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1.
Nonrandom structural features in the heparin polymer   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Computer simulation studies were used to prepare an ensemble of heparin number chains. The polydispersity of these chains was simulated by introducing a specific "fraction of terminators", and it closely resembled the experimentally observed polydispersity of a porcine mucosal, glycosaminoglycan heparin. The same percentage of simulated chains contained antithrombin III (ATIII) binding site sequences as are typically found to contain ATIII binding sites using affinity chromatography. Heparin lyase action was then simulated by using Michaelis-Menten kinetics. In one model, heparin chains were constructed from the random assembly of monosaccharide units using the observed mole percentage of each. After simulated depolymerization, the final oligosaccharides formed were compared to the observed oligosaccharide products. The simulation which assumed a random distribution of monosaccharide units in heparin did not agree with experimental observations. In particular, no ATIII binding site sequences were found in the simulated number chains. The results of this simulation indicate that heparin is not simply a random assembly of monosaccharide units. These results are consistent with the known, ordered biosynthesis of heparin. In a second model, heparin chains were constructed from randomly assembled oligosaccharides at the mole percentage in which each is found in the final product mixture. The action of heparin lyase was then simulated, and the distribution of the oligosaccharide products was measured throughout the simulated time course of the depolymerization reaction. The simulated rate of formation and final concentration of a particular oligosaccharide which contains a portion of heparin's ATIII binding site were similar to those observed experimentally. These results are consistent with the random distribution of ATIII binding sites within glycosaminoglycan heparin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
A tetrasaccharide possessing a biosynthetically permissible structural variability in and adjacent to the antithrombin III (ATIII) binding site has been isolated from heparin lyase depolymerized bovine lung heparin by using strong anion-exchange high-pressure liquid chromatography (SAX-HPLC). On the basis of two-dimensional 500-MHz 1H NMR experiments, including phase-sensitive correlated spectroscopy (COSY) and rotating frame nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy (ROESY), and fast-atom bombardment mass spectrometry (FAB-MS), the primary structure of this tetrasaccharide was unambiguously established as delta UAp2S (1----4)-alpha-D-GlcNp2S6S(1----4)-beta-D-GlcAp(1----4)-alph a-D-GlcNp2S3S6S (where delta UA represents 4-deoxy-alpha-L-threo-hex-4-enopyranosyluronic acid). The 1H NMR ROESY experiment proved to be particularly valuable in offering sequence information. Heparins from a variety of species and tissue sources were examined by oligosaccharide mapping using SAX-HPLC and gradient polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Two of these heparins are used as anticoagulants; they are porcine intestinal mucosal heparin and bovine lung heparin. The predominant ATIII-binding site in porcine heparin contained an N-acetylated glucosamine residue. We now report the structure of the predominant ATIII-binding site in bovine heparin as----4)-alpha-D-GlcNp2S6S(1----4)-beta-D-GlcAp(1----4)-alph a-D- GlcNp2S3S6S(1----4)-alpha-L-IdoAp2S(1----4)-alpha-D-GlcNp 2S6S(1----. This study shows the presence of one or both types of ATIII-binding-site variants in all of the heparins that were examined.  相似文献   

3.
The serine proteinase inhibitor antithrombin III (ATIII) is a key regulatory protein of intrinsic blood coagulation. ATIII attains its full biological activity only upon binding polysulfated oligosaccharides, such as heparin. A series of synthetic peptides have been prepared based on the proposed heparin binding regions of ATIII and their ability to bind heparin has been assessed by CD spectrometry, by isothermal titration calorimetry, and by the ability of the peptides to compete with ATIII for binding heparin in a factor Xa procoagulant enzyme assay. Peptide F123-G148, which encompasses both the purported high-affinity pentasaccharide binding region and an adjacent, C-terminally directed segment of ATIII, was found to bind heparin with good affinity, but amino-terminal truncations of this sequence, including L130-G148 and K136-G148 displayed attenuated heparin binding activities. In fact, K136-G148 appears to encompass only a low-affinity heparin binding site. In contrast, peptides based solely on the high-affinity binding site (K121-A134) displayed much higher affinities for heparin. By CD spectrometry, these high-affinity peptides are chiefly random coil in nature, but low microM concentrations of heparin induce significant alpha-helix conformation. K121-A134 also effectively competes with ATIII for binding heparin. Thus, through the use of synthetic peptides that encompass part, if not all, of the heparin binding site(s) within ATIII, we have further elucidated the structure-function relations of heparin-ATIII interactions.  相似文献   

