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1.
The thrombin mutant W215A/E217A features a drastically impaired catalytic activity toward chromogenic and natural substrates but efficiently activates the anticoagulant protein C in the presence of thrombomodulin. As the remarkable anticoagulant properties of this mutant continue to be unraveled in preclinical studies, we solved the x-ray crystal structures of its free form and its complex with the active site inhibitor H-d-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH(2)Cl (PPACK). The PPACK-bound structure of W215A/E217A is identical to the structure of the PPACK-bound slow form of thrombin. On the other hand, the structure of the free form reveals a collapse of the 215-217 strand that crushes the primary specificity pocket. The collapse results from abrogation of the stacking interaction between Phe-227 and Trp-215 and the polar interactions of Glu-217 with Thr-172 and Lys-224. Other notable changes are a rotation of the carboxylate group of Asp-189, breakage of the H-bond between the catalytic residues Ser-195 and His-57, breakage of the ion pair between Asp-222 and Arg-187, and significant disorder in the 186- and 220-loops that define the Na(+) site. These findings explain the impaired catalytic activity of W215A/E217A and demonstrate that the analysis of the molecular basis of substrate recognition by thrombin and other proteases requires crystallization of both the free and bound forms of the enzyme.  相似文献   

2.
Na(+) binding near the primary specificity pocket of thrombin promotes the procoagulant, prothrombotic, and signaling functions of the enzyme. The effect is mediated allosterically by a communication between the Na(+) site and regions involved in substrate recognition. Using a panel of 78 Ala mutants of thrombin, we have mapped the allosteric core of residues that are energetically linked to Na(+) binding. These residues are Asp-189, Glu-217, Asp-222, and Tyr-225, all in close proximity to the bound Na(+). Among these residues, Asp-189 shares with Asp-221 the important function of transducing Na(+) binding into enhanced catalytic activity. None of the residues of exosite I, exosite II, or the 60-loop plays a significant role in Na(+) binding and allosteric transduction. X-ray crystal structures of the Na(+)-free (slow) and Na(+)-bound (fast) forms of thrombin, free or bound to the active site inhibitor H-d-Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethyl-ketone, document the conformational changes induced by Na(+) binding. The slow --> fast transition results in formation of the Arg-187:Asp-222 ion pair, optimal orientation of Asp-189 and Ser-195 for substrate binding, and a significant shift of the side chain of Glu-192 linked to a rearrangement of the network of water molecules that connect the bound Na(+) to Ser-195 in the active site. The changes in the water network and the allosteric core explain the thermodynamic signatures linked to Na(+) binding and the mechanism of thrombin activation by Na(+). The role of the water network uncovered in this study establishes a new paradigm for the allosteric regulation of thrombin and other Na(+)-activated enzymes involved in blood coagulation and the immune response.  相似文献   

