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1.
Heparin, other glycosaminoglycans, and synthetic sulfated polymers have antithrombotic and anticoagulant activities, which may be mediated through a range of interactions with different proteins. A simple, quantitative method has been developed for assessing the affinity of interaction between sulfated polymers and proteins in the liquid phase. This has been used to compare the binding of a range of glycosaminoglycans and other sulfated polymers to antithrombin III and thrombin, a major inhibitor of and a central protease in the coagulation system, respectively. The results are consistent with the binding of naturally occurring glycosaminoglycans to antithrombin III solely through the well-defined antithrombin III-binding pentasaccharide found in heparin, the apparent affinity of a preparation depending upon its content of this pentasaccharide. Highly sulfated synthetic polymers will, however, bind antithrombin III by a second mechanism. The affinity of heparin for thrombin decreased with decreasing molecular weight. However, results obtained with heparan sulfate preparations did not indicate any clear relationship between either molecular weight or sulfate content and thrombin binding, but suggested that there may be an oligosaccharide sequence containing N-sulfate residues which confers high affinity for thrombin. In addition, some of the synthetic sulfated polymers bound thrombin with very high affinity.  相似文献   

2.
The secretory enzyme extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) occurs in at least three forms, which differ with regard to heparin affinity: A lacks affinity, B has intermediate affinity, and C has relatively strong affinity. The affinity of EC-SOD C for various sulphated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) was assessed (a) by determining the concentration of NaCl required to release the enzyme from GAG-substituted Sepharose 4B and (b) by determining the relative potencies of the GAGs to release EC-SOD C from heparan sulphate-Sepharose 4B. Both methods indicated the same order of affinity. Heparin bound EC-SOD C about 10 times as avidly as the studied heparan sulphate preparation, which in turn was 10 and 150 times as efficient as dermatan sulphate and chondroitin sulphate respectively. Chondroitin sulphate showed weak interaction with EC-SOD C at physiological ionic strength. Heparin subfractions with high or low affinity for antithrombin III were equally efficient. The binding of EC-SOD C to heparin-Sepharose was essentially independent of pH in the range 6.5-9; below pH 6.5 the affinity increased, and beyond pH 9.5 there was a precipitous fall in affinity. The inhibitory effect of NaCl on the binding of EC-SOD C to GAGs indicates that the interaction is of electrostatic nature. EC-SOD C carries a negative net charge at neutral pH, and it is suggested that the binding occurs between the negative charges of the GAG sulphate groups and a structure in the C-terminal end of the enzyme that has a cluster of positive charges. These results are compatible with the notion that heparan sulphate proteoglycans on cell surfaces or in the intercellular matrix may serve to bind EC-SOD C in tissues.  相似文献   

3.
The high heparin affinity subtype C of the secretory enzyme extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) exists in the body mainly complexed with extracellular sulfated glycosaminoglycans (SGAGs). Addition of sulfated polysaccharides to EC-SOD C resulted in a prompt partial inhibition of the enzymic activity, in most cases amounting to 10-17%, but with the large dextran sulfate 500,000 amounting to 35%. Complex formation between heparin and EC-SOD C could also be observed as increases in apparent molecular weight of the enzyme. The findings suggest that the binding sites for SGAGs on EC-SOD C are localized far from the active site and that EC-SOD in vivo associated with SGAGs should retain the major part of its enzymic activity. Studies with amino acid-specific reagents suggested that both lysine and arginine residues are involved in the binding of SGAGs. In particular, modification of only a few lysine residues/subunit resulted in loss of high SGAG affinity, whereas arginine modification resulted in loss of not only SGAG affinity but also enzymic activity. We propose that this is due to modification of Arg-186, which is homologous to the highly conserved arginine in the entrance to the active site of the copperzinc-SODs.  相似文献   

