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1.
Heparin binds to human antithrombin III and accelerates its inhibitory activity in the blood coagulation system. Previous reports (Rosenberg, R. D., and Damus, P. S. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 6490-6505; Pecon, J. M., and Blackburn, M. N. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 935-938) have shown that selective chemical modification of a limited number of lysine residues in antithrombin III causes drastic loss of its heparin cofactor activity. We have performed chemical modification of antithrombin III with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid in order to determine the location of these lysine residues. When antithrombin III was treated with 100 M excess of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid for 10 min, about 3.2 mol of amino group per mol of antithrombin III were modified. The heparin cofactor activity dropped to about 25%, whereas the progressive inhibitory activity (in the absence of heparin) remained essentially intact (about 95%). The modified amino groups were identified to be Lys114 (75%), Lys125 (94%), and Lys287 (96%). These results were obtained by comparing and analyzing the cyanogen bromide fragments derived from native antithrombin III and the 10-min modified antithrombin III. When antithrombin III was pretreated with heparin, followed by trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid modification, the extent of modification at Lys114 and Lys125 decreased from 75% and 94% to 20% and 40%, respectively, whereas the modification at Lys287 remained nearly quantitative (greater than 95%). Based on these results, we conclude that Lys114 and Lys125 are essential for the heparin cofactor activity of human antithrombin III.  相似文献   

2.
Plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1), the fast-acting inhibitor of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and urokinase (u-PA), is a member of the serpin superfamily of proteins. Both in plasma and in the growth substratum of cultured endothelial cells, PAI-1 is associated with its binding protein vitronectin, resulting in a stabilization of active PAI-1. Recently, it has been demonstrated that the PAI-1-binding site on vitronectin is adjacent to a heparin-binding site (Preissner et al., 1990). Furthermore, it can be deduced that the amino acid residues, proposed to mediate heparin binding in the serpins antithrombin III and heparin cofactor II, are conserved in PAI-1. Consequently, here we have investigated whether PAI-1 also interacts with heparin. At pH 7.4, PAI-1 quantitatively binds to heparin-Sepharose and can be eluted with increasing [NaCl]. Binding of PAI-1 to heparin-Sepharose can be efficiently competed with heparin in solution (IC50, 7 microM). In the presence of heparin, the protease specificity of PAI-1 toward thrombin is substantially increased. This is shown by (i) quenching of thrombin activity of PAI-1 in the presence of heparin and (ii) induction of the formation of SDS-stable complexes between thrombin and PAI-1 by heparin. In a dose response curve, both effects reached a maximum at approximately 1 unit/mL and then diminished again upon further increasing the heparin concentration, strongly suggesting a template mechanism as an explanation for the observed effect. In contrast to vitronectin, heparin does not stabilize the active conformation of PAI-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Heparin cofactor II (Mr = 65,600) was purified 1800-fold from human plasma to further characterize the structural and functional properties of the protein as they compare to antithrombin III (Mr = 56,600). Heparin cofactor II and antithrombin III are functionally similar in that both proteins have been shown to inhibit thrombin at accelerated rates in the presence of heparin. There was little evidence for structural homology between heparin cofactor II and antithrombin III when high performance liquid chromatography-tryptic peptide maps and NH2-terminal sequences were compared. A partially degraded form of heparin cofactor II was also obtained in which a significant portion (Mr = 8,000) of the NH2 terminus was missing. The rates of thrombin inhibition (+/- heparin) by native and partially degraded-heparin cofactor II were not significantly different, suggesting that the NH2-terminal region of the protein is not essential either for heparin binding or for thrombin inhibition. A significant degree of similarity was found in the COOH-terminal regions of the proteins when the primary structures of the reactive site peptides, i.e. the peptides which are COOH-terminal to the reactive site peptide bonds cleaved by thrombin, were compared. Of the 36 residues identified, 19 residues in the reactive site peptide sequence of heparin cofactor II could be aligned with residues in the reactive site peptide from antithrombin III. While the similarities in primary structure suggest that heparin cofactor II may be an additional member of the superfamily of proteins consisting of antithrombin III, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin and ovalbumin, the differences in structure could account for differences in protease specificity and reactivity toward thrombin. In particular, a disulfide bond which links the COOH-terminal (reactive site) region of antithrombin III to the remainder of the molecule and is important for the heparin-induced conformational change in the protein and high affinity binding of heparin does not appear to exist in heparin cofactor II. This observation provides an initial indication that while the reported kinetic mechanisms of action of heparin in accelerating the heparin cofactor II/thrombin and antithrombin III/thrombin reactions are similar, the mechanisms and effects of heparin binding to the two inhibitors may be different.  相似文献   