3.
A process of thrombin interaction with synthetic and natural substrates in the presence of Na+ ions has been analyzed in the survey. Molecular bases of this interaction have been presented, interrelation between the structure and function of thrombin has been noted; the nature of the unique site of its active centre which determines high thrombin affinity for the substrates and increase of its catalytic activity defined by the term of "specificity to univalent cations" have been considered in detail. Na+ ions play the role of allosteric effector in realization of two informational states of thrombin which penform, respectively, two fundamental and competing functions in the process of hemostasis. The molecular basis of the process of Na+ binding with thrombin is rather simple and depends only on the single site which importance for the enzyme function is marked by numerous investigations of a number of authors, and it is shown that Na(+)-binding site is distributed in the other zone of thrombin molecule as compared to exosites I and II, which do not take part in Na(+)-binding and allosteric transduction. Considerable attention was given to conformational conversions of a thrombin molecule caused by Na+ ions binding. It was shown that the transition slow <--> fast of the enzyme forms leads to formation of the ion pair Arg-187: Asp-222, optimal orientation of Asp-189 and Ser-195 for binding of substrates and considerable shift of the lateral chain Glu-192 determined by the disturbance of the lattice of water molecules which connects Na(+)-binding site with aminoacid Ser-195 of the active centre of the enzyme. New data have been presented which indicate that the changes in the lattice of water molecules and allosteric nucleus of Na(+)-binding site of the enzyme are the basic link of raising the affinity between the thrombin and substrate and mechanism of the enzyme activation by Na(+)-ions. The survey touches some problems of creation of allosteric inhibitors of thrombin which can take essential effect on Na(+)-binding site and favor stabilization of the anticoagulant slow-form of thrombin, and of enzyme rational mutants with selective specificity in respect of protein C which display effective and safe anticoagulant and antithrombotic effects in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
Thrombin is the ultimate protease of the blood clotting cascade and plays a major role in its own regulation. The ability of thrombin to exhibit both pro- and anti-coagulant properties has spawned efforts to turn thrombin into an anticoagulant for therapeutic purposes. This quest culminated in the identification of the E217K variant through scanning and saturation mutagenesis. The antithrombotic properties of E217K thrombin are derived from its inability to convert fibrinogen to a fibrin clot while maintaining its thrombomodulin-dependent ability to activate the anticoagulant protein C pathway. Here we describe the 2.5-A crystal structure of human E217K thrombin, which displays a dramatic restructuring of the geometry of the active site. Of particular interest is the repositioning of Glu-192, which hydrogen bonds to the catalytic Ser-195 and which results in the complete occlusion of the active site and the destruction of the oxyanion hole. Substrate binding pockets are further blocked by residues previously implicated in thrombin allostery. We have concluded that the E217K mutation causes the allosteric inactivation of thrombin by destabilizing the Na(+) binding site and that the structure thus may represent the Na(+)-free, catalytically inert "slow" form.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetic mechanism of Na(+) binding to thrombin was resolved by stopped-flow measurements of intrinsic fluorescence. Na(+) binds to thrombin in a two-step mechanism with a rapid phase occurring within the dead time of the spectrometer (<0.5 ms) followed by a single-exponential slow phase whose k(obs) decreases hyperbolically with increasing [Na(+)]. The rapid phase is due to Na(+) binding to the enzyme E to generate the E:Na(+) form. The slow phase is due to the interconversion between E(*) and E, where E(*) is a form that cannot bind Na(+). Temperature studies in the range from 5 to 35 degrees C show significant enthalpy, entropy, and heat capacity changes associated with both Na(+) binding and the E to E(*) transition. As a result, under conditions of physiologic temperature and salt concentrations, the E(*) form is negligibly populated (<1%) and thrombin is almost equally partitioned between the E (40%) and E:Na(+) (60%) forms. Single-site Phe mutations of all nine Trp residues of thrombin enabled assignment of the fluorescence changes induced by Na(+) binding mainly to Trp-141 and Trp-215, and to a lesser extent to Trp-148, Trp-207, and Trp-237. However, the fast phase of fluorescence increase is influenced to different extents by all Trp residues. The distribution of these residues over the entire thrombin surface demonstrates that Na(+) binding induces long-range effects on the structure of the enzyme as a whole, contrary to the conclusions drawn from recent structural studies. These findings elucidate the mechanism of Na(+) binding to thrombin and are relevant to other clotting factors and enzymes allosterically activated by monovalent cations.  相似文献   

6.
Crystal structure of the anticoagulant slow form of thrombin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Using the thrombin mutant R77aA devoid of the site of autoproteolytic degradation at exosite I, we have solved for the first time the structure of thrombin free of any inhibitors and effector molecules and stabilized in the Na(+)-free slow form. The slow form shows subtle differences compared with the currently available structures of the Na(+)-bound fast form that carry inhibitors at the active site or exosite I. The most notable differences are the displacement of Asp-189 in the S1 specificity pocket, a downward shift of the 190-193 strand, a rearrangement of the side chain of Glu-192, and a significant shift in the position of the catalytic Ser-195 that is no longer within H-bonding distance from His-57. The structure of the slow form explains the reduced specificity toward synthetic and natural substrates and suggests a molecular basis for its anticoagulant properties.  相似文献   

