold in Vmax; I90A had an increase of approximately 5-fold in Kd(app)FIXa and approximately 10-fold decrease in Vmax; and V107A had an increase of approximately 3-fold in Kd(app)FIXa and approximately 4-fold decrease in Vmax. We conclude that residues Asn89, Ile90, and Val107 within loops 1 and 2 (Cys88-Cys109) of the EGF2 domain of factor IXa are essential for normal interactions with the platelet surface and for the assembly of the factor X-activating complex on activated platelets.  相似文献   

13.
The specific molecular target for direct heparin inhibition of factor X activation by intrinsic tenase (factor IXa-factor VIIIa) was investigated. Comparison of size-fractionated oligosaccharides demonstrated that an octasaccharide was sufficient to inhibit intrinsic tenase. Substitution of soluble dihexanoic phosphatidylserine (C6PS) for phospholipid (PL) vesicles demonstrated that inhibition by low-molecular weight heparin (LMWH) was independent of factor IXa-factor VIIIa membrane assembly. LMWH also inhibited factor X activation by the factor IXa-PL complex via a distinct mechanism that required longer oligosaccharides and was independent of substrate concentrations. The apparent affinity of LMWH for the factor IXa-PL complex was higher in the absence of factor VIIIa, suggesting that the cofactor adversely affected the interaction of heparin with factor IXa-phospholipid. LMWH did not interact directly with the active site, as it failed to inhibit chromogenic substrate cleavage by the factor IXa-PL complex. LMWH induced a modest decrease in factor IXa-factor VIIIa affinity [K(D(app))] on PL vesicles that did not account for the inhibition. In contrast, LMWH caused a substantial reduction in factor IXa-factor VIIIa affinity in the presence of C6PS that fully accounted for the inhibition. Factor IXa bound LMWH with significantly higher affinity than factor X by competition solution affinity analysis, and the K(D(app)) for the factor IXa-LMWH complex agreed with the K(I) for inhibition of the factor IXa-PL complex by LMWH. Thus, LMWH binds to an exosite on factor IXa that antagonizes cofactor activity without disrupting factor IXa-factor VIIIa assembly on the PL surface. This exosite may contribute to the clinical efficacy of heparin and represents a novel target for antithrombotic therapy.  相似文献   

14.
We investigated the kinetics of the inhibitory action of antithrombin III and antithrombin III plus heparin during the activation of factor X by factor IXa. Generation and inactivation curves were fitted to a three-parameter two-exponentional model to determine the pseudo first-order rate constants of inhibition of factor IXa and factor Xa by antithrombin III/heparin. In the absence of heparin, the second-order rate constant of inhibition of factor Xa generated by factor IXa was 2.5-fold lower than the rate constant of inhibition of exogenous factor Xa. It appeared that phospholipid-bound factor X protected factor Xa from inactivation by antithrombin III. It is, as yet, unclear whether an active site or a nonactive site interaction between factor Xa and factor X at the phospholipid surface is involved. The inactivation of factor IXa by antithrombin III was found to be very slow and was not affected by phospholipid, calcium, and/or factor X. With unfractionated heparin above 40 ng/ml and antithrombin III at 200 nM, the apparent second-order rate constant of inhibition of exogenous and generated factor Xa were the same. Thus, in this case phospholipid-bound factor X did not protect factor Xa from inhibition. In the presence of synthetic pentasaccharide heparin, however, phospholipid-bound factor X reduced the rate constant about 5-fold. Pentasaccharide had no effect on the factor IXa/antithrombin III reaction. Unfractionated heparin (1 micrograms/ml) stimulated the antithrombin III-dependent inhibition of factor IXa during factor X activation 400-fold. In the absence of reaction components this stimulated was 65-fold. We established that calcium stimulated the heparin-dependent inhibition of factor IXa.  相似文献   