4.
Heparin cofactor II and antithrombin III are plasma proteins functionally similar in their ability to inhibit thrombin at accelerated rates in the presence of heparin. To further characterize the structural and functional properties of human heparin cofactor II as compared to antithrombin III, we studied the possible significance of arginyl and tryptophanyl residues and the changes in protein structure and activity during guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) denaturation. Both antithrombin and heparin cofactor activities of heparin cofactor II are inactivated by the arginine-specific reagent, 2,3-butanedione. Saturation kinetics are observed during modification and suggest formation of a reversible protease inhibitor-butanedione complex. Quantitation of arginyl residues following butanedione modification shows a loss of about four residues for total inactivation, one of which is essential for antithrombin activity. Arginine-modified heparin cofactor II did not bind to heparin-agarose and implies a role for the other modified arginyl residues during heparin cofactor activity. N-Bromosuccinimide oxidation (20 mol of reagent/mol of protein) of heparin cofactor II results in modification of approximately two tryptophanyl residues with no concomitant loss of heparin cofactor activity. Moreover, there is no enhancement of intrinsic protein fluorescence during heparin binding to the native inhibitor. Circular dichroism measurements show that the structural transition of heparin cofactor II during denaturation is distinctly biphasic, yielding midpoints at 0.6 and 2.6 M GdmCl. Functional protease inhibitory activities are affected to the same extent following denaturation-renaturation at various GdmCl concentrations. The results indicate that arginyl residues are critical for both antithrombin and heparin binding activities. In contrast, tryptophanyl residues are apparently not essential for heparin-dependent interactions. The results also suggest that heparin cofactor II contains two structural domains which unfold at different GdmCl concentrations.  相似文献   

5.
Fucoidan, poly(L-fucopyranose) linked primarily alpha 1----2 with either a C3- or a C4-sulfate, is an effective anticoagulant in vitro and in vivo (Springer, G. F., Wurzel, H. A., McNeal, G. M., Jr., Ansell, N. J., and Doughty, M. F. (1957) Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med. 94, 404-409). We have determined the antithrombin effects of fucoidan on the glycosaminoglycan-binding plasma proteinase inhibitors antithrombin III and heparin cofactor II. Fucoidan enhances the heparin cofactor II-thrombin reaction more than 3500-fold. The apparent second-order rate constant of thrombin inhibition by heparin cofactor II increases from 4 x 10(4) (in the absence of fucoidan) to 1.5 x 10(8) M-1 min-1 as the fucoidan concentration increases from 0.1 to 10 micrograms/ml and then decreases as fucoidan is increased above 10 micrograms/ml. The fucoidan reaction with heparin cofactor II-thrombin is kinetically equivalent to a "template model." Apparent fucoidan-heparin cofactor II and fucoidan-thrombin dissociation constants are 370 and 1 nM, respectively. The enhancement of thrombin inhibition by fucoidan, like heparin and dermatan sulfate, is eliminated by selective chemical modification of lysyl residues either of heparin cofactor II or of thrombin. The fucoidan-antithrombin III reactions with thrombin and factor Xa are accelerated maximally 285- and 35-fold at fucoidan concentrations of 30 and 500 micrograms/ml, respectively. Using human plasma and 125I-labeled thrombin in an ex vivo system, the heparin cofactor II-thrombin complex is formed preferentially over the antithrombin III-thrombin complex in the presence of 10 micrograms/ml fucoidan. Our results indicate that heparin cofactor II is activated by fucoidan in vitro and in an ex vivo plasma system and suggest that the major antithrombin activity of fucoidan in vivo is mediated by heparin cofactor II and not by antithrombin III.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Antithrombin III Basel is a hereditary abnormal antithrombin with normal progressive inhibition activity (normal reactive site) and reduced heparin cofactor activity (impaired heparin binding site). Structures of antithrombin III Basel and normal antithrombin III isolated from the same patient were compared by peptide mapping using the dimethylaminoazobenzene isothiocyanate precolumn derivatization technique. Of the approximately 50 tryptic peptides of normal and abnormal antithrombin III, one peptide comprising residues 40-46 had a different retention time in reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography. The amino acid sequence of the peptide from antithrombin III Basel had a single substitution of Pro (normal) by Leu (abnormal) at position 41. This substitution is close to an Arg (residue 47) and a Trp (residue 49) which have previously been shown to be critical for heparin binding by antithrombin III. Although additional amino acid substitutions in antithrombin III Basel cannot be ruled out, this Pro-Leu replacement could cause a conformational change by increasing both the helical structure and the hydrophobicity around residue 41. These data suggest that: (i) the heparin binding site of antithrombin III encompasses the region containing residues 41, 47, and 49; and (ii) the impaired heparin cofactor activity of antithrombin III Basel is likely due to a conformational change of the heparin binding site induced by the Pro-Leu substitution at position 41.  相似文献   