4.
A heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chain, biotinylated at its reducing-end, was bound to a streptavidin-coated biochip. Surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy showed a low affinity interaction with antithrombin III (ATIII) when it was flowed over a surface containing heparan sulfate. ATIII bound tightly with high affinity when the same surface was enzymatically modified to using 3-O-sulfotransferase isoform 1 (3-OST-1) in the presence of 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS). The 3-OST-1 enzyme is involved in heparan sulfate biosynthesis and introduces a critical 3-O-sulfo group into this glycosaminoglycan affording the appropriate pentasaccharide sequence capable of high affinity binding to ATIII. This experiment demonstrates the specific structural modification of a glycosaminoglycan bound to a biochip using a biosynthetic enzyme, suggesting a new approach to rapid screening glycosaminoglycan-protein interactions.  相似文献   

5.
D M Cohen  R J Linhardt 《Biopolymers》1990,30(7-8):733-741
Heparin is a mixture of linear polysaccharides of undetermined sequence. Both biosynthetic data and computer simulation studies have established that each heparin polymer chain is comprised of oligosaccharides of defined sequence, representing ordered domains. One such ordered domian is a pentasaccharide corresponding to heparin's antithrombin III binding site. Previous computer simulation studies, performed under the assumption that heparin lyase (heparinase, EC 4.2.2.7), has a random endolytic action pattern, suggested that certain of these ordered oligosaccharide domains may themselves be nonrandomly arranged in the heparin polymer. The present work presents computer simulations of alternative action patterns for heparin lyase while assuming a random distribution of these oligosaccharide units within the heparin polymer. We consider action patterns that are determined solely by the primary structure of the substrate molecules. Results of the simulations are compared to (1) the experimental measurements of product chains formed throughout the reaction and (2) the change in weight average molecular weight Mw as a function of reaction completion as determined by absorbance at 232 nm. From the simulation of 60 action patterns for heparin lyase, we infer that one of the following statements concerning heparin and heparin lyase is true: (1) Heparin is a random arrangement of a small number of structurally defined oligosaccharide units. Heparin lyase changes its action pattern during the depolymerization of heparin (perhaps influenced by the secondary structure of substrate). (2) Heparin contain clusters of oligosaccharide sequences that are present in low concentrations (overall) in the polymer. Heparin lyase has a specificity for cleaving glycosidic linkages either exolytically at the nonreducing terminus of a chain or (endolytically) at the reducing side of these rare oligosaccharide sequence.  相似文献   

6.
Cesaretti M  Luppi E  Maccari F  Volpi N 《Glycobiology》2004,14(12):1275-1284
Heparin with high anticoagulant activity (activated partial thromboplastin time of 347 +/- 56.4 and anti-Xa activity of 317 +/- 48.3) was isolated from the marine clam species Tapes phylippinarum in an amount of approximately 2.1 mg/g dry animals. Agarose-gel electrophoresis showed a high content of the slow-moving heparin component (22 +/- 6.8%) and 78 +/- 5.4% of the fast-moving species. An average molecular mass of 13,600 was calculated by PAGE analysis, whereas a number average molecular weight Mn value of 10,700, a weight average molecular weight Mw of 14,900, and a dispersity index Mn/Mw of 1.386 were obtained by high-performance size-exclusion chromatography. Structural analysis of clam heparin, performed by depolymerizing heparin samples with heparinase (EC 4.2.2.7) and then separating the resulting unsaturated oligosaccharides by strong anion exchange-HPLC revealed the presence of large amounts (more than 130% than standard pharmaceutical heparin obtained from bovine intestine) of the oligosaccharide sequence bearing part of the ATIII-binding region, DeltaUA2S (1-->4)-alpha-D-GlcN2S6S (1-->4)-alpha-L-IdoA (1-->4)-alpha-D-GlcNAc6S (1-->4)-beta-D-GlcA (1-->4)-alpha-D-GlcN2S3S6S in the T. phylippinarum heparin, in comparison with bovine mucosal heparin and a sample of porcine mucosal heparin previously published. Furthermore, as expected from the oligosaccharide compositional analysis, due to the presence of a great mol % (80.6%) of the trisulfated disaccharide DeltaUA2S(1-->4)-alpha-D-GlcN2S6S, mollusc heparin is a more sulfated polysaccharide than bovine mucosal heparin (73.5%) and a sample of porcine mucosal (72.8%) heparin previously reported. To our knowledge, this is the first article describing a clam heparin having the ATIII binding site mainly identical to that of human and porcine intestinal mucosal heparins and bovine intestinal mucosal heparin but different from that found in beef lung heparin.  相似文献   

