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1.
The importance of 3-O- and 6-O-sulfated glucosamine residues within the heparin octasaccharide iduronic acid(1)----N-acetylglucosamine 6-O-sulfate(2)----glucuronic acid(3)----N-sulfated glucosamine 3,6-di-O-sulfate(4)----iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate(5)----N-sulfated glucosamine 6-O-sulfate(6)----iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate(7)----anhydromannitol 6-O-sulfate(8) was determined by comparing with synthetic tetra- and penta-saccharides its ability to bind human antithrombin. The octasaccharide had an affinity for antithrombin of 1 X 10(-8) M (10.2 kcal/mol) measured by intrinsic fluorescence enhancement at 6 degrees C. The synthetic pentasaccharide, consisting of residues 2-6, had an affinity of 3 X 10(-8) M (9.6 kcal/mol). The same pentasaccharide, except lacking the 3-O-sulfate on residue 4, had an affinity of 5 X 10(-4) M (4.5 kcal/mol) measured by equilibrium dialysis. The tetrasaccharide, consisting of residues 2-5, bound antithrombin with an affinity of 5 X 10(-6) M (6.8 kcal/mol). The tetrasaccharide, consisting of residues 3-6, had an affinity of 5 X 10(-5) M (5.5 kcal/mol). Since the loss of either the 6-O-sulfated residue 2 or the 3-O-sulfate of residue 4 results in a 4-5 kcal/mol or a 40-50% loss in binding energy of the pentasaccharide, these two residues must be the major contributors to the binding and must be linked to the biologic activity of the octasaccharide.  相似文献   

2.
We have isolated from nitrous acid cleavage products of heparin two major octasaccharide fragments which bind with high affinity to human antithrombin. Octasaccharide S, with the predominant structure iduronic acid----N-acetylglucosamine 6-O-sulfate----glucuronic acid-----N-sulfated glucosamine 3,6-di-O-sulfate----iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate----N-sulfated glucosamine 6-O-sulfate----iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate----anhydromannitol 6-O-sulfate, is sensitive to cleavage by Flavobacterium heparinase as well as platelet heparitinase and binds to antithrombin with a dissociation constant of (5-15) X 10(-8) M. Octasaccharide R, with the predominant structure iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate----N-sulfated glucosamine 6-O-sulfate----iduronic acid----N-acetylglucosamine 6-O-sulfate----glucuronic acid----N-sulfated glucosamine 3,6-di-O-sulfate----iduronic acid 2-O-sulfate----anhydromannitol 6-O-sulfate, is resistant to degradation by both enzymes and binds antithrombin with a dissociation constant of (4-18) X 10(-7) M. The occurrence of a 15-17% replacement of N-sulfated glucosamine 3,6-di-O-sulfate with N-sulfated glucosamine 3-O-sulfate and a 10-12% replacement of iduronic acid with glucuronic acid in both octasaccharides indicates that these substitutions have little or no effect on the binding of the oligosaccharides to the protease inhibitor. When bound to antithrombin, both octasaccharides produce a 40% enhancement in the intrinsic fluorescence of the protease inhibitor and a rate of human factor Xa inhibition of 5 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 as monitored by stopped-flow fluorometry. This suggests that the conformation of antithrombin in the region of the factor Xa binding site is similar when the protease inhibitor is complexed with either octasaccharide.  相似文献   