7.
Thrombin     
Thrombin is a Na+-activated, allosteric serine protease that plays opposing functional roles in blood coagulation. Binding of Na+ is the major driving force behind the procoagulant, prothrombotic and signaling functions of the enzyme, but is dispensable for cleavage of the anticoagulant protein C. The anticoagulant function of thrombin is under the allosteric control of the cofactor thrombomodulin. Much has been learned on the mechanism of Na+ binding and recognition of natural substrates by thrombin. Recent structural advances have shed light on the remarkable molecular plasticity of this enzyme and the molecular underpinnings of thrombin allostery mediated by binding to exosite I and the Na+ site. This review summarizes our current understanding of the molecular basis of thrombin function and allosteric regulation. The basic information emerging from recent structural, mutagenesis and kinetic investigation of this important enzyme is that thrombin exists in three forms, E*, E and E:Na+, that interconvert under the influence of ligand binding to distinct domains. The transition between the Na+ -free slow from E and the Na+ -bound fast form E:Na+ involves the structure of the enzyme as a whole, and so does the interconversion between the two Na+ -free forms E* and E. E* is most likely an inactive form of thrombin, unable to interact with Na + and substrate. The complexity of thrombin function and regulation has gained this enzyme pre-eminence as the prototypic allosteric serine protease. Thrombin is now looked upon as a model system for the quantitative analysis of biologically important enzymes.  相似文献   

8.
Thrombin participates in its own positive and negative feedback loops, and its allosteric state helps determine the hemostatic balance. Here we present the 1.8 A crystallographic structure of S195A thrombin in two conformational states: active site occupied and active site free. The active site-occupied form shows how thrombin can accommodate substrates, such as protein C. The active site-free form is in a previously unobserved closed conformation of thrombin, which satisfies all the conditions of the so-called "slow" form. A mechanism of allostery is revealed, which relies on the concerted movement of the disulphide bond between Cys168 and 182 and aromatic residues Phe227, Trp215, and Trp60d. These residues constitute an allosteric switch, which is flipped directly through sodium binding, resulting in the fast form with an open active site.  相似文献   

9.
Fibrin formation depends on the release of the two N-terminal fibrinopeptides A (FPA) from fibrinogen, and its formation is accompanied by an intermediate, alpha-profibrin, which lacks only one of the FPA. In this study, we confirm that the maximal levels of alpha-profibrin found over the course of thrombin reactions with human fibrinogen are only half of what would be expected if the first and second FPA were being released independently with equal rate constants. The rapidity of release of the fibrinopeptides by thrombin had been shown to depend on an allosteric transformation that is induced when Na(+) binds to a site defined by the 215-227 residues of thrombin, a transformation that results in the exposure of its fibrinogen-binding exosites transforming the thrombin from a slow to a fast acting form toward fibrinogen. When choline was substituted for sodium to transform thrombin to its slow form, the maximal levels of alpha-profibrin rose to those expected for independent release of the two FPA. Thus, it is only the fast thrombin that releases the second FPA fast, and that fast release only occurs when both FPA are present because of a partial coupling of its release with that of the first FPA. The release of the FPA from purified alpha-profibrin with the first FPA already missing is no faster than the release of any FPA. Surprisingly, we also found that slow thrombin became increasingly transformed to a fast form in the absence of sodium when the fibrinogen was elevated to high concentrations. This potentiation by concentrated fibrinogen also occurs with the recombinant mutant thrombin (Y225P), which is otherwise slow in both the presence and absence of Na(+). The potentiation of thrombin by fibrinogen must be short-lived so that the thrombin reverts to its slow acting form in the interim among encounters with other fibrinogen molecules in dilute fibrinogen solutions lacking Na(+), whereas at high fibrinogen concentrations the thrombin encounters other molecules before it reverts back to the slow form.  相似文献   