4.
The specificity of endothelial binding sites for heparin was investigated with heparin fractions and fragments differing in their Mr, charge density and affinity for antithrombin III, as well as with heparinoids and other anionic polyelectrolytes (polystyrene sulphonates). The affinity for endothelial cells was estimated by determining I50 values in competition experiments with 125I-heparin. We found that affinity for endothelial cells increases as a function of Mr and charge density (degree of sulphation). Binding sites are not specific receptors for heparin. Other anionic polyelectrolytes, such as pentosan polysulphates and polystyrene sulphonates, competed with heparin for binding to endothelial cells. Fractions of standard heparin with high affinity for antithrombin III also had greater affinity for endothelium. However, these two properties of heparin (affinity for antithrombin III and affinity for endothelial cells) could be dissociated. Oversulphated heparins and oversulphated low-Mr heparin fragments had lower anticoagulant activity and higher affinity for endothelial cells than did their parent compounds. Synthetic pentasaccharides, bearing the minimal sequence for binding to antithrombin III, did not bind to endothelial cells. Binding to endothelial cells involved partial neutralization of heparin. Bound heparin exhibited only 5% and 7% of antifactor IIa and antifactor Xa specific activity, respectively. In the presence of 200 nM-antithrombin III, and in the absence of free heparin, a limited fraction (approx. 30%) of bound heparin was displaced from endothelial cells during a 1 h incubation period. These data suggested that a fraction of surface-bound heparin could represent a pool of anticoagulant.  相似文献   

5.
Heparin was divided into four fractions on fibronectin-Sepharose. The higher affinity fraction for fibronectin was larger in molecular size, higher in sulfate content and higher in affinity for anti-thrombin III. Together with these heparin fractions, the following three series of heparin samples were examined to compare the affinity for fibronectin-Sepharose: four fractions separated on Sephadex G-100; five fractions separated on antithrombin III-Sepharose, and six partially and completely N-desulfated heparins. The result showed that the affinity of heparin for fibronectin was dependent exclusively on its molecular size, and that an appropriate level of sulfate content in heparin (1.9-2.4 mol/disaccharide) was essential for the affinity. The sulfated preparations of glycosaminoglycans (heparan sulfate, dermatan sulfate and chondroitin 4-sulfate) and neutral polysaccharides (amylose and dextran) having higher sulfate content than heparin were found to display higher affinity for fibronectin than heparin. This suggested that highly sulfated polysaccharides showed potent affinity irrespective of their polysaccharide structure. The sulfated chondroitin 4-sulfate having a sulfate content and molecular size comparable to those of heparin was inferior to heparin with respect to affinity. A competitive dissociation experiment indicated that heparin and other polysulfated polysaccharides share a common binding site on the fibronectin molecule.  相似文献   

6.
The rate of the reaction between thrombin and antithrombin III is greatly increased in the presence of heparin. Several mechanisms for this effect are possible. To study the problems commercial heparin was fractionated into one fraction of high anticogulant activity and one of low anticoagulant activity by affinity chromatography on matrix-bound antithrombin III. The strength of the binding of the two heparin fractions to antithrombin III and thrombin, respectively, was determined by a crossed immunoelectrophoresis technique. As was to be expected, the high activity fraction was strongly bound to antithrombin III while the low activity fraction was weakly bound. In contrast, thrombin showed equal binding affinity for both heparin fractions. The ability of the two heparin fractions to catalyse the inhibition of thrombin by antithrombin III was determined and was found to be much greater for the high activity heparin fraction. A mechanism for the reaction between thrombin and antithrombin III in the presence of small amounts of heparin is suggested, whereby antithrombin III first binds heparin and this complex then inhibits thrombin by interaction with both the bound heparin and the antithrombin III.  相似文献   

7.
The secretory enzyme extracellular-superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) has affinity for heparin and some other sulfated glycosaminoglycans and is in vivo bound to heparan sulfate proteoglycan. Nonenzymic glycation of EC-SOD, both in vivo and in vitro, is associated with a reduction in heparin affinity, whereas the enzymic activity is not affected. The glycation sites in EC-SOD are further studied in the present article. It is shown that modification of a few of the five lysyl residues of the subunits of the enzyme with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid nearly abolishes the in vitro glycation susceptibility. From a chymotryptic digest of in vitro glycated EC-SOD, two peptides with affinity for boronate could be isolated. Amino acid sequence analysis showed that both encompassed the carboxyterminal end. epsilon-Glucitol lysine was identified in both peptides at positions 211 and 212. The primary glycation sites in EC-SOD are thus lysine-211 and lysine-212 in the putative heparin-binding domain in the carboxyterminal end.  相似文献   