3.
B A Owen  W G Owen 《Biochemistry》1990,29(40):9412-9417
Factor Xa modified by reductive methylation (greater than 92%) loses the capacity to bind heparin as determined both by gel chromatography and by sedimentation equilibrium ultracentrifugation. The kinetic properties of methylated factor Xa differ, with respect to KM and Vmax for a synthetic tripeptide substrate and for antithrombin III inhibition rate constants, from those of the unmodified enzyme. The 10,000-fold rate enhancement elicited by the addition of heparin to the antithrombin III inhibition reaction, however, is the same. The observed second-order rate constants (k"obs) for antithrombin III inhibition of factor Xa and methylated factor Xa are 3000 and 340 M-1 s-1, respectively, whereas k"obs values for the inhibition of factor Xa or methylated factor Xa with antithrombin III-heparin are 4 X 10(7) and 3 X 10(6) M-1 s-1, respectively. These findings provide direct evidence that the interaction of factor Xa with heparin is not involved in the heparin-enhanced inhibition of this enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
The inactivation of human coagulation factor Xa by the plasma proteinase inhibitors alpha 1-antitrypsin, antithrombin III and alpha 2-macroglobulin in purified systems was found to be accelerated by the divalent cations Ca2+, Mn2+ and Mg2+. The rate constant for the inhibition of factor Xa by antithrombin III rose from 2.62 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 in the absence of divalent cations to a maximum of 6.40 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 5 mM Ca2+, 8.10 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 5 mM Mn2+, with a slight decrease in rate at higher cation concentrations. Mg2+ caused a gradual rise in rate constant to 5.65 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 20 mM. The rate constant for the inhibition of factor Xa by alpha 1-antitrypsin in the absence of divalent cations was 5.80 X 10(3) M-1 X min-1. Ca2+ increased the rate to 1.50 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 5 mM and Mn2+ to 2.40 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 6 mM. The rate constant for these cations again decreased at higher concentrations. Mg2+ caused a gradual rise in rate constant to 1.08 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 10 mM. The rate constant for the factor Xa-alpha 2-macroglobulin reaction was raised from 6.70 X 10(3) M-1 X min-1 in the absence of divalent cations to a maximum of 4.15 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 4 mM Ca2+, with a decrease to 3.05 X 10(4) M-1 at 10 mM. These increases in reaction rate were correlated to the binding of divalent cations to factor Xa by studying changes in the intrinsic fluorescence and dimerization of factor Xa. The changes in fluorescence suggested a conformational change in factor Xa which may be responsible for the increased rate of reaction, whilst the decrease in rate constant at higher concentrations of Ca2+ and Mn2+ may be due to factor Xa dimerization.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of heparin fractions of various Mr, with high affinity for antithrombin III, on the kinetics of the reaction between factor Xa and antithrombin III have been studied using purified human proteins. Each of the heparin fractions, which varied between pentasaccharide and Mr 32,000, accelerated the inhibition of factor Xa although an increasing rate of inhibition was observed with increasing Mr. The chemically synthesized pentasaccharide preparation (Mr 1714) gave a maximum inhibition rate constant of 1.2 X 10(7) M-1 X min-1, compared with 6.3 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 in the absence of heparin, and this rose progressively to 4.2 X 10(8) M-1 X min-1 with the two fractions of highest Mr (22,500 and 32,000). The 35-fold difference in inhibition rates observed with the high-affinity fractions was virtually abolished by the presence of 0.3 M-NaCl. The disparity in these rates of inhibition was shown to be due to a change in the Km for factor Xa when a two-substrate model of heparin catalysis was used. The Km for factor Xa rose from 28 nM for the fraction of Mr 32,000 to 770 nM for the pentasaccharide, whilst 0.3 M-NaCl also caused an increase in Km with the high-Mr fraction. These data suggest that the increased rates of inhibition observed with heparins of higher Mr may be due to an involvement of heparin binding to factor Xa as well as to antithrombin III.  相似文献   