10.
Thrombin is a primary target for the development of novel anticoagulants, since it plays two important and opposite roles in hemostasis: procoagulant and anticoagulant. All thrombin functions are influenced by Na+ binding, which triggers the transition of this enzyme from an anticoagulant (slow) form to a procoagulant (fast) form. In previous studies, we have conveniently produced by chemical synthesis analogues of the N-terminal fragment 1-47 of hirudin HM2 containing noncoded amino acids and displaying up to approximately 2700-fold more potent antithrombin activity, comparable to that of full-length hirudin. In the work presented here, we have exploited the versatility of chemical synthesis to probe the structural and energetic properties of the S3 site of thrombin through perturbations introduced in the structure of hirudin fragment 1-47. In particular, we have investigated the effects of systematic replacement of Tyr3 with noncoded amino acids retaining the aromatic nucleus of Tyr, as well as similar hydrophobic and steric properties, but possessing different electronic (e.g., p-fluoro-, p-iodo-, or p-nitro-Phe), charge (p-aminomethyl-Phe), or conformational (homo-Phe) properties. Our results indicate that the affinity of fragment 1-47 for thrombin is proportional to the desolvation free energy change upon complex formation, and is inversely related to the electric dipole moment of the amino acid side chain at position 3 of hirudin. In this study, we have also identified the key features that are responsible for the preferential binding of hirudin to the procoagulant (fast) form of thrombin. Strikingly, shaving at position 3, by Tyr --> Ala exchange, abolishes the differences in the affinity for thrombin allosteric forms, whereas a bulkier side chain (e.g., beta-naphthylalanine) improves binding preferentially to the fast form. These results provide strong, albeit indirect, evidence that the procoagulant (fast) form of thrombin is in a more open and accessible conformation with respect to the less forgiving structure it acquires in the slow form. This view is also supported by the results of molecular dynamics simulations conducted for 18 ns on free thrombin in full explicit water, showing that after approximately 5 ns thrombin undergoes a significant conformational transition, from a more open conformation (which we propose can be related to the fast form) to a more compact and closed one (which we propose can be related to the slow form). This transition mainly involves the Trp148 and Trp60D loop, the S3 site, and the fibrinogen binding site, whereas the S1 site, the Na+-binding site, and the catalytic pocket remain essentially unchanged. In particular, our data indicate that the S3 site of the enzyme is less accessible to water in the putative slow form. This structural picture provides a reasonable molecular explanation for the fact that physiological substrates related to the procoagulant activity of thrombin (fibrinogen, thrombin receptor 1, and factor XIII) orient a bulky side chain into the S3 site of the enzyme. Taken together, our results can have important implications for the design of novel thrombin inhibitors, of practical utility in the treatment of coagulative disorders.  相似文献   

11.
Structural biology has recently advanced our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of activation and selectivity in monovalent cation activated enzymes. Here we report a 1.9 Angstrom resolution crystal structure of free thrombin, a Na(+) selective enzyme, in the presence of KCl. There are two molecules in the asymmetric unit, one with the cation site bound to K(+) and the other with this site free. The K(+)-bound form shows key differences compared with the Na(+)-bound structure that explain the different kinetics of activation. The cation-free form, on the other hand, assumes a conformation where the monovalent cation binding site is completely disordered, the S1 pocket is inaccessible to substrate and binding to exosite I is compromised by an unprecedented >20 Angstrom shift in the position of the autolysis loop. This form, named S(*), corresponds to the inactive Na(+)-free slow form identified by early kinetic studies. A simple model of thrombin allostery that incorporates the contribution of S(*) is proposed.  相似文献   

