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1.
Venom from the Australian elapid Pseudonaja textilis (Common or Eastern Brown snake), is the second most toxic snake venom known and is the most common cause of death from snake bite in Australia. This venom is known to contain a prothrombin activator complex, serine proteinase inhibitors, various phospholipase A2s, and pre- and postsynaptic neurotoxins. In this study, we performed a proteomic identification of the venom using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, mass spectrometry, and de novo peptide sequencing. We identified most of the venom proteins including proteins previously not known to be present in the venom. In addition, we used immunoblotting and post-translational modification-specific enzyme stains and antibodies that reveal the complexity and regional diversity of the venom. Modifications observed include phosphorylation, gamma-carboxylation, and glycosylation. Glycoproteins were further characterized by enzymatic deglycosylation and by lectin binding specificity. The venom contains an abundance of glycoproteins with N-linked sugars that include glucose/mannose, N-acetylgalactosamine, N-acetylglucosamine, and sialic acids. Additionally there are multiple isoforms of mammalian coagulation factors that comprise a significant proportion of the venom. Indeed two of the identified proteins, a procoagulant and a plasmin inhibitor, are currently in development as human therapeutic agents.  相似文献   

2.
The prothrombin activator from the venom of Oxyuranus scutellatus (Taipan snake) was purified by gel filtration on Sephadex G-200 and ion-exchange chromatography on QAE-Sephadex. The activator is a large protein with a molecular weight of approximately 300,000, which is composed of subunits of Mr 110,000 and 80,000 and two disulfide-linked polypeptides of Mr 30,000. One or both of these Mr 30,000 subunits contain the active site. The venom activator readily converts Factor Xa-specific chromogenic substrates and is also able to activate prothrombin (Km = 166 microM, Vmax = 2.5 mumol of prothrombin activated per min/mg of venom). Gel electrophoretic analysis of prothrombin activation indicates that the venom activator randomly cleaves the Arg274-Thr275 and Arg323-Ile324 bonds of prothrombin since both thrombin and meizothrombin are formed as reaction products. Venom-catalyzed prothrombin activation is not affected by bovine Factor Va but is greatly stimulated by phospholipids plus Ca2+ ions. This stimulatory effect is explained by a decrease of the Km for prothrombin. In the presence of 50 microM phospholipid vesicles (25% phosphatidylserine/75% phosphatidylcholine; mole/mole), the Km is 0.34 microM and the Vmax is 7.1 mumol of prothrombin activated per min/mg of venom. The purified venom activator contains gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues which presumably function in the interaction between the venom activator and phospholipids. Treatment of the activator with 0.8 M NaSCN strongly reduces its ability to activate prothrombin but has no effect on its amidolytic activity. The prothrombin-converting activity of the NaSCN-treated activator can be restored with bovine Factor Va. During prolonged gradient gel electrophoresis, the Mr 300,000 activator dissociates into smaller subunits. This causes a loss of the prothrombin-converting activity, while the amidolytic activity is recovered in a protein with an apparent molecular weight of 57,000. This protein can, however, rapidly activate prothrombin in the presence of Factor Va or in the presence of a protein component of Mr 220,000 that also migrates on the gel. These results suggest that the prothrombin activator from the O. scutellatus venom is a multimeric protein complex consisting of a Factor Xa-like enzyme and a Factor Va-like cofactor.  相似文献   