7.
Fluorescence and stopped flow methods were used to compare clinically used heparins with regard to their ability to bind to antithrombin and to accelerate the inactivation of factor Xa. Titration of antithrombin with both low molecular weight heparin (LMWH) (enoxaparin, fragmin and ardeparin) and unfractionated heparin (UFH) produced an equivalent fluorescence increase and indicates similar affinity of all heparin preparations to antithrombin. However, relative to UFH enoxaparin, the LMWH with the smallest average molecular mass, contained only 12% material with high affinity for antithrombin. The rate of factor Xa inhibition by antithrombin increased with the concentration of the examined heparins to the same limiting value, but the concentration required for maximal acceleration depended on the preparation. According to these data the high affinity fraction of the heparin preparations increased the intrinsic fluorescence and inhibitory activity equally without additional effects by variations in chain length and chemical composition. In contrast, in the presence of Ca UFH accelerated the inhibition of factor Xa by antithrombin 10-fold more efficiently than comparable concentrations of the high affinity fractions of enoxaparin and fragmin. The bell-shaped dependence of this accelerating effect suggests simultaneous binding of both proteins to heparin. In conclusion, under physiologic conditions the anti-factor Xa activity of heparin results from a composite effect of chain length and the content of material with high affinity to antithrombin. Thus, the reduced antithrombotic activity of LMWH relative to UFH results from a smaller content of high affinity material and the absence of a stimulating effect of calcium.  相似文献   

8.
Thrombin-inhibitory activity of whale heparin oligosaccharides   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Whale heparin was partially digested with a purified heparinase and the oligosaccharide fractions with 8-20 monosaccharide units were isolated from the digest by gel filtration on Sephadex G-50, followed by affinity chromatography on a column of antithrombin III immobilized on Sepharose 4B. A marked difference in the inhibitory activity for thrombin in the presence of antithrombin III was observed between the high-affinity fractions for antithrombin III of octasaccharide approximately hexadecasaccharide and those of octadecasaccharide approximately eicosasaccharide. The disaccharide compositions of these hexadeca-, octadeca-, and eicosasaccharides were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography after digestion with a mixture of purified heparitinases 1 and 2 and heparinase. The analytical data indicated that the proportions of trisulfated disaccharide (IdUA(2S)alpha 1----4GlcNS(6S)) and disulfated disaccharide (UA1----4GlcNS(6S)) increased with the manifestation of high thrombin-inhibitory activity, while that of monosulfated disaccharide (UA1----4GlcNS) decreased. The present observations, together with those so far reported, suggest that the presence of the former structural elements, specifically IdUA(2S)alpha 1----4GlcNS(6S), as well as the antithrombin III-binding pentasaccharide at the proper positions in the molecules of whale heparin oligosaccharides is essential for the manifestation of high inhibitory activity for thrombin in the presence of antithrombin III. The structural bases for the manifestation of the anticoagulant activity of whale and porcine heparins and their oligosaccharides are also discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Antithrombin III (ATIII) is the main inhibitor of the coagulation proteases like factor Xa and thrombin. Anticoagulant activity of ATIII is increased by several thousand folds when activated by vascular wall heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) and pharmaceutical heparins. ATIII isoforms in human plasma, alpha-ATIII and beta-ATIII differ in the amount of glycosylation which is the basis of differences in their heparin binding affinity and function. Crystal structures and site directed mutagenesis studies have mapped the heparin binding site in ATIII, however the hydrogen bond switch and energetics of interaction during the course of heparin dependent conformational change remains largely unclear. An analysis of heparin bound conformational states of ATIII using PEARLS software showed that in heparin bound intermediate state, Arg 47 and Arg 13 residues make hydrogen bonds with heparin but in the activated conformation Lys 11 and Lys 114 have more hydrogen bond interactions. In the protease bound-antithrombin-pentasaccharide complex Lys 114, Pro 12 and Lys 125 form important hydrogen bonding interactions. The results showed that A-helix and N-terminal end residues are more important in the initial interactions but D-helix is more important during the latter stage of conformational activation and during the process of protease inhibition. We carried out the residue wise Accessible Surface Area (ASA) analysis of alpha and beta ATIII native states and the results indicated major differences in burial of residues from Ser 112 to Ser 116 towards the N-terminal end. This region is involved in the P-helix formation on account of heparin binding. A cavity analysis showed a progressively larger cavity formation during activation in the region just adjacent to the heparin binding site towards the C-terminal end. We hypothesize that during the process of conformational change after heparin binding beta form of antithrombin has low energy barrier to form D-helix extension toward N and C-terminal end as compared to alpha isoform.  相似文献   