15.
Factor VIIIa, a cofactor for the protease factor IXa, is a trimer of A1, A2 and A3-C1-C2 subunits. In the absence of phospholipid (PL), the k(cat) for factor VIIIa-dependent, factor IXa-catalyzed conversion of factor X was markedly less than that observed in the presence of PL (approx. 150 min(-1)) and decreased as the ionic strength of the reaction increased. At low salt concentration, the k(cat) (5.5 min(-1)) was approx. 8-fold greater than observed at near physiologic ionic strength (0.7 min(-1)). However, this level of salt showed minimal effects on the intermolecular affinities of factor VIIIa (or isolated A2 subunit) for factor IXa or on the K(m) for factor X. Alternatively, the association of A2 subunit with A1 subunit was sensitive to increases in salt and paralleled the reduction in k(cat) observed with factor VIIIa. This instability was not observed in PL-containing reactions. Fluorescence energy transfer between acrylodan-A2 and fluorescein-A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer showed a requirement for both PL and factor IXa for maximal association of A2 with dimer. These results indicate that in the presence of factor IXa, the salt-dependent dissociation of factor VIIIa subunits is significantly enhanced in the absence of PL, promoting a reduced k(cat) for the cofactor-dependent generation of factor Xa.  相似文献   

16.
Wakabayashi H  Su YC  Ahmad SS  Walsh PN  Fay PJ 《Biochemistry》2005,44(30):10298-10304
We recently identified an acidic-rich segment in the A1 domain of factor VIII (residues 110-126) that functions in the coordination of Ca(2+), an ion necessary for cofactor activity [Wakabayashi et al. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 12677-12684]. Mutagenesis studies showed that replacement of residue Glu113 with Ala (E113A) yielded a factor VIII point mutant possessing increased specific activity as determined by a one-stage clotting assay. Mutagenesis at this site suggested that substitution with relatively small, nonpolar residues was well tolerated, whereas replacement with a number of polar or charged residues appeared detrimental to activity. Ala substitution resulted in the greatest enhancement, yielding an approximately 2-fold increased specific activity. Time course experiments following reaction with thrombin revealed similar rates of activation and inactivation of E113A as observed for the wild type. Results from factor Xa generation assays showed minimal differences in kinetic parameters and factor IXa affinity for E113A and wild-type factor VIIIa when run in the presence of synthetic phospholipid vesicles, whereas factor VIIIa E113A displayed an approximately 4-fold greater affinity for factor IXa compared with factor VIIIa wild type in reactions run on the platelet membrane surface. This latter effect may be attributed, in part, to a 2-fold increased affinity of factor VIIIa E113A for the platelet membrane. Considering that low levels of factors VIIIa and IXa are generated during clotting in plasma, the increased cofactor specific activity observed for E113A factor VIII may result from its enhanced affinity for factor IXa on the physiological membrane.  相似文献   

17.
Previous studies have demonstrated a Factor IX and IXa binding site on the endothelial cell surface for which both the zymogen and enzyme compete with equal affinity. In this report, we demonstrate that the affinity of Factor IXa, but not Factor IX, for the cell surface is increased in the presence of both Factors VIII and X. When Factor Xa formation was studied in the presence of saturating concentrations of Factors VIII and X, the half-maximal rate was observed at a Factor IXa concentration of 151 +/- 12 pM. Active site-blocked Factor IXa, 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl-Glu-Gly-Arg-Factor IXa, was a more effective inhibitor of Factor X activation (Ki = 124 pM) than was Factor IX (Ki = 3.0 nM). Radioligand binding studies carried out in the presence of Factors VIII and X confirmed the presence of a selective endothelial cell Factor IXa binding site with Kd = 127 +/- 27 pM. In contrast, when Factor IXa binding was studied in the absence of other coagulation factors, or in the presence of Factor VIII (thrombin-activated or unactivated) alone, this new high affinity site was not observed. Competitive binding studies indicated that Factor IXa was 12 times more effective as an inhibitor of Factor IX-endothelial cell binding in the presence of Factors VIII and X. Consistent with the increased affinity of Factor IXa binding in the presence of factors VIII and X, cell-associated Factor IXa coagulant activity decayed 7 times more slowly in the presence of these coagulation factors. These results demonstrate selective Factor IXa-endothelial cell binding in the presence of Factors VIII and X, suggesting this interaction could be a physiologic occurrence.  相似文献   