6.
Biosynthesis of heparin. O-sulfation of the antithrombin-binding region   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The antithrombin-binding region in heparin is a pentasaccharide sequence with the predominant structure GlcNAc(6-OSO3)-GlcA-GlcNSO3(3,6-di-OSO3)-IdoA -(2-OSO3)-GlcNSO3(6-OSO3) (where GlcA and IdoA represent D-glucuronic and L-iduronic acid, respectively), in which the 3-O-sulfate residue on the internal glucosaminyl unit is a marker group for this particular region of the polysaccharide molecule. A heparin octasaccharide which contained the above pentasaccharide sequence was N/O-desulfated and re-N-sulfated and was then incubated with adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phospho[35S]sulfate in the presence of a microsomal fraction from mouse mastocytoma tissue. Fractionation of the resulting 35S-labeled octasaccharide on antithrombin-Sepharose yielded a high affinity fraction that accounted for approximately 2% of the total incorporated label. Structural analysis of this fraction indicated that the internal glucosamine unit of the pentasaccharide sequence was 3-O-35S-sulfated, whereas both adjacent glucosamine units carried 6-O-[35S]sulfate groups. In contrast, the fractions with low affinity for antithrombin (approximately 98% of incorporated 35S) showed no consistent O-35S sulfation pattern and essentially lacked glucosaminyl 3-O-[35S]sulfate groups. It is suggested that the 3-O-sulfation reaction concludes the formation of the antithrombin-binding region. This proposal was corroborated in a similar experiment using a synthetic pentasaccharide with the structure GlcNSO3(6-OSO3)-GlcA-GlcNSO3(6-OSO3)-Id oA (2-OSO3)-GlcNSO3(6-OSO3) as sulfate acceptor. This molecule corresponds to a functional antithrombin-binding region but for the lack of a 3-O-sulfate group at the internal glucosamine unit. The 35S-labeled pentasaccharide recovered after incubation bound with high affinity to antithrombin-Sepharose and contained a 3-O-[35S]sulfate group at the internal glucosamine residue as the only detectable labeled component. The use of this pentasaccharide substrate along with the affinity matrix provides a highly specific assay for the 3-O-sulfotransferase.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Structural and functional properties of alpha-protease nexin I (alpha-PNI) expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells were studied. All three cysteines were in the reduced form, showing that the potential disulfide bridge between residues Cys117 and Cys131 was not formed. Heparin association rate enhancements were from ka = 8.3 x 10(5) to 0.7-1.6 x 10(9) M-1 s-1 for the interaction of PNI with thrombin, from ka = 5.1 x 10(3) to 3.5 x 10(5) M-1 s-1 for interaction with Factor Xa, and from ka = 2.2 x 10(6) to 1.0 x 10(7) M-1 s-1 for interaction with trypsin; there was no rate enhancement of the plasmin interaction (ka = 1.0 x 10(5) M-1 s-1). The minimal heparin pentasaccharide had no effect on these interactions. Cleavage of the reactive center loop of PNI by three different proteases gave the typical stressed to relaxed change in thermal stability, but unlike with antithrombin III, there was no loss of heparin affinity. A similar difference from antithrombin was that PNI-thrombin complexes retained normal heparin affinity. These results are compatible with a role for protease nexin I as a cell-associated thrombin inhibitor that remains bound to the cell surface even after complexing with the protease, as compared with the role of antithrombin III as a circulating inhibitor of thrombin that becomes activated on binding to the microvasculature and is released on complex formation.  相似文献   

9.
The kinetics of alpha-factor Xa inhibition by antithrombin III (AT) were studied in the absence and presence of heparin (H) with high affinity for antithrombin by stopped-flow fluorometry at I 0.3, pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C, using the fluorescence probe p-aminobenzamidine (P) and intrinsic protein fluorescence to monitor the reactions. Active site binding of p-aminobenzamidine to factor Xa was characterized by a 200-fold enhancement and 4-nm blue shift of the probe fluorescence emission spectrum (lambda max 372 nm), 29-nm red shift of the excitation spectrum (lambda max 322 nm), and dissociation constant (KD) of about 80 microM. Under pseudo-first order conditions [( AT]0, [H]0, [P]0 much greater than [Xa]0), the observed factor Xa inactivation rate constant (kobs) measured by p-aminobenzamidine displacement or residual enzymatic activity increased linearly with the "effective" antithrombin concentration (i.e. corrected for probe competition) up to 300 microM in the absence of heparin, indicating a simple bimolecular process with a rate constant of 2.1 x 10(3) M-1 s-1. In the presence of heparin, a similar linear dependence of kobs on effective AT.H complex concentration was found up to 25 microM whether the reaction was followed by probe displacement or the quenching of AT.H complex protein fluorescence due to heparin dissociation, consistent with a bimolecular reaction between AT.H complex and free factor Xa with a 300-fold enhanced rate constant of 7 x 10(5) M-1 s-1. Above 25 microM AT.H complex, an increasing dead time displacement of p-aminobenzamidine and a downward deviation of kobs from the initial linear dependence on AT.H complex concentration were found, reflecting the saturation of an intermediate Xa.AT.H complex with a KD of 200 microM and a limiting rate of Xa-AT product complex formation of 140 s-1. Kinetic studies at catalytic heparin concentrations yielded a kcat/Km for factor Xa at saturating antithrombin of 7 x 10(5) M-1 s-1 in agreement with the bimolecular rate constant obtained in single heparin turnover experiments. These results demonstrate that 1) the accelerating effect of heparin on the AT/Xa reaction is at least partly due to heparin promoting the ordered assembly of antithrombin and factor Xa in an intermediate ternary complex and that 2) heparin catalytic turnover is limited by the rate of conversion of the ternary complex intermediate to the product Xa-AT complex with heparin dissociation occurring either concomitant with this step or in a subsequent faster step.  相似文献   