10.
Oligosaccharides with different affinities for antithrombin were isolated following partial deaminative cleavage of pig mucosal heparin with nitrous acid. The smallest high-affinity component obtained was previously identified as an octasaccharide with the predominant structure: (Formula: see text). The interaction of this octasaccharide, and of deca- and dodecasaccharides containing the same octasaccharide sequence, with antithrombin was studied by spectroscopic techniques. The near-ultraviolet difference spectra, circular dichroism spectra, and fluorescence enhancements induced by adding these oligosaccharides to antithrombin differed only slightly from the corresponding parameters measured in the presence of undegraded high-affinity heparin. Moreover, the binding constants obtained for the oligosaccharides and for high-affinity heparin were similar (1.0-2.9 X 10(7) M-1 at I = 0.3). In contrast, two hexasaccharides corresponding to units 1-6 and 3-8, respectively, of the above sequence showed about a 1000-fold lower affinity for antithrombin, and also induced considerably different spectral perturbations in antithrombin. Since the 1-6 hexasaccharide contains a reducing-terminal anhydromannose residue instead of the N-sulfated glucosamine unit 6 of the intact sequence, these results strongly support our previous conclusion that the N-sulfate group at position 6 is essential to the interaction with antithrombin. The low affinity of the hexasaccharide 3-8 provides further evidence that a pentasaccharide sequence 2-6 constitutes the actual antithrombin-binding region in the heparin molecule. Structural analysis of the various oligosaccharides revealed natural variants with an N-sulfate group substituted for the N-acetyl group at position 2. The preponderance of N-acetyl over N-sulfate groups at this position may be rationalized in terms of the mechanism of heparin biosynthesis, assuming that the D-gluco configuration of unit 3 is an essential feature of the antithrombin-binding region.  相似文献   