8.
Binding and endocytosis of heparin by human endothelial cells in culture   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Binding of heparin and low molecular weight heparin fragments (CY 222, Mr range 1500-8000) to human vascular endothelial cells was studied. Primary culture of human umbilical vein endothelial cells and either 125I or 3H-labeled heparin or [125I]CY 222 were used. Slow, saturable and specific binding was found. No other tested glycosaminoglycan, excepting a highly sulfated heparan fraction, was able to compete for heparin binding. Two groups of binding sites for [3H]heparin could be distinguished: one with high affinity (Kd = 0.12 microM) and another with lower affinity (Kd = 1.37 microM) and a relative large capacity of binding (1.16 X 10(7) molecules/cell) was calculated. The Kd for unlabeled heparin, as calculated from competition experiments, was 0.23 microM. Much lower affinity was calculated for unlabeled low molecular weight heparin fragments CY 222 (Kd = 4.3 microM) from competition experiments with [125I]CY 222. The binding reversibility was only partial for unfractionated heparin. Even by chasing with unlabeled compound, a fraction of 25-30% was not dissociable from endothelial cells. This fraction was much lower if incubation was carried out at 4 degrees C. The addition of basic proteins (histones) to the incubation medium greatly enhanced the undissociable binding at 37 degrees C, but not at 4 degrees C. The undissociable fraction of heparin was not available to degradation by purified microbial heparinase. These results suggest that a fraction of bound heparin is internalized by the vascular endothelium.  相似文献   

9.
Nonenzymatic glycation of antithrombin III has been reported to cause the reduction of heparin-catalyzed thrombin-inhibiting activity in diabetes. The effect of in vitro nonenzymatic glycation of pure antithrombin III on heparin binding and heparin-potentiated activity under a variety of buffers and pH values was studied to further clarify the physiological significance of this reaction. The extent of glycation, measured by the fructosamine assay and [14C]glucose binding, was enhanced by the presence of phosphate ion (pH 7.45, 8.5 and 9.5) and increased linearly with increasing phosphate ion concentration from 0.01 to 0.2 M phosphate. Conversely, the heparin-catalyzed antithrombin activity decreased from 93.1% of controls for 0.01 M phosphate to 73.5% for 0.2 M phosphate as the extent of glycation increased. The increase in intrinsic fluorescence induced by binding of heparin to antithrombin III was also moderated by glycation of antithrombin III in a dose-dependent manner with a negative correlation coefficient of -0.94. Direct measurement of the heparin binding by affinity chromatography showed a decrease in the heparin-binding fraction which correlated with the degree of glycation and the decrease in heparin-catalyzed activity. These studies suggest that nonenzymatic glycation may be responsible for the reduction in antithrombin III activity observed in some diabetics.  相似文献   

10.
The binding of Apolipoprotein E supplemented triglyceride emulsions to sulfated glycosaminoglycans demonstrated specificity for the carbohydrate polymers. Glucosamine containing glycosaminoglycans with relatively less sulfate had little affinity for the Apo E emulsion whereas those with more sulfate (i.e. heparin and sulfated heparans) effectively bound the emulsion. Galactosamine containing glycosaminoglycans (chondroitin 4 sulfate and dermatan sulfate) demonstrated no binding. The Apo E induced uptake of triglyceride emulsions by hepatocytes was inhibited by highly sulfated polysaccharides (i.e. heparin, dextran sulfate) but other glycosaminoglycans which did not bind the emulsion were ineffective in this inhibition. The same sulfated compounds which inhibited the hepatocyte Apo E emulsion interaction effectively released hepatic lipase from isolated heptic perfusions. Glycosaminoglycan sulfates which did not bind the Apo E supplemented emulsions and did not inhibit hepatocyte association were ineffective in releasing lipase. A heparan mixture isolated from human liver was much less effective in inhibiting Apo E induced association of emulsions with hepatocytes, than heparin. A highly sulfated octasaccharide fraction isolated from bovine liver heparin inhibited more effectively than the human heparans but less than the heparin. Inhibition of Apo E mediated hepatocyte emulsion association was produced by a one hour exposure of the cells to either heparinase or heparanase. The heparanase was more active than the heparinase and both were effective in the presence of protease inhibitors. Enzymes hydrolyzing chondroitin sulfates and hyaluronic acid were ineffective in inhibiting the Apo E induced association. The specific binding of human low density lipoprotein to the hepatocyte was much less effected by the heparanase exposure than the Apo E mediated binding.  相似文献   

11.
Novel compounds presenting anticoagulant activity, such as sulfated