18.
In the extrinsic pathway of blood coagulation, Factor X is activated by a complex of tissue factor, factor VII(a) and Ca2+ ions. Using purified human coagulation factors and a sensitive spectrophotometric assay for Factor Xa, we could demonstrate activation of Factor X by Factor VIIa in the absence of tissue-factor apoprotein, phospholipids and Ca2+. This finding allowed a kinetic analysis of the contribution of each of the cofactors. Ca2+ stimulated the reaction rate 10-fold at an optimum of 6 mM (Vmax. of 1.1 x 10(-3) min-1) mainly by decreasing the Km of Factor X (to 11.4 microM). In the presence of Ca2+, 25 microM-phospholipid caused a 150-fold decrease of the apparent Km and a 2-fold increase of the apparent Vmax. of the reaction; however, both kinetic parameters increased with increasing phospholipid concentration. Tissue-factor apoprotein contributed to the reaction rate mainly by an increase of the Vmax., in both the presence (40,500-fold) and absence (4900-fold) of phospholipid. The formation of a ternary complex of Factor VIIa with tissue-factor apoprotein and phospholipid was responsible for a 15 million-fold increase in the catalytic efficiency of Factor X activation. The presence of Ca2+ was absolutely required for the stimulatory effects of phospholipid and apoprotein. The data fit a general model in which the Ca2(+)-dependent conformation allows Factor VIIa to bind tissue-factor apoprotein and/or a negatively charged phospholipid surface resulting into a decreased intrinsic Km and an increased Vmax. for the activation of fluid-phase Factor X.  相似文献   

19.
The interactions of bovine factor IX, its activation intermediate, Factor IX alpha, and its activation products, Factor IXa alpha and Factor IXa beta, with phospholipid vesicles, of mean radius of approx. 30 nm, containing various amounts of phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylcholine (PC), have been examined. For Factor IX, Factor IX alpha, Factor IXa alpha and Factor IXa beta, the dissociation constants, at saturating levels of Ca2+, are independent of the PS concentration in the vesicle after levels of 20-30% (w/w) have been reached, and attain minimum values of approx. 1.7, 1.7, 0.7 and 1.0 microM, respectively, with vesicles containing 50% PS. The amount of protein bound per vesicle particle is independent of the PS content, above 20% PS, for Factor IX and Factor IXa beta, with values of approx. 995-1197 and 1128-1566 molecules/vesicle, respectively. With Factor IX alpha, a dependence on the amount of protein bound with the content of PS is seen, which ranges from 338 to 619 molecules/vesicle with membranes containing 30-50% PS. For Factor IXa alpha, no regularity is noted and a range of 583-1083 molecules of protein/vesicle is observed with the systems employed. Examination of the radii of the proteins on the vesicle demonstrates that Factors IX alpha and IXa alpha occupy considerably more of the surface than do Factors IX and IXa beta, suggesting that a reason for the decreased number of binding sites for the former two proteins on the vesicle may be related to their greater surface spatial requirements.  相似文献   

20.
An activator of blood coagulation factor X was found in the venom of the horned viper Cerastes cerastes, and was purified by gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography and chromatofocussing. The activator is a protein composed of a heavy and a light polypeptide chain linked by disulfide bonds. Two subforms of the activator were found. Both contained a heavy chain of Mr 58000 and are distinguished from each other by the presence of two different light chains of Mr 17700 and 15000. The activator appears to cleave the bond in the factor X molecule that is also cleaved by factor IXa. Factor X activation by the activator is strongly stimulated by Ca2+. The kinetic parameters for the activation reaction have been determined. A Km for factor X of 19.2 nM and a Vmax of 0.11 pmol of Xa/min per ng venom were found.  相似文献   

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