11.
The synthetic antithrombin-binding heparin pentasaccharide and a full-length heparin of approximately 26 saccharides containing this specific sequence have been compared with respect to their interactions with antithrombin and their ability to promote inhibition and substrate reactions of antithrombin with thrombin and factor Xa. The aim of these studies was to elucidate the pentasaccharide contribution to heparin's accelerating effect on antithrombin-proteinase reactions. Pentasaccharide and full-length heparins bound antithrombin with comparable high affinities (KD values of 36 +/- 11 and 10 +/- 3 nM, respectively, at I 0.15) and induced highly similar protein fluorescence, ultraviolet and circular dichroism changes in the inhibitor. Stopped-flow fluorescence kinetic studies of the heparin binding interactions at I 0.15 were consistent with a two-step binding process for both heparins, involving an initial weak encounter complex interaction formed with similar affinities (KD 20-30 microM), followed by an inhibitor conformational change with indistinguishable forward rate constants of 520-700 s-1 but dissimilar reverse rate constants of approximately 1 s-1 for the pentasaccharide and approximately 0.2 s-1 for the full-length heparin. Second order rate constants for antithrombin reactions with thrombin and factor Xa were maximally enhanced by the pentasaccharide only 1.7-fold for thrombin, but a substantial 270-fold for factor Xa, in an ionic strength-independent manner at saturating oligosaccharide. In contrast, the full-length heparin produced large ionic strength-dependent enhancements in second order rate constants for both antithrombin reactions of 4,300-fold for thrombin and 580-fold for factor Xa at I 0.15. These enhancements were resolvable into a nonionic component ascribable to the pentasaccharide and an ionic component responsible for the additional rate increase of the larger heparin. Stoichiometric titrations of thrombin and factor Xa inactivation by antithrombin, as well as sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the products of these reactions, indicated that pentasaccharide and full-length heparins similarly promoted the formation of proteolytically modified inhibitor during the inactivation of factor Xa by antithrombin, whereas only the full-length heparin was effective in promoting this substrate reaction of antithrombin during the reaction with thrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
This paper demonstrates that heparin-oligosaccharides with low anticoagulant activity have a high capacity to inhibit activation of the amplification pathway of complement in vitro. We prepared heparin-oligosaccharides by partial depolymerization of heparin using purified flavobacterial heparinase. The resulting oligosaccharide mixture was then fractionated using strong anion exchange-high pressure liquid chromatography to produce individual oligosaccharide components of this mixture, with degree of polymerization ranging from 2 to 16. These heparin-oligosaccharides were examined for both their anticoagulant activity and capacity to inhibit activation of the amplification pathway of complement. Although there was little difference among commercial heparins, a correlation between molecular weight and activity to inhibit convertase generation was clearly established for heparin-oligosaccharides between degree of polymerization 2 through 16. Heparin-oligosaccharides of degree of polymerization 10-16 (Mr 3888-5320) demonstrated up to 54% of heparin's activity on a molar basis (and up to 163% of heparin's activity on a weight basis) in inhibiting the amplification pathway of complement in vitro while showing almost no anticoagulant activity. These studies, for the first time, completely separate heparin's ability to inhibit complement activation from its anticoagulant activity.  相似文献   

13.
Oligosaccharides (10-20 monosaccharide units) with high affinity for antithrombin, as well as larger high-affinity heparin fractions (having relative molecular masses between 6,000 and 21,500), all markedly accelerated the inhibition of Factor Xa by antithrombin. Moreover, all high-affinity oligosaccharides and heparins enhanced, to a similar extent, the amount of free proteolytically modified antithrombin cleaved at the reactive bond by Factor Xa. In contrast, a minimum high-affinity heparin size of approximately 18 monosaccharide units was required to significantly accelerate the inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin and to enhance the production of modified antithrombin by this enzyme. All high-affinity fractions studied had similar affinities for antithrombin, as determined by fluorescence titrations. In competition experiments, binary complexes of antithrombin with octadecasaccharide or larger high-affinity heparins, but not with smaller oligosaccharides, displaced inactivated 125I-thrombin from matrix-linked low-affinity heparin. Moreover, similar binary complexes with 3H-labeled octadecasaccharide or larger chains, but not with smaller oligosaccharides, were capable of binding to matrix-linked inactivated thrombin. These results indicate that simultaneous binding of antithrombin and thrombin to high-affinity heparin is a prerequisite to the acceleration of the antithrombin-thrombin reaction and that the minimum heparin sequence capable of binding both proteins comprises approximately 18 monosaccharide units. Similar complex formation apparently is not required for the acceleration of the antithrombin-Factor Xa reaction.  相似文献   