12.
Thrombin exists in two allosteric forms, slow (S) and fast (F), that recognize natural substrates and inhibitors with significantly different affinities. Because under physiologic conditions the two forms are almost equally populated, investigation of thrombin function must address the contribution from the S and F forms and the molecular origin of their differential recognition of ligands. Using a panel of 79 Ala mutants, we have mapped for the first time the epitopes of thrombin recognizing a macromolecular ligand, hirudin, in the S and F forms. Hirudin binding is a relevant model for the interaction of thrombin with fibrinogen and PAR1 and is likewise influenced by the allosteric S-->F transition. The epitopes are nearly identical and encompass two hot spots, one in exosite I and the other in the Na+ site at the opposite end of the protein. The higher affinity of the F form is due to the preferential interaction of hirudin with Lys-36, Leu-65, Thr-74, and Arg-75 in exosite I; Gly-193 in the oxyanion hole; and Asp-221 and Asp-222 in the Na+ site. Remarkably, no correlation is found between the energetic and structural involvements of thrombin residues in hirudin recognition, which invites caution in the analysis of protein-protein interactions in general.  相似文献   

13.
The specificity of thrombin for procoagulant and anticoagulant substrates is regulated allosterically by Na+. Ordered cleavage of prothrombin (ProT) at Arg320 by the prothrombinase complex generates proteolytically active, meizothrombin (MzT), followed by cleavage at Arg271 to produce thrombin and fragment 1.2. The alternative pathway of initial cleavage at Arg271 produces the inactive zymogen form, the prethrombin 2 (Pre 2).fragment 1.2 complex, which is cleaved subsequently at Arg320. Cleavage at Arg320 of ProT or prethrombin 1 (Pre 1) activates the catalytic site and the precursor form of exosite I (proexosite I). To determine the pathway of expression of Na+-(pro)exosite I linkage during ProT activation, the effects of Na+ on the affinity of fluorescein-labeled hirudin-(54-65) ([5F]Hir-(54-65)(SO-3)) for the zymogens, ProT, Pre 1, and Pre 2, and for the proteinases, MzT and MzT-desfragment 1 (MzT(-F1)) were quantitated. The zymogens showed no significant linkage between proexosite I and Na+, whereas cleavage at Arg320 caused the affinities of MzT and MzT(-F1) for [5F]Hir-(54-65)(SO-3) to be enhanced by Na+ 8- to 10-fold and 5- to 6-fold, respectively. MzT and MzT(-F1) showed kinetically different mechanisms of Na+ enhancement of chromogenic substrate hydrolysis. The results demonstrate for the first time that MzT is regulated allosterically by Na+. The results suggest that the distinctive procoagulant substrate specificity of MzT, in activating factor V and factor VIII on membranes, and the anticoagulant, membrane-modulated activation of protein C by MzT bound to thrombomodulin are regulated by Na+-induced allosteric transition. Further, the Na+ enhancement in MzT activity and exosite I affinity may function in directing the sequential ProT activation pathway by accelerating thrombin formation from the MzT fast form.  相似文献   

14.
Thrombin is the ultimate coagulation factor; it is the final protease generated in the blood coagulation cascade and is the effector of clot formation. Regulation of thrombin activity is thus of great relevance to determining the correct haemostatic balance, with dysregulation leading to bleeding or thrombosis. One of the most enigmatic and controversial regulators of thrombin activity is the monovalent cation Na+. When bound to Na+, thrombin adopts a 'fast' conformation which cleaves all procoagulant substrates more rapidly, and when free of Na+, thrombin reverts to a 'slow' state which preferentially activates the protein C anticoagulant pathway. Thus, Na+-binding allosterically modulates the activity of thrombin and helps determine the haemostatic balance. Over the last 30 years, there has been much research investigating the structural basis of thrombin allostery. Biochemical and mutagenesis studies established which regions and residues are involved in the slow-->fast conformational change, and recently several crystal structures of the putative slow form have been solved. In this article, the biochemical and crystallographic data are reviewed to see if we are any closer to understanding the conformational basis of the Na+ activation of thrombin.  相似文献   