3.
The prothrombin activator present in the venom of the mainland tiger snake (Notechis scutatus scutatus) was purified to homogeneity by gel chromatography on Sephadex G-200 followed by ion-exchange chromatography on SP-Sephadex. The venom activator has an apparent molecular weight of 54,000. It consists of a heavy chain (Mr = 32,000) and a light chain (Mr = 23,000) held together by one or more disulfide bridges. The active site is located at the heavy chain region of the molecule. The venom activator contains 8 gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues/molecule. Gel electrophoretic analysis of prothrombin activation indicates that the venom activator is capable of cleaving both the Arg 274-Thr 275 and Arg 323-Ile 324 bonds of bovine prothrombin. The order of bond cleavage appears to be random since prethrombin-2 and meizothrombin occur as intermediates during prothrombin activation. Prothrombin activation by the venom activator alone is very slow. This is explained by the unfavorable kinetic parameters for the reaction (Km for prothrombin = 105 microM, Vmax = 0.0025 nmol of prothrombin activated per min/microgram of venom activator). Phospholipids plus Ca2+ and Factor Va greatly stimulate venom-catalyzed prothrombin activation. In the presence of 50 microM phospholipid vesicles composed of 20 mol % phosphatidylserine and 80 mol % phosphatidylcholine, the Km drops to 0.2 microM, whereas there is hardly any effect on the Vmax. Factor Va causes a 3,500-fold increase of the Vmax (8.35 nmol of prothrombin activated per min/microgram of venom activator) and a 10-fold decrease of the Km (9.5 microM). The most favorable kinetic parameters are observed in the presence of both 50 microM phospholipid and Factor Va (Km = 0.16 microM, Vmax = 27.9 nmol of prothrombin activated per min/microgram of venom activator). These changes of the kinetic parameters explain the stimulatory effects of Factor Va and phospholipid on venom-catalyzed prothrombin activation. The venom activator slowly converts the Factor Xa-specific chromogenic substrates CH3SO2-D-leucyl-glycyl-L-arginine-p-nitroanilide and N-benzoyl-L-isoleucyl-L-glutamyl-(piperidyl)-glycyl-L-arginyl-p-nitroani lide hydrochloride. Factor Va causes a 7-fold stimulation of chromogenic substrate conversion by the venom activator. This stimulation appears to be the result of the formation of a tight 1:1 complex between the venom activator and Factor Va.  相似文献   

4.
A prothrombin activator from the venom of Bothrops neuwiedi was purified by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100, ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephacel and affinity chromatography on a Zn2+-chelate column. The overall purification was about 200-fold, which indicates that the prothrombin activator comprises about 0.5% of the crude venom. The venom activator is a single-chain protein with an apparent molecular weight of 60 kDa. It readily activated bovine prothrombin with a Km of 38 microM and a Vmax of 120 mumol prothrombin activated per min per mg of venom activator. Venom-catalyzed prothrombin activation was not accelerated by the so-called accessory components of the prothrombinase complex, phospholipids plus Ca2+ and Factor Va. Gel-electrophoretic analysis of prothrombin activation indicated that the venom activator only cleaved the Arg-323-Ile-324 bond of bovine prothrombin, since meizothrombin was the only product of prothrombin activation. The activator did not hydrolyze commercially available p-nitroanilide substrates and its prothrombin-converting activity was not inhibited by benzamidine, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, dansyl-Glu-Gly-Arg-chloromethyl ketone and soy-bean trypsin inhibitor. However, chelating agents such as EDTA, EGTA and o-phenanthroline rapidly destroyed the enzymatic activity of the venom activator. The activity of chelator-treated venom activator could be partially restored by the addition of an excess CaCl2. These results indicate that the venom activator remarkably differs from Factor Xa and that the enzyme is not a serine proteinase, but likely belongs to the metalloproteinases. The structural and functional properties of the venom prothrombin activator from B. neuwiedi are similar to those reported for the venom activator from Echis carinatus.  相似文献   

5.
H Hofmann  C Bon 《Biochemistry》1987,26(3):772-780
In this paper, we show that the procoagulant action of Bothrops atrox venom is due in part to a protein component that activates prothrombin. The venom prothrombin activator was purified by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. It was separated from a protease by affinity chromatography in a p-aminobenzamidine-CH-Sepharose column. It is a protein of about Mr 70,000, consisting of a single polypeptide chain. We have studied the kinetics of activation of prothrombin under different experimental conditions. The prothrombin activator from B. atrox venom is insensitive to reagents of serine and thiol proteases but is inactivated by ion chelators and by various divalent ions. These results suggest that it is a metalloenzyme. The prothrombin activator from B. atrox venom is inactive on the chromogenic substrates S-2337 and S-2238, and it is selective for prothrombin since it does not act on other blood coagulation factors such as fibrinogen and factor X. We have also studied the pattern of peptide cleavages produced in the human prothrombin molecule during the activation by the activator from B. atrox venom and compared it to that obtained with ecarin, a prothrombin activator from Echis carinatus venom. In the presence of thrombin inhibitors, e.g., hirudin, we found that the activators from B. atrox venom and ecarin act in a similar, or identical, manner by producing a thrombin intermediate, meizothrombin. In the absence of thrombin inhibitors, several peptides are generated, and alpha-thrombin is produced as a consequence of meizothrombin action.  相似文献   