8.
Inhibition of thrombin by heparin cofactor II (HCII) is accelerated 1000-fold by heparin or dermatan sulfate. To investigate the contribution of basic residues of the A helix of HCII to this activation, we constructed amino acid substitutions (K101Q, R103L, and R106L) by site-directed mutagenesis. K101Q greatly reduced heparin cofactor activity and required a more than 10-fold higher concentration of dermatan sulfate to accelerate thrombin inhibition compared with wild-type recombinant HCII. Thrombin inhibition by R106L was not significantly stimulated by dermatan sulfate. These results provide evidence that basic residues of the A helix of HCII (Lys(101) and Arg(106)) are necessary for heparin- or dermatan sulfate-accelerated thrombin inhibition.  相似文献   

9.
Tyrosine sulfate was identified as a constituent of human heparin cofactor II by analysis of sulfate-labeled protein secreted by a human hepatoma-derived cell line and of purified protein from human plasma. Alkaline hydrolysis of heparin cofactor II released tyrosine sulfate as demonstrated by anion-exchange high performance liquid chromatography of hydrolysates. Two sites of sulfation were identified, and the amino acid sequences of the sites were established by sequential Edman degradation of sulfate-containing tryptic peptides that were isolated by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography. Each peptide contains only a single tyrosine residue so that the sites of sulfation can be assigned unambiguously. The two sites of sulfation are separated by 13 residues and represent an internal sequence repeat in the heparin cofactor II molecule. The two sites have the following sequences. Glu56-Asp-Asp-Asp-Tyr(SO4)-Leu-Asp62 Glu69-Asp-Asp-Asp-Tyr(SO4)-Ile-Asp75 Sulfate-labeled heparin cofactor II formed a covalent complex with thrombin in a heparin-dependent manner. Thus, the sulfate-containing form of the protein was shown to be biologically active. The characteristic sulfate-containing segment of heparin cofactor II, which contains 17 acidic amino acid residues over a span of 30 residues, may contribute to the unique properties of this thrombin inhibitor.  相似文献   

10.
The anticoagulant properties of mast cell product, chondroitin sulphate E   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The anticoagulant potency in vitro of chondroitin sulphate E has been found to be similar to that of the heparinoids. In purified systems chondroitin sulphate E was shown to be principally an activator of heparin cofactor II. Maximum acceleration of heparin cofactor II:thrombin interaction was 185-fold (9.3 X 10(7) M-1 min-1), antithrombin III:thrombin interaction was 11-fold (4.16 X 10(6) M-1 min-1) and antithrombin III:factor Xa was 146-fold (3.86 X 10(6) M-1 min-1). Chondroitin sulphate E was observed to prolong the thrombin clotting time of fibrinogen in the absence of antithrombin III and heparin cofactor II. The effect appeared to be related to interference in thrombin:fibrinogen interaction rather than in fibrin monomer polymerization.  相似文献   