10.
We have determined the rate constants of inactivation of factor Xa and thrombin by antithrombin III/heparin during the process of prothrombin activation. The second-order rate constant of inhibition of factor Xa alone by antithrombin III as determined by using the synthetic peptide substrate S-2337 was found to be 1.1 X 10(6) M-1 min-1. Factor Xa in prothrombin activation mixtures that contained prothrombin, and either saturating amounts of factor Va or phospholipid (20 mol % dioleoylphosphatidylserine/80 mol % dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, 10 microM), was inhibited by antithrombin III with a second-order rate constant that was essentially the same: 1.2 X 10(6) M-1 min-1. When both factor Va and phospholipid were present during prothrombin activation, factor Xa inhibition by antithrombin III was reduced about 10-fold, with a second-order rate constant of 1.3 X 10(5) M-1 min-1. Factor Xa in the prothrombin activation mixture that contained both factor Va and phospholipid was even more protected from inhibition by the antithrombin III-heparin complex. The first-order rate constants of these reactions at 200 nM antithrombin III and normalized to heparin at 1 microgram/mL were 0.33 and 9.5 min-1 in the presence and absence of factor Va and phospholipid, respectively. When the prothrombin concentration was varied widely around the Km for prothrombin, this had no effect on the first-order rate constants of inhibition. It is our conclusion that factor Xa when acting in prothrombinase on prothrombin is profoundly protected from inhibition by antithrombin III in the absence as well as in the presence of heparin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
We have previously shown that exosites in antithrombin outside the P6-P3' reactive loop region become available upon heparin activation to promote rapid inhibition of the target proteases, factor Xa and factor IXa. To identify these exosites, we prepared six antithrombin-alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor chimeras in which antithrombin residues 224-286 and 310-322 that circumscribe a region surrounding the reactive loop on the inhibitor surface were replaced in 10-16-residue segments with the homologous segments of alpha1-proteinase inhibitor. All chimeras bound heparin with a high affinity similar to wild-type, underwent heparin-induced fluorescence changes indicative of normal conformational activation, and were able to form SDS-stable complexes with thrombin, factor Xa, and factor IXa and inhibit these proteases with stoichiometries minimally altered from those of wild-type antithrombin. With only one exception, conformational activation of the chimeras with a heparin pentasaccharide resulted in normal approximately 100-300-fold enhancements in reactivity with factor Xa and factor IXa. The exception was the chimera in which residues 246-258 were replaced, corresponding to strand 3 of beta-sheet C, which showed little or no enhancement of its reactivity with these proteases following pentasaccharide activation. By contrast, all chimeras including the strand 3C chimera showed essentially wild-type reactivities with thrombin after pentasaccharide activation as well as normal full-length heparin enhancements in reactivity with all proteases due to heparin bridging. These findings suggest that antithrombin exosites responsible for enhancing the rates of factor Xa and factor IXa inhibition in the conformationally activated inhibitor lie in strand 3 of beta-sheet C of the serpin.  相似文献   

13.
The influence of heparin on the inhibition of factor Xa has been studied under conditions where factor Xa is bound to collagen-thrombin-stimulated platelets to form the prothrombinase complex. Unfractionated heparin was found to cause a concentration-dependent acceleration of the inhibition of the platelet prothrombinase complex up to a maximum rate constant of 4.1 X 10(7) M-1 X min-1 at heparin concentrations of 0.2 microM and above. This is equivalent to a 4800-fold acceleration over the rate constant for the inhibition in the absence of heparin, and is 6.8-fold lower than the rate constant for the inhibition of uncomplexed factor Xa in the presence of saturating concentrations of heparin which was determined as 2.8 X 10(8) M-1 X min-1. The effects of three Mr fractions of heparin were also studied. These were a gel-filtered heparin of Mr 15000, a gel-filtered heparin of Mr 6000 and a heparin oligosaccharide (primarily 8-10 monosaccharide units) prepared by nitrous acid depolymerization, each with high affinity for antithrombin III. These fractions all accelerated the rate of the antithrombin III inhibition of the platelet prothrombinase complex, with maximum rate constants of 6.8 X 10(7), 1.4 X 10(7) and 9.8 X 10(6) M-1 X min-1, respectively. On comparison with the effect of these heparin fractions on the rate of inhibition of uncomplexed factor Xa a progressively increasing disparity between the rate of inhibition of uncomplexed and complexed factor Xa was observed, rising from 1.7-fold with the oligosaccharide to 6.8-fold with the unfractionated heparin. A possible mechanism for this differential activity between uncomplexed and complexed factor Xa with the various heparin fractions is discussed in terms of an involvement of heparin binding to factor Xa.  相似文献   