14.
Heparin and HS (heparan sulfate) exert their wide range of biological activities by interacting with extracellular protein ligands. Among these important protein ligands are various angiogenic growth factors and cytokines. HS binding to VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) regulates multiple aspects of vascular development and function through its specific interaction with HS. Many studies have focused on HS-derived or HS-mimicking structures for the characterization of VEGF165 interaction with HS. Using a heparinase 1-prepared small library of heparin-derived oligosaccharides ranging from hexasaccharide to octadecasaccharide, we systematically investigated the heparin-specific structural features required for VEGF binding. We report the apparent affinities for the association between the heparin-derived oligosaccharides with both VEGF165 and VEGF55, a peptide construct encompassing exclusively the heparin-binding domain of VEGF165. An octasaccharide was the minimum size of oligosaccharide within the library to efficiently bind to both forms of VEGF and a tetradecasaccharide displayed an effective binding affinity to VEGF165 comparable to unfractionated heparin. The range of relative apparent binding affinities among VEGF and the panel of heparin-derived oligosaccharides demonstrate that the VEGF binding affinity likely depends on the specific structural features of these oligosaccharides, including their degree of sulfation, sugar-ring stereochemistry and conformation. Notably, the unique 3-O-sulfo group found within the specific antithrombin binding site of heparin is not required for VEGF165 binding. These findings afford new insight into the inherent kinetics and affinities for VEGF association with heparin and heparin-derived oligosaccharides with key residue-specific modifications and may potentially benefit the future design of oligosaccharide-based anti-angiogenesis drugs.  相似文献   

15.
Three sulphated polysaccharides, dermatan sulphate, fucan and heparin, were fractionated according to their affinity towards antithrombin III (ATIII) and heparin cofactor II (HCII), the two main physiological thrombin (IIa) inhibitors. Both inhibitors were immobilized on concanavalin A—Sepharose, which binds to the glycosylated chains of the proteins while the protein-binding site for the polysaccharide remains free. Each polysaccharide was fractionated into bound and unbound fractions either for ATIII or HCII. The eluted fractions were tested for their ability to catalyse and interactions. The possible presence of a unique binding site for ATIII and HCII, on each sulphated polysaccharide, was also studied.  相似文献   

16.
Oligosaccharides of well-defined molecular size were prepared from heparin by nitrous acid depolymerization, affinity chromatography on immobilized antithrombin III (see footnote on Nomenclature) and gel chromatography on Sephadex G-50. High affinity (for antithrombin III) octa-, deca-, dodeca-, tetradeca-, hexadeca- and octadeca-saccharides were prepared, as well as oligosaccharides of larger size than octadecasaccharide. The inhibition of Factor Xa by antithrombin III was greatly accelerated by all of these oligosaccharides, the specific anti-Factor Xa activity being invariably greater than 1300 units/mumol. The anti-Factor Xa activity of the decasaccharide was not significantly decreased in the presence of platelet factor 4, even at high platelet factor 4/oligosaccharide ratios. Measurable but incomplete neutralization of the anti-Factor Xa activities of the tetradeca- and hexadeca-saccharides was observed, and complete neutralization of octadeca- and larger oligo-saccharides was achieved with excess platelet factor 4. The octa-, deca-, dodeca-, tetradeca- and hexadeca-saccharides had negligible effect on the inhibition of thrombin by antithrombin III, whereas specific anti-thrombin activity was expressed by the octadeca-saccharide and by the larger oligosaccharides. An octadecasaccharide is therefore the smallest heparin fragment (prepared by nitrous acid depolymerization) that can accelerate thrombin inhibition by antithrombin III. The anti-thrombin activities of the octadecasaccharide and larger oligosaccharides were more readily neutralized by platelet factor 4 than were their anti-Factor Xa activities. These findings are compatible with two alternative mechanisms for the action of platelet factor 4, both involving the binding of the protein molecule adjacent to the antithrombin III-binding site. Such binding results in either steric interference with the formation of antithrombin III-proteinase complexes or in displacement of the antithrombin III molecule from the heparin chain.  相似文献   

17.
Antithrombin III exists in plasma as major and minor isoforms differing in affinity for heparin. The nature of the binding of each purified isoform to immobilized heparins was investigated. Unfractionated, mixed-affinity heparin bound each isoform with both high affinity and concentration-dependent low affinity. The isoforms were resolved when filtered through low-affinity heparin (heparin repeatedly passed over immobilized antithrombin III) columns. Following chemical modification of a specific tryptophan residue required for heparin binding, each isoform failed to bind to either low-affinity or mixed-affinity heparin-agarose, but elution of the modified higher-affinity isoform was retarded on both gels. Because the modified lower-affinity isoform eluted with the similarly sized bovine serum albumin in these experiments, the difference in isoform affinity for heparin appears to be the result of a unique, secondary heparin-binding site in the higher-affinity isoform that can bind a heparin site with low affinity for antithrombin III. This interpretation was supported by the chromatographic behavior of the isoforms on mixed-affinity agarose during reverse gradient elution. Two other populations of each of the tryptophan-modified isoforms were identified. Since these isoforms bound tightly to mixed-affinity heparin-agarose but eluted at lower salt concentrations than the corresponding unmodified isoforms, both isoforms may contain additional secondary sites that interact weakly with heparin. A general model of heparin-antithrombin III interaction is proposed in which a high-affinity heparin site initially interacts with a primary site on antithrombin III. The subsequent conformational change leads to a cooperative, entropy-driven association between secondary sites on the protein and low-affinity sites on heparin, stabilizing antithrombin III in its activated form.  相似文献   