11.
Evidence for essential lysines in heparin cofactor II   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Covalent modification with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate was used to study the function of lysyl residues in heparin cofactor II, a heparin-dependent plasma protease inhibitor. Reduction of the Schiff base with sodium borohydride resulted in modification of 3-4 lysyl residues of heparin cofactor II at high concentrations of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate, one of which was protected in the presence of heparin. The antithrombin activity of modified heparin cofactor II was enhanced compared to the native protein. However, the heparin cofactor activity for thrombin inhibition was reduced significantly or completely eliminated in the modified protease inhibitor depending on the extent of phosphopyridoxylation. In contrast to native heparin cofactor II, the modified protease inhibitor did not bind to a heparin-agarose column. The results suggest that lysyl residues are essential for heparin cofactor activity during thrombin inhibition.  相似文献   

12.
Serine protease inhibitors ("serpins") are highly homologous proteins which inhibit selected "target" serine proteases by acting as a pseudo-substrate. Their specificity is primarily determined by the amino acid sequence around the carboxyl-terminally located reactive center (P1-P1'). In addition, the association rate constant between a serpin and a serine protease can be dramatically increased by non-protein cofactors, such as heparin in the case of thrombin inhibition by antithrombin III. In an attempt to alter the specificity of PAI-1 from an inhibitor of the fibrinolytic system to an inhibitor of coagulation, we replaced P1-P1' or P3 through P3' of the reactive center of PAI-1 by the corresponding residues of antithrombin III and assessed whether the mutant proteins, purified from lysates of transformed Escherichia coli cells, had acquired thrombin inhibitory properties. The experiments were performed in the presence and absence of vitronectin, a multifunctional protein which has been shown to bind PAI-1 in plasma and in the matrix of endothelial cells. The second-order rate constants for t-PA inhibition of "wild-type" PAI-1 and PAI P1-P1'ATIII, irrespective of the presence of vitronectin, were similar, whereas replacing P3-P3' resulted in a 40-fold decrease of the second-order rate constant towards t-PA, again independent of vitronectin. In the absence of vitronectin, reactivity of PAI-1 and its "antithrombin III-like" variants towards thrombin was slow; however, PAI-1 P3-P3' ATIII had a 10-fold higher k1 than wild-type PAI-1 (1.3 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 versus 1.1 x 10(3) M-1 s-1). In contrast, in the presence of vitronectin, PAI-1 and even more rapidly PAI-1 P3-P3'ATIII were found to be effective thrombin inhibitors, with k1 values of 2.2 x 10(5) M-1s-1 and 1.8 x 10(6) M-1 s-1, respectively. Thus, in the presence of vitronectin, PAI-1 P3-P3'ATIII displays a 3-fold higher k1 with thrombin than with t-PA. It is shown that vitronectin enhances, in a dose-dependent manner, the formation of sodium dodecyl sulfate-resistant complexes between PAI-1 or mutants thereof and thrombin. Therefore, vitronectin is the first protein described to function as a cofactor for serpin specificity. PAI-1 is proposed to be a versatile inhibitor which, in the presence of vitronectin, can modulate both coagulation and fibrinolysis.  相似文献   

13.
X J Sun  J Y Chang 《Biochemistry》1990,29(38):8957-8962
Arginyl residues of human antithrombin III have been implicated to involve in the heparin binding site [Jorgensen, A. M., Borders, C. L., & Fish, W. W. (1985) Biochem, J. 231, 59-63]. We have performed chemical modification of antithrombin with (p-hydroxyphenyl)glyoxal (HPG) in order to determine the locations of these arginine residues. Antithrombin was modified with 12 mM HPG in the absence and presence of heparin (2-fold by weight to antithrombin). In the absence of heparin, about 3-4 mol of arginines/mol of antithrombin were modified within 60 min, and the modification led to the loss of 95% of the inhibitor's heparin cofactor activity as well as heparin-induced fluorescence enhancement and 50% of its progressive inhibitory activity. In the presence of heparin, the extent of modification was diminished by 30% and modified antithrombin retained approximately 70% of its heparin cofactor activity. Peptide mapping and subsequent sequence analysis revealed that selective HPG modification occurred at Arg129 and Arg145 and that their modifications were protected upon binding of heparin to antithrombin. We conclude that Arg129 and Arg145 are situated within the heparin binding site of human antithrombin III.  相似文献   