14.
Amidolytic assays have been developed to determine factor XIIa, factor XIa and plasma kallikrein in mixtures containing variable amounts of each enzyme. The commercially available chromogenic p-nitroanilide substrates Pro-Phe-Arg-NH-Np (S2302 or chromozym PK), Glp-Pro-Arg-NH-Np (S2366), Ile-Glu-(piperidyl)-Gly-Arg-NH-Np (S2337), and Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg-NH-Np (S2222) were tested for their suitability as substrates in these assays. The kinetic parameters for the conversion of S2302, S2222, S2337 and S2366 by beta factor XIIa, factor XIa and plasma kallikrein indicate that each active enzyme exhibits considerable activity towards a number of these substrates. This precludes direct quantification of the individual enzymes when large amounts of other activated contact factors are present. Several serine protease inhibitors have been tested for their ability to inhibit those contact factors selectively that may interfere with the factor tested for. Soybean trypsin inhibitor very efficiently inhibited kallikrein, inhibited factor XIa at moderate concentrations, but did not affect the amidolytic activity of factor XIIa. Therefore, this inhibitor can be used to abolish a kallikrein and factor XIa contribution in a factor XIIa assay. We also report the rate constants of inhibition of contact activation factors by three different chloromethyl ketones. D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl was moderately active against contact factors (k = 2.2 X 10(3) M-1 s-1 at pH 8.3) but showed no differences in specifity. D-Phe-Phe-Arg-CH2Cl was a very efficient inhibitor of plasma kallikrein (k = 1.2 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 at pH 8.3) whereas it slowly inhibited factor XIIa (k = 1.4 X 10(3) M-1 s-1) and factor XIa (k = 0.11 X 10(3) M-1 s-1). Also Dns-Glu-Gly-Arg-CH2Cl was more reactive towards kallikrein (k = 1.6 X 10(4) M-1 s-1) than towards factor XIIa (k = 4.6 X 10(2) M-1 s-1) and factor XIa (k = 0.6 X 10(2) M-1 s-1). Since Phe-Phe-Arg-CH2Cl is highly specific for plasma kallikrein it can be used in a factor XIa assay selectively to inhibit kallikrein. Based on the catalytic efficiencies of chromogenic substrate conversion and the inhibition characteristics of serine protease inhibitors and chloromethyl ketones we were able to develop quantitative assays for factor XIIa, factor XIa and kallikrein in mixtures of contact activation factors.  相似文献   

15.
Protease nexin. Properties and a modified purification procedure   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
The present paper describes chemical and functional properties of protease nexin, a serine protease inhibitor released from cultured human fibroblasts. It is shown that protease nexin is actually synthesized by fibroblasts and represents about 1% of their secreted protein. Analysis of the amino acid composition of purified protease nexin indicates that it is evolutionarily related to antithrombin III and heparin cofactor II. Protease nexin contains approximately 6% carbohydrate, with 2.3% amino sugar, 1.1% neutral sugar, and 3.0% sialic acid. The Mr calculated from equilibrium sedimentation analysis is 43,000. Protease nexin is a broad specificity inhibitor of trypsin-like serine proteases. It reacts rapidly with trypsin (kassoc = 4.2 +/- 0.4 X 10(6) M-1 s-1), thrombin (kassoc = 6.0 +/- 1.3 X 10(5) M-1 s-1), urokinase (kassoc = 1.5 +/- 0.1 X 10(5) M-1 s-1), and plasmin (kassoc = 1.3 +/- 0.1 X 10(5) M-1 s-1), and slowly inhibits Factor Xa and the gamma subunit of nerve growth factor but does not inhibit chymotrypsin-like proteases or leukocyte elastase. In the presence of heparin, protease nexin inhibits thrombin at a nearly diffusion-controlled rate. Two heparin affinity classes of protease nexin can be detected. The present characterization pertains to the fraction of protease nexin having the higher affinity for heparin. The low affinity material, which is the minor fraction, is lost during purification.  相似文献   