6.
A prothrombinase complex of mouse peritoneal macrophages   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Addition of prothrombin to mouse peritoneal macrophages in vitro resulted in the formation of a thrombin-like enzyme, as demonstrated by use of the luminogenic peptide substrate S-2621. The prothrombinase activity was sedimented by high-speed centrifugation following homogenization of the cells and was abolished by treatment of the cells with the nonionic detergent Triton X-100 at 0.02% concentration. Moreover, the activity was drastically reduced by maintaining cultures in the presence of warfarin and, presumably due to competitive substrate inhibition, by adding S-2222, a chromogenic peptide substrate for Factor Xa. These findings suggest that prothrombin cleavage is catalyzed by Factor Xa at the macrophage surface. The generated thrombin was inhibited by antithrombin, and this reaction was accelerated by heparin with high affinity for antithrombin but not by the corresponding oligosaccharides composed of 8-14 monosaccharide units. Such oligosaccharides which are capable of accelerating the inactivation of Factor Xa by antithrombin, inhibited thrombin formation from prothrombin in the macrophage cultures, presumably by promoting inactivation by antithrombin of Factor Xa in a prothrombinase complex. Activation of the macrophage coagulation system, as proposed to occur in certain inflammatory conditions, thus may be modulated at various levels by heparin, or heparin oligosaccharides, released from mast cells.  相似文献   

7.
Three members of the same family were found to have a clotting defect consistent with the diagnosis of heterozygous factor X Friuli disorder. The main features of the defect were a mild prolongation of prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time, but a normal Stypven-Cephalin clotting time. Factor X activity was 40-50% of normal using tissue thromboplastin, but was perfectly normal using Russell's viper venom and cephalin. Using chromogenic substrate S-2222 the level was 30% of normal. Immunologically, factor X was normal. Bleeding manifestations were mild if any. The hereditary pattern was autosomal. The family comes from an area far away from Friuli and represents the first example of factor X Friuli discovered outside the Friuli.  相似文献   

8.
Pseudonaja textilis, an Australian Elapid, is known to produce a highly toxic venom. Both protein profiling and N-terminal sequence analysis showed the presence of four new phospholipases A(2) in this venom. Besides being non-lethal, the phospholipase A(2) proteins were found to be moderately active enzymes and they showed procoagulant property. cDNA cloning and characterization indicated the presence of two isoforms of PLA(2) proteins in a single snake, each containing the "pancreatic loop," characteristic of group IB phospholipase A(2). The genomic cloning also confirmed the presence of two genes each containing four exons that are interrupted by three introns. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the venom group IB PLA(2) gene is primitive and could have evolved from the same ancestor as the mammalian and venom group IA PLA(2) genes. In the present study, we report that the Pt-PLA2 gene could be responsible for the production of PL1, 2, and 3 possibly via RNA editing process.  相似文献   

9.
Limited proteolysis of bovine blood coagulation Factor X by chymotrypsin produces a derivative in which the light chain is cleaved between Tyr 44 and Lys 45. Two peptide products, residues 1-44 of the Factor X light chain and a modified zymogen, Factor X(-GD) have been isolated and characterized by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, elution behavior on anion-exchange chromatography, amino acid composition, and by partial amino acid sequence determination. Factor X(-GD) no longer contains the 12 gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues of the native zymogen and thus serves as a model for investigation of the properties conferred on Factor X by the presence of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid. Cleavage of Factor X at Tyr 44 by chymotrypsin is inhibited by Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions. Factor X(-GD) is activated by the coagulation factor activator of Vipera russellii venom, but at less than 1% of the rate of activation of native Factor X. The susceptibility of Tyr 44 to chymotryptic cleavage implies that this residue is on the surface of the light chain of Factor X. Factor Xa(-GD) is indistinguishable from native Factor Xa in its activity on Benzoyl-Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide, on prothrombin alone, and on prothrombin plus Factor Va. In the presence of phospholipid the rate of prothrombin activation catalyzed by Factor Xa(-GD) is the same as in the absence of phospholipid.  相似文献   