14.
Inhibition of thrombin by heparin cofactor (HCII) is accelerated approximately 1000-fold by heparin or dermatan sulfate. We found recently that the mutation Arg189----His decreases the affinity of HCII for dermatan sulfate but not for heparin (Blinder, M. A., Andersson, T. R., Abildgaard, U., and Tollefsen, D. M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 5128-5133). Other investigators have implicated Arg47 and Lys125 of anti-thrombin (homologous to Arg103 and Lys185 of HCII) in heparin binding. To investigate the corresponding residues in HCII, we have constructed amino acid substitutions (Arg103----Leu, Gln, or Trp; Lys185----Met, Asn, or Thr) by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis of the cDNA and expressed the products in Escherichia coli. The recombinant HCII variants were assayed for binding to heparin-Sepharose and for inhibition of thrombin in the presence of various concentrations of heparin or dermatan sulfate. All of the Arg103 variants bound to heparin with normal affinity. Furthermore, inhibition of thrombin by the Arg103----Leu variant occurred at a normal rate in the absence of a glycosaminoglycan and was accelerated by normal concentrations of heparin and dermatan sulfate. These results indicate that HCII, unlike anti-thrombin, does not require a positive charge at this position for the interaction with heparin or dermatan sulfate. The Arg103----Gln and Arg103----Trp variants inhibited thrombin at about one-third of the normal rate in the absence of a glycosaminoglycan, suggesting that these mutations exert an effect on the reactive site (Leu444-Ser445) of HCII. All of the Lys185 variants bound to heparin with decreased affinity but inhibited thrombin at approximately the normal rate in the absence of a glycosaminoglycan. These variants required greater than 10-fold higher concentrations of heparin to accelerate inhibition of thrombin and were not stimulated significantly by dermatan sulfate, suggesting that heparin and dermatan sulfate interact with Lys185 of HCII. These results provide evidence that the glycosaminoglycan-binding site in HCII includes Lys185 but not Arg103, both of which were predicted to be involved by homology to anti-thrombin.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of bovine thrombomodulin on the specificity of bovine thrombin   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Bovine lung thrombomodulin is purified and used to investigate the basis of the change in substrate specificity of bovine thrombin when bound to thrombomodulin. Bovine thrombomodulin is a single polypeptide having an apparent molecular weight of 84,000 and associates with thrombin with high affinity and rapid equilibrium, to act as a potent cofactor for protein C activation and antagonist of reactions of thrombin with fibrinogen, heparin cofactor 2, and hirudin. Bovine thrombomodulin inhibits the clotting activity of thrombin with Kd less than 2.5 nM. Kinetic analysis of the effect of bovine thrombomodulin on fibrinopeptide A hydrolysis by thrombin indicates competitive inhibition with Kis = 0.5 nM. The active site of thrombin is little perturbed by thrombomodulin, as tosyl-Gly-Pro-Arg-p-nitroanilide hydrolysis and inhibition by antithrombin III are unaffected. Insensitivity of the reaction with antithrombin III is likewise observed with thrombin bound to thrombomodulin on intact endothelium. Antithrombin III-heparin, human heparin cofactor 2, and hirudin inhibit thrombin-thrombomodulin more slowly than thrombin. These effects may arise from a decrease in Ki of the inhibitors for thrombin-thrombomodulin or from changes in the active site not detected by tosyl-Gly-Pro-Arg-p-nitroanilide or antithrombin III. Bovine prothrombin fragment 2 inhibits thrombin clotting activity (Kd less than 7.5 microM) and acts as a competitive inhibitor of protein C activation (Kis = 2.1 microM). The data are consistent with a mechanism whereby thrombomodulin alters thrombin specificity by either binding to or allosterically altering a site on thrombin distinct from the catalytic center required for binding or steric accommodation of fibrinogen, prothrombin fragment 2, heparin cofactor 2, and hirudin.  相似文献   