16.
Alignment of the heparin-activated serpins indicates the presence of two binding sites for heparin: a small high-affinity site on the D-helix corresponding in size to the minimal pentasaccharide heparin, and a longer contiguous low-affinity site extending to the reactive center pole of the molecule. Studies of the complexing of antithrombin and its variants with heparin fractions and with reactive center loop peptides including intermolecular loop-sheet polymers all support a 3-fold mechanism for the heparin activation of antithrombin. Binding to the pentasaccharide site induces a conformational change as measured by circular dichroism. Accompanying this, the reactive center becomes more accessible to proteolytic cleavage and there is a 100-fold increase in the kass for factor Xa but only a 10-fold increase for thrombin, to 6.4 x 10(4) M-1 s-1. To obtain a 100-fold increase in the kass for thrombin requires in addition a 4:1 molar ratio of disaccharide to neutralize the charge on the extended low-affinity site. Full activation requires longer heparin chains in order to stabilize the ternary complex between antithrombin and thrombin. Thus, addition of low-affinity but high molecular weight heparin in conjunction with pentasaccharide gives an overall kass of 2.7 x 10(6) M-1 s-1, close to that of maximal heparin activation.  相似文献   

17.
Heparan sulfate (HS) chains interact with various growth and differentiation factors and morphogens, and the most interactions occur on the specific regions of the chains with certain monosaccharide sequences and sulfation patterns. Here we generated a library of octasaccharides by semienzymatic methods by using recombinant HS 2-O-sulfotransferase and HS 6-O-sulfotransferase, and we have made a systematic investigation of the specific binding structures for various heparin-binding growth factors. An octasaccharide (Octa-I, DeltaHexA-GlcNSO(3)-(HexA-GlcNSO(3))(3)) was prepared by partial heparitinase digestion from completely desulfated N-resulfated heparin. 2-O- and 6-O-sulfated Octa-I were prepared by enzymatically transferring one to three 2-O-sulfate groups and one to three 6-O-sulfate groups per molecule, respectively, to Octa-I. Another octasaccharide containing 3 units of HexA(2SO(4))-GlcNSO(3)(6SO(4)) was prepared also from heparin. This octasaccharide library was subjected to affinity chromatography for interactions with fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-2, -4, -7, -8, -10, and -18, hepatocyte growth factor, bone morphogenetic protein 6, and vascular endothelial growth factor, respectively. Based upon differences in the affinity to those octasaccharides, the growth factors could be classified roughly into five groups: group 1 needed 2-O-sulfate but not 6-O-sulfate (FGF-2); group 2 needed 6-O-sulfate but not 2-O-sulfate (FGF-10); group 3 had the affinity to both 2-O-sulfate and 6-O-sulfate but preferred 2-O-sulfate (FGF-18, hepatocyte growth factor); group 4 required both 2-O-sulfate and 6-O-sulfate (FGF-4, FGF-7); and group 5 hardly bound to any octasaccharides (FGF-8, bone morphogenetic protein 6, and vascular endothelial growth factor). The approach using the oligosaccharide library may be useful to define specific structures required for binding to various heparin-binding proteins. Octasaccharides with the high affinity to FGF-2 and FGF-10 had the activity to release them, respectively, from their complexes with HS. Thus, the library may provide new reagents to specifically regulate bindings of the growth factors to HS.  相似文献   