15.
The tetradecapeptide Ac-D-F-L-A-E-G-G-G-V-R-G-P-R-V-OMe, which mimics residues 7f-20f of the A alpha-chain of human fibrinogen, has been co-crystallized with bovine thrombin from ammonium sulfate solutions in space group P2(1) with unit cell dimensions of a = 83.0 A, b = 89.4 A, c = 99.3 A, and beta = 106.6 degrees. Three crystallographically independent complexes were located in the asymmetric unit by molecular replacement using the native bovine thrombin structure as a model. The standard crystallographic R-factor is 0.167 at 2.3-A resolution. Excellent electron density could be traced for the decapeptide, beginning with Asp-7f and ending with Arg-16f in the active site of thrombin; the remaining 4 residues, which have been cleaved from the tetradecapeptide at the Arg-16f/Gly-17f bond, are not seen. Residues 7f-11f at the NH2 terminus of the peptide form a single turn of alpha-helix that is connected by Gly-12f, which has a positive phi angle, to an extended chain containing residues 13f-16f. The major specific interactions between the peptide and thrombin are 1) a hydrophobic cage formed by residues Tyr-60A, Trp-60D, Leu-99, Ile-174, Trp-215, Leu-9f, Gly-13f, and Val-15f that surrounds Phe-8f; 2) a hydrogen bond linking Phe-8f NH to Lys-97 O;3) a salt link between Glu-11f and Arg-173; 4) two antiparallel beta-sheet hydrogen bonds between Gly-14f and Gly-216; and 5) the insertion of Arg-16f into the specificity pocket. Binding of the peptide is accompanied by a considerable shift in two of the loops near the active site relative to human D-phenyl-L-prolyl-L-arginyl chloromethyl ketone (PPACK)-thrombin.  相似文献   

16.
D-3-Phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PGDH) from Escherichia coli is allosterically inhibited by L-serine, the end product of its metabolic pathway. Previous results have shown that inhibition by serine has a large effect on Vmax and only a small or negligible effect on Km. PGDH is thus classified as a V-type allosteric enzyme. In this study, the active site of PGDH has been studied by site-directed mutagenesis to assess the role of certain residues in substrate binding and catalysis. These consist of a group of cationic residues (Arg-240, Arg-60, Arg-62, Lys-39, and Lys-141') that potentially form an electrostatic environment for the binding of the negatively charged substrate, as well as the only tryptophan residue found in PGDH and which fits into a hydrophobic pocket immediately adjacent to the active site histidine residue. Interestingly, Trp-139' and Lys-141' are part of the polypeptide chain of the subunit that is adjacent to the active site. The results of mutating these residues show that Arg-240, Arg-60, Arg-62, and Lys-141' play distinct roles in the binding of the substrate to the active site. Mutants of Trp-139' show that this residue may play a role in stabilizing the catalytic center of the enzyme. Furthermore, these mutants appear to have a significant effect on the cooperativity of serine inhibition and suggest a possible role for Trp-139' in the cooperative interactions between subunits.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction of thrombin with protein C triggers a key down-regulatory process of the coagulation cascade. Using a panel of 77 Ala mutants, we have mapped the epitope of thrombin recognizing protein C in the absence or presence of the cofactor thrombomodulin. Residues around the Na(+) site (Thr-172, Lys-224, Tyr-225, and Gly-226), the aryl binding site (Tyr-60a), the primary specificity pocket (Asp-189), and the oxyanion hole (Gly-193) hold most of the favorable contributions to protein C recognition by thrombin, whereas a patch of residues in the 30-loop (Arg-35 and Pro-37) and 60-loop (Phe-60h) regions produces unfavorable contributions to binding. The shape of the epitope changes drastically in the presence of thrombomodulin. The unfavorable contributions to binding disappear and the number of residues promoting the thrombin-protein C interaction is reduced to Tyr-60a and Asp-189. Kinetic studies of protein C activation as a function of temperature reveal that thrombomodulin increases >1,000-fold the rate of diffusion of protein C into the thrombin active site and lowers the activation barrier for this process by 4 kcal/mol. We propose that the mechanism of thrombomodulin action is to kinetically facilitate the productive encounter of thrombin and protein C and to allosterically change the conformation of the activation peptide of protein C for optimal presentation to the thrombin active site.  相似文献   