16.
From structural analysis on genetically abnormal and chemically modified human antithrombin III [Koide, T., Odani, S., Takahashi, K., Ono, T. and Sakuragawa, N. (1984) Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 81, 289-293; Chang, J.-Y. and Tran, T. H., (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 1174-1176; Blackburn, M. N., Smith, R. L., Carson, J. and Sibley, C. C. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 939-941], the heparin-binding site of antithrombin III has been suggested to be in the region of Pro-41, Arg-47 and Trp-49. In this study the heparin-binding site was probed by preferential cleavage of V8 protease on heparin-treated and non-treated native antithrombin III. The study has been based on the presumption that the heparin-binding site of antithrombin III is situated at exposed surface domain and may be preferentially attacked during limited proteolytic digestion. Partially digested antithrombin III samples were monitored by quantitative amino-terminal analysis and amino acid sequencing to identify the preferential cleavage sites. 1-h-digested antithrombin III was separated on HPLC and peptide fragments were isolated and characterized both qualitatively and quantitatively. The results reveal that Glu-Gly (residues 34-35), Glu-Ala (residues 42-43) and Glu-Leu (residues 50-51) are three preferential cleavage sites for V8 protease and their cleavage, especially the Glu-Ala and the Glu-Leu sites, was drastically inhibited when antithrombin III was preincubated with heparin. Both high-affinity and low-affinity antithrombin-III-binding heparins were shown to inhibit the V8 protease digestion of native antithrombin III, but the high-affinity sample exhibited a higher inhibition activity than the low-affinity heparin. These findings (a) imply that the segment containing residues 34-51 is among the most exposed region of native antithrombin III and (b) support the previous conclusions that this region may play a pivotal role in the heparin binding.  相似文献   

17.
Four monoclonal antibodies with distinct epitopes were prepared against antithrombin III. None of them is directed against the heparin-binding region nor the active site, yet two mAb namely A36 and B108, interfere with antithrombin III inhibition of thrombin. The epitope of monoclonal antibody A36 is located within amino acid residues 1-393, at a site different from the active site since it recognizes antithrombin III and antithrombin-III-thrombin complexes with the same affinity. A36 partially prevents the intrinsic antithrombin III activity and has no effect on the heparin-enhanced antithrombin III activity when added to the antithrombin-III--heparin complex. If A36 is first reacted with antithrombin III and then heparin is added to the reaction mixture, A36 fixes the conformation of antithrombin III so that heparin binds to antithrombin III, but is not able to induce the conformational change in the antithrombin III molecule required for the enhanced activity. The epitope for monoclonal antibody B108 is located within residues 282-393, close to the active site. It does not recognize antithrombin-III-thrombin complexes by solid-phase radioimmunoassay. Its binding to antithrombin III induces a conformational change that enhances antithrombin III activity in a manner that resembles the heparin effect, but its effect is additive to the heparin effect, since when it was added to a reaction mixture which contained a saturating amount of heparin, inhibition of thrombin was enhanced. The epitope for monoclonal antibody A5 is located within residues 1-393, and its recognition of antithrombin III or antithrombin-III-thrombin is strongly dependent on the integrity of the disulfide bonds. A5 has no effect on antithrombin III activities. The epitope for monoclonal antibody A10 is well defined within a narrow range of 55 amino acid residues, 339-393, on the antithrombin III molecule, close to the active site, yet it has no effect on antithrombin III inhibitory activity. These monoclonal antibodies may be developed for various diagnostic or clinical purposes and offer a powerful tool for studying the conformational changes and structure/activity relationships in the antithrombin III molecule.  相似文献   