18.
Binding of platelet factor 4 to heparin oligosaccharides.   总被引:4,自引:1,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Heparin fractions of differing Mr (7800-18 800) prepared from commercial heparin by gel filtration and affinity chromatography on immobilized anti-thrombin III had specific activities when determined by anti-Factor Xa and anti-thrombin assays that ranged from 228 to 448 units/mg. The anti-Factor Xa activity of these fractions could be readily and totally neutralized by increasing concentrations of platelet factor 4 (PF4). That these fractions bound to immobilized PF4 was indicated by the complete binding under near physiological conditions of 3H-labelled unfractionated commercial heparin. An anti-thrombin III-binding oligosaccharide preparation (containing predominantly eight to ten saccharide units), prepared by degradation of heparin with HNO2 had high (800 units/mg) anti-Factor Xa, but negligible anti-thrombin, specific activity. The anti-Factor Xa activity of this material could not be readily neutralized by PF4, and the 3H-labelled oligosaccharides did not completely bind to immobilized PF4. A heterogeneous anti-thrombin III-binding preparation containing upwards of 16 saccharides had anti-thrombin specific activity of just less than one-half the anti-Factor Xa specific activity. This material was completely bound to immobilized PF4 and was eluted with similar concentrations of NaCl to those that were required to elute unfractionated heparins from these columns. Furthermore, increasing concentrations of PF4 neutralized the anti-Factor Xa activity of this material in a manner similar to that of unfractionated heparin. It is concluded that heparin oligosaccharides require saccharide units in addition to the anti-thrombin III-binding sequence in order to fully interact with PF4.  相似文献   

19.
An hereditary abnormal antithrombin III (ATIII Geneva) with defective heparin cofactor activity was characterized by DNA single strand amplification and subsequent direct sequencing. ATIII Geneva was found to have a G to A transition in Exon IIIa leading to an Arg-129 to Gln mutation. This amino acid is part of the ATIII region comprising residues 114-154, which contains the highest proportion of basic residues (Arg or Lys), and is known from chemical modification studies to be involved in heparin binding. The variant protein did not bind heparin-Sepharose and was isolated from the propositus plasma by immunoaffinity chromatography. High affinity (for ATIII) heparin had only a minimal effect on thrombin and activated factor X inhibition by the purified abnormal ATIII. Taken together, these results demonstrate an important role for Arg-129 in the binding and interaction of ATIII with heparin of high affinity. We propose that a cooperation between Lys-125, Arg-129, Lys-136, and Arg-47 exposed at the surface of the inhibitor allows the binding of the essential pentasaccharide domain of heparin which is specific for the ATIII interaction.  相似文献   

20.
A peptide model for the heparin binding site of antithrombin III (ATIII) was synthesized to elucidate the structural consequences of heparin binding. This peptide [ATIII(123-139)] and a sequence-permuted analogue (ATIII random) showed similar conformational behavior (as analyzed by circular dichroism spectroscopy) in aqueous and organic media. In the presence of heparin, however, the peptide ATIII(123-139) assumed a stable conformation, whereas peptide ATIII random did not. Complex formation was saturable and sensitive to salt. The ATIII(123-139)-heparin complex contained beta-structure, rather than helical structure. This finding is incompatible with current models of heparin binding and suggests that heparin binding may induce nonnative structures at the binding site which could, in turn, lead to activation of ATIII. The peptide ATIII(123-139) was able to inhibit the binding of ATIII by heparin, consistent with the notion that this peptide may be a model for the heparin binding site.  相似文献   

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