18.
The epithelial Na(+)/H(+) exchanger, NHE3, was found to activate slowly following an acute cytosolic acidification. The sigmoidal course of activation could not be explained by the conventional two-state model, which postulates that activation results from protonation of an allosteric modifier site. Instead, mathematical modeling predicted the existence of three distinct states of the exchanger: two different inactive states plus an active form. The interconversion of the inactive states is rapid and dependent on pH, whereas the conversion between the second inactive state and the active conformation is slow and pH-independent but subject to regulation by other stimuli. Accordingly, exposure of epithelial cells to hypoosmolar solutions activated NHE3 by accelerating this latter transition. The number of surface-exposed exchangers and their association with the cytoskeleton were not affected by hypoosmolarity. Instead, NHE3 is activated by the membrane deformation, a result of cell swelling. This was suggested by the stimulatory effects of amphiphiles that induce a comparable positive (convex) deformation of the membrane. We conclude that NHE3 exists in multiple states and that different physiological parameters control the transitions between them.  相似文献   

19.
Human thrombin utilizes Na+ as a driving force for the cleavage of substrates mediating its procoagulant, prothrombotic, and signaling functions. Murine thrombin has Asp-222 in the Na+ binding site of the human enzyme replaced by Lys. The charge reversal substitution abrogates Na+ activation, which is partially restored with the K222D mutation, and ensures high activity even in the absence of Na+. This property makes the murine enzyme more resistant to the effect of mutations that destabilize Na+ binding and shift thrombin to its anticoagulant slow form. Compared with the human enzyme, murine thrombin cleaves fibrinogen and protein C with similar k(cat)/K(m) values but activates PAR1 and PAR4 with k(cat)/K(m) values 4- and 26-fold higher, respectively. The significantly higher specificity constant toward PAR4 accounts for the dominant role of this receptor in platelet activation in the mouse. Murine thrombin can also cleave substrates carrying Phe at P1, which potentially broadens the repertoire of molecular targets available to the enzyme in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
The regulatory properties of thrombin are derived predominantly from its capacity to produce different functional conformations. Functional studies have revealed that two antagonistic thrombin conformations exist in equilibrium: the fast (procoagulant) and slow (anticoagulant) forms. The mechanisms whereby thrombin activity is regulated by the binding of different effectors remain among the most enigmatic and controversial subjects in the field of protein function. In order to obtain more detailed information on the dynamic events originating from the interaction with the Na+ effector and ligand binding at the active site and anion binding exosite 1 (ABE1), we carried out molecular dynamics simulations of thrombin in different bound states. The results indicated that Na+ release results in a more closed conformation of thrombin, which can be compared to the slow form. The conformational changes induced by displacement of the sodium ion from the Na-binding site include: (1) distortion of the 220- and 186-loops that constitute the Na-binding site; (2) folding back of the Trp148 loop towards the body of the protein, (3) a 180° rotation of the Asp189 side-chain, and (4) projection of the Trp60D loop toward the solvent accompanied by the rearrangement of the Trp215 side chain toward the 95–100 loop. Our findings correlate well with the known structural and recognition properties of the slow and fast forms of thrombin, and are in accordance with the hypothesis that there is communication between the diverse functional domains of thrombin. The theoretical models generated from our MD simulations complement and advance the structural information currently available, leading to a more detailed understanding of thrombin structure and function.  相似文献   

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