10.
H Hofmann  C Dumarey  C Bon 《Biochimie》1983,65(3):201-210
The coagulating activity of Bothrops atrox venom was investigated in vitro with purified fibrinogen, with normal plasma and with plasma deficient in various factors of the coagulation cascade. This study indicated that Bothrops atrox venom possesses a thrombin-like action caused by one or several serine proteases sensitive to DFP treatment, but that its clotting action is in fact mainly due to components insensitive to DFP which activate prothrombin and factor X (Stuart factor). We partially purified the DFP insensitive activator of factor X from Bothrops atrox venom and found it to be a protein of molecular weight 77,000. Analysis of the purified fraction by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gel in the presence of SDS showed that it is mainly composed of one heavy polypeptide chain (65,000) and one light doublet (12 - 13,000). This activator is calcium-dependent and catalyzes in vitro the conversion of purified factor X into factor X alpha. By its molecular properties, it resembles the factor X activator from Vipera russellii venom rather than physiological activators.  相似文献   

11.
A prothrombin activator, named 'basparin A,' was isolated from the venom of the crotaline snake Bothrops asper, the species responsible for the majority of snakebite cases in Central America. It is an acidic (pI 5.4), 70kDa, single chain P-III metalloproteinase comprising, in addition to the metalloproteinase domain, disintegrin-like, and high-cysteine domains. Basparin A is a glycoprotein displaying immunological cross-reactivity with BaH1, a P-III hemorrhagic metalloproteinase isolated from the same venom. It activates prothrombin through the formation of meizothrombin, without requiring additional cofactors; it is, therefore, a class A snake venom prothrombin activator. In contrast with most venom metalloproteinases, it does not degrade components of the extracellular matrix. Apart from its clotting activity, basparin A inhibits collagen-dependent platelet aggregation in vitro, an effect that does not depend on proteolytic activity. Clotting activity on human plasma is not abrogated by the plasma proteinase inhibitors alpha(2) macroglobulin and murinoglobulin, whereas activity is completely inhibited by Costa Rican polyvalent (Crotalinae) anti-venom. Basparin A does not induce local tissue alterations, such as hemorrhage, myonecrosis, and edema, in mice. Moreover, it does not induce systemic hemorrhage, thrombocytopenia nor prolongation of the bleeding time following intravenous administration. At low doses, the only observed effect induced by basparin A, when injected intravenously or intramuscularly into mice, is defibrin(ogen)ation. At higher doses, intravenous administration resulted in sudden death due to numerous occluding thrombi in pulmonary vessels. Basparin A is likely to play an important role in the coagulopathy associated with B. asper envenoming.  相似文献   