18.
The presence of two unfolding domains in antithrombin III during its denaturation in guanidinium chloride has previously been reported (Villanueva, G. B., and Allen, N. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 11010-11013). In the present work, we report the results of refolding studies on antithrombin III. Circular dichroism and intrinsic fluorescence studies have demonstrated that the first unfolding domain of low stability (midpoint at 0.7 M guanidinium chloride) is irreversible upon renaturation, whereas the second unfolding domain (midpoint at 2.3 M guanidinium chloride) is reversible. The intermediate form of antithrombin III, termed AT-IIIR, which has lost the structural features of the first domain was investigated. Clotting assays and electrophoretic analyses showed that AT-IIIR had lost 60% of heparin cofactor activity but was still capable of forming sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable complexes with thrombin. Although certain regions of this molecule do not refold to the conformation of native antithrombin III, the tryptophan residues refold to a conformation identical with the native state. This was demonstrated by fluorescence quenching, solvent perturbation, and chemical modification studies. However, the tryptophan-ascribed fluorescence enhancement and absorption difference spectrum which occur when heparin binds to antithrombin III are reduced by 70%. On the basis of these data, the binding of heparin to antithrombin III is interpreted in terms of a two-step mechanism. The primary binding occurs in the region without tryptophan and is followed by a secondary conformational rearrangement which affects the tryptophan environment. The mechanism of the binding of heparin and antithrombin III has been previously studied by kinetic methods, and the data also support a two-step mechanism. The agreement of these two studies employing entirely different approaches to the same problem lends support to the validity of this postulated mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
This study characterizes the structural and functional significance of sulfhydryl residues in human plasma heparin cofactor II (HCII). For quantification of sulfhydryl groups, the extinction coefficient of HCII was redetermined and found to be 0.593 ml mg-1 cm-1 using second-derivative spectroscopy and multicomponent analysis assuming 4, 10, and 2 residues of tryptophan, tyrosine, and tyrosine-O-sulfate per mole of protein, respectively. The results show that tyrosine-O-sulfate residues in HCII and in cholecystokinin peptide fragments (as model compounds) do not significantly contribute to the absorbance spectrum from 280 to 300 nm. A total of three sulfhydryl groups per mole of HCII was detected by Ellman's reagent titration, with or without treatment with dithioerythritol, indicating the absence of intramolecular disulfide bonds. Incubation of HCII with 0.1-10 mM dithioerythritol did not diminish its heparin-enhanced thrombin inhibition activity. Treatment with various sulfhydryl-specific reagents, including p-mercuribenzoate, HgCl2, and N-substituted maleimide derivatives, inactivated HCII. Titration with Ellman's reagent after these reactions identified the modification site as a cysteinyl residue(s). However, complete methanethio derivatization of the sulfhydryl groups of HCII using methyl methanethiosulfonate did not alter heparin-catalyzed thrombin inhibition. These results indicate that the sulfhydryl groups of HCII are not essential for thrombin inhibition. HCII differs from antithrombin III, which contains an essential disulfide bond for heparin-dependent thrombin inhibition (Longas, M. O., et al. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 3436). Furthermore, within the "serpin" (serine proteinase inhibitor) superfamily, HCII resembles chicken ovalbumin in occurrence of sulfhydryl residues and reactivity with various sulfhydryl group-directed compounds.  相似文献   

20.
Heparin was fractionated by affinity chromatography on immobilized antithrombin III followed by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100. Eighteen fractions were obtained ranging in molecular weight from 9,700 to 34,300 as determined by sedimentation equilibrium. The binding stoichiometries of antithrombin III and thrombin interactions with the heparin of these fractions were measured, using changes in intrinsic and extrinsic fluorescence. Catalytic activity also was measured for each of the heparin fractions. As the molecular weight of heparin varied from about 10,000 to 30,000, the average number of antithrombin and thrombin sites/heparin molecule varied from 1.0 to 2.1 and 2.4 to 6.8. In addition, the molar specific activity increased 5.7-fold, an increase which correlated directly with the product of the number of antithrombin III and thrombin molecules bound. Thus as the number of bound molecules increased with increased molecular weight, the rate of reaction/bound antithrombin III increased in proportion to the number of bound thrombin molecules and vice versa. This can be explained by assuming that heparin functions as a template for both proteins, that all bound thrombin and antithrombin III molecules are accessible to each other, and that the rate at which a bound molecule reacts is proportional to the number of molecules of its interacting counterpart bound. These observations and conclusions are similar to those of Hoylaerts et al. (Hoylaerts, M., Owen, W. G., and Collen, D. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5670-5677), who demonstrated that the rate at which single molecules of antithrombin III, covalently attached to heparin, react increases as the thrombin binding capacity (chain length) of heparin increases.  相似文献   

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