18.
1. Five and four tryptophan residues in Taka-amylase A [EC 3.2.1.1] of A. oryzae (TAA) were modified with dimethyl(2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl)-sulfonium bromide (K-IWS) in the absence and the presence of 15% maltose (substrate analog), respectively. Only one tryptophan residue was modified with dimethyl(2-methoxy-5-nitrobenzyl)-sulfonium bromide (K-IIWS) irrespective of the presence or absence of maltose. Kinetic parameters (molecular activity, k0, Michaelis constant, Km, and inhibitor constant, Ki) of the enzyme modified with K-IWS and K-IIWS were determined. The k0 value decreased with increase in the number of modified residues, but Km and Ki values and the type of inhibition were not altered by the modification. 2. The fluorescence quenching reaction of TAA with N-bromosuccinimide (NBS) proceeded in three phases. The second-order rate constants of the three phases were determined to be (4.3 +/- 0.5) x 10(5) M-1 . s-1, (2.1 +/- 0.3) x 10(3) M-1 . s-1 and (1.7 +/- 0.2) x 10(2) M-1 . s-1, respectively. In the presence of maltose, the first phase was further separated into two phases with rate constants of (4.6 +/- 0.6) x 10(6) M-1 . s-1 and (6.9 +/- 1.1) x 10(4) M-1 . s-1, respectively. On the basis of the results, it is estimated that five out of nine tryptophan residues are accessible to the solvent and among them, two tryptophan residues are substantially exposed: one is located in the maltose binding site near the catalytic site (its modification affects the catalytic function), and the other exists on the enzyme surface far from the active site.  相似文献   

19.
The kinetics of the interaction between the 50 S subunits (R) of bacterial ribosomes and the antibiotics virginiamycin S (VS), virginiamycin M (VM), and erythromycin have been studied by stopped flow fluorimetric analysis, based on the enhancement of VS fluorescence upon its binding to the 50 S ribosomal subunit. Virginiamycin components M and S exhibit a synergistic effect in vivo, which is characterized in vitro by a 5- to 10-fold increase of the affinity of ribosomes for VS, and by the loss of the ability of erythromycin to displace VS subsequent to the conformational change (from R to R*) produced by transient contact of ribosomes with VM. Our kinetic studies show that the VM-induced increase of the ribosomal affinity for VS (K*VS = 25 X 10(6) M-1 instead of KVS = 5.5 X 10(6) M-1) is due to a decrease of the dissociation rate constant (k*-VS = 0.008 s-1 instead of 0.04 s-1). The association rate constant remains practically the same (k+VS approximately k*+VS = 2.8 X 10(5) M-1 s-1), irrespective of the presence of VM. VS and erythromycin bind competitively to ribosomes. This effect has been exploited to determine the dissociation rate constant of VS directly by displacement experiments from VS . 50 S complexes, and the association rate constant of erythromycin (k+Ery = 3.2 X 10(5) M-1 S-1) on the basis of competition experiments for binding of free erythromycin and VS to ribosomes. By making use of the change in competition behavior of erythromycin and VS, after interaction of ribosomes with VM, the conformational change induced by VM has been explored. Within the experimentally available concentration region, the catalytic effect of VM has been shown to be coupled to its binding kinetics, and the association rate constant of VM has been determined (k+VM = 1.4 X 10(4) M-1 S-1). Evidence is presented for a low affinity binding of erythromycin (K*Ery approximately 3.3 X 10(4) M-1) to ribosomes altered by contact with VM. A model involving a sequence of 5 reactions has been proposed to explain the replacement of ribosome-bound erythromycin by VS upon contact of 50 S subunits with VM.  相似文献   

20.
S P Jordan  L Waxman  D E Smith  G P Vlasuk 《Biochemistry》1990,29(50):11095-11100
Tick anticoagulant peptide (TAP) is a 60 amino acid protein which is a highly specific inhibitor of human blood coagulation factor Xa (fXa) isolated from the tick Ornithodoros moubata [Waxman, L., Smith, D. E., Arcuri, K. E., & Vlasuk, G. P. (1990) Science 248, 593-596]. Due to the limited quantities of native TAP, a recombinant version of TAP produced in Saccharomyces cerevisiae was used for a detailed kinetic analysis of the inhibition interaction with human fXa. rTAP was determined to be a reversible, slow, tight-binding inhibitor of fXa, displaying a competitive type of inhibition. The binding of rTAP to fXa is stoichiometric with a dissociation constant of (1.8 +/- 0.02) x 10(-10) M, a calculated association rate constant of (2.85 +/- 0.07) x 10(6) M-1 s-1, and a dissociation rate constant of (0.554 +/- 0.178) x 10(-3) s-1. Binding studies show that 35S-rTAP binds only to fXa and not to DFP-treated fXa or zymogen factor X, which suggests the active site of fXa is required for rTAP inhibition. That rTAP is a unique serine proteinase inhibitor is suggested both by its high specificity for its target enzyme, fXa, and also by its unique structure.  相似文献   

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