12.
Two lethal proteins, which specifically bind to the nAChR from Torpedo californica, were isolated from the venom of Pseudonaja textilis, the common brown snake from Australia. The isolated proteins have masses of 6236 and 6345 Da and are structurally related to short-chain neurotoxins from other elapids. Six cDNAs encoding isoforms of related neurotoxins were cloned using the RT-PCR of the venom gland mRNAs. The sequences of the corresponding proteins consist of 57-58 amino acid residues and display several unique features when compared with all known short-chain neurotoxins. Accordingly, they grouped separately in phylogenetic analysis. The six cDNAs were expressed in Escherichia coli and the recombinant proteins were characterized. They have similar masses and display similar toxicities and binding constants to the nAChR as the native toxins isolated from the venom. Thus, a new group of short-chain postsynaptic neurotoxins from the venom of an Australian elapid has been characterized.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The effects of autolysis on the structure of chicken calpain II.   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Heparin catalyses the inhibition of two key enzymes of blood coagulation, namely Factor Xa and thrombin, by enhancing the antiproteinase activities of plasma antithrombin III and heparin cofactor II. In addition, heparin can directly inhibit the activation of Factor X and prothrombin. The contributions of each of these effects to the anticoagulant activity of heparin have not been delineated. We therefore performed experiments to assess how each of these effects of heparin contributes to its anticoagulant activity by comparing the effects of heparin, pentosan polysulphate and D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl on the intrinsic pathway of coagulation. Unlike heparin, pentosan polysulphate catalyses only the inhibition of thrombin by plasma. D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl is rapid enough an inhibitor of thrombin so that when added to plasma no complexes of thrombin with its inhibitors are formed, whether or not the plasma also contains heparin. Heparin (0.66 microgram/ml) and pentosan polysulphate (6.6 micrograms/ml) completely inhibited the intrinsic-pathway activation of 125I-prothrombin to 125I-prothrombin fragment 1 + 2 and 125I-thrombin. On the addition of thrombin, a good Factor V activator, to the plasma before each sulphated polysaccharide, the inhibition of prothrombin activation was demonstrable only in the presence of higher concentrations of the sulphated polysaccharide. D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl also completely inhibited the intrinsic-pathway activation of prothrombin in normal plasma. The inhibitory effect of D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl was reversed if thrombin was added to the plasma before D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2Cl. The inhibition of the activation of prothrombin by the three agents was also abolished with longer times with re-added Ca2+. Reversal of the inhibitory effects of heparin and pentosan polysulphate was associated with the accelerated formation of 125I-thrombin-antithrombin III and 125I-thrombin-heparin cofactor complexes respectively. These results suggest that the anticoagulant effects of heparin and pentosan polysulphate are mediated primarily by their ability to inhibit the thrombin-dependent activation of Factor V, thereby inhibiting the formation of prothrombinase complex, the physiological activator of prothrombin.  相似文献   

15.
The Factor V activator (RVV-V) of Russell's viper venom can cause a 20–26-fold increase in the Factor V activity of bovine and human plasma whereas only a 2–4-fold increase was obtained under similar conditions with bovine serum Factor V activity. On incubation with RVV-V, bovine plasma Factor V underwent a significant change in behavior on Sephadex chromatography, with an apparent change in molecular weight from a value greater than 400 000 to one near 205 000. Bovine serum Factor V, as isolated, had a molecular weight (size) of approximately 230 000 which did not change on treatment with RVV-V.  相似文献   

16.
The simultaneous isolation of three enzymes from the southern copperhead snake venom (Agkistrodon contortrix contortrix; ACC) is described. The first step is a chromatography of crude venom on a Mono S cation-exchange column at pH 6.5. A fibrin clot promoting enzyme (fiprozyme) that preferentially releases fibrinopeptide B from fibrinogen is isolated from the fraction not binding to the Mono S by a further three-step process. The procedure involves affinity chromatography on Blue Sepharose, gel chromatography on Sephacryl S-200 and metal–chelate chromatography on Chelating Sepharose. Protein C activator and phospholipase coelute from the Mono S column. They are separated by a gel chromatography on Sephacryl S-200. After this step two enzymes are obtained: a highly purified protein C activator applicable in methods for determination of functional level of protein C (a plasma regulator of hemostasis) and an electrophoretically pure enzyme with the activity of phospholipase A2.  相似文献   

17.
Textilotoxin is a presynaptic neurotoxin from the venom of the Australian common brown snake, Pseudonaja textilis. It has the highest lethality and is structurally the most complex of any known snake venom neurotoxin. It was resolved into its five non-covalently linked subunits in a single step by reverse-phase HPLC. Two of the subunits were identical. The N-terminal amino-acid sequence and amino-acid composition of each subunit were determined. Subunit A was the only one found to possess phospholipase A activity. Separation of textilotoxin into its subunits was reversible and reformed textilotoxin had the same Mr and lethality in mice as the native toxin. Experiments with various unnatural combinations of subunits have led to interesting variations in lethality and Mr of the resulting complexes.  相似文献   

18.
Bothrojaracin is a potent and specific alpha-thrombin inhibitor (Kd approximately 0.6 nM) isolated from Bothrops jararaca venom. It binds to both of thrombin's anion-binding exosites (1 and 2), thus inhibiting the ability of the enzyme to act upon several natural macromolecular substrates, such as fibrinogen, platelet receptor, protein C, and factor V. Additionally, bothrojaracin interacts with prothrombin (Kd approximately 30 nM), as previously determined by a solid-phase assay. However, there is no information concerning the effect of this interaction on prothrombin activation and whether the binding of bothrojaracin can occur in plasma. Here, we show that bothrojaracin specifically interacts with prothrombin in human plasma. It is an effective anticoagulant after activation of the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation, and analysis of prothrombin conversion in plasma shows that bothrojaracin strongly reduces alpha-thrombin formation. To determine whether this effect is due exclusively to inhibition of feedback reactions involving the thrombin-induced activation of factors V and VIII, we analyzed the effect of bothrojaracin on the activation of purified prothrombin by Oxyuranus scutellatus venom. As with plasma, bothrojaracin greatly inhibited thrombin formation, suggesting a direct interference in the prothrombin activation by the enzyme found in this venom (scuterin, a prothrombin activator described as a factor Xa/factor Va-like complex). Altogether, we suggest that bothrojaracin exerts its anticoagulant effect in plasma by two distinct mechanisms: (1) it binds generated thrombin and inhibits exosite 1 dependent activities such as fibrinogen clotting and factor V activation, and (2) it interacts with prothrombin and decreases its proteolytic activation. Thus, bothrojaracin may be useful in the search for thrombin inhibitors that bind both the zymogen and the active enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Some biochemical properties and proteic components of the brown spider (Loxos celes laeta) venom were studied. The electrophoretic profiles of glandular venom and venom obtained through electrical stimulation were compared using two electrophoretic systems. The first, using a polyacrylamide gel with SDS in tubes, and the second, using an acrylamide gradient on slides. The glandular venom presented 20 and 35 bands respectively, while the venom obtained through electrical stimulation presented 19 and 24 bands. The molecular weight of the proteins detected ranged from 13.5 Kd to 220 Kd. A thermolabil proteolitic activity of casein was detected, and was optimum at pH 9. The effects of the divalent ions, calcium and magnesium, as well as that of chelating agents upon the proteolytic activity of the venom were analyzed. The venom had a procoagulant effect upon citrated human plasma, and was not able to activate the Factor X of the coagulation system in vitro.  相似文献   

20.
1. The widely accepted theory that calcium participates in the coagulation mechanism in the form of Ca(++) and acts as a catalyst is not in accord with several important experimental findings: (a) The anticoagulant action of sodium oxalate is much slower than the precipitation of ionized calcium as the oxalate salt. (b) Sodium citrate begins to depress prothrombin activity at a concentration at which ionized calcium is still present. The inability of tricalcium phosphate to adsorb prothrombin from citrated plasma indicates that citrate forms a complex with prothrombin and it is postulated that prothrombin is thereby inactivated. (c) In plasma which is decalcified, i.e. in which the Ca(++) is markedly reduced, the labile factor of prothrombin rapidly decreases. A concentration of 0.01 M sodium citrate sufficient to inhibit coagulation does not depress Ca(++) enough to cause diminution of the labile factor, whereas when the concentration is increased to 0.02 M the labile factor decreases as rapidly as in oxalated plasma. 2. It is postulated that calcium functions in coagulation not as Ca(++) but as combined with a component which is part of the prothrombin complex that is not adsorbed by tricalcium phosphate. A concentration of sodium citrate just sufficient to inhibit coagulation is not enough to remove calcium from the essential prothrombin component. The primary anticoagulant action of sodium citrate is therefore not decalcification but antiprothrombic. 3. It has been shown that citrated plasma is basically different from oxalated plasma in several important aspects. Unless cognizance is taken of these differences, serious errors and misinterpretations of experimental findings may be made.  相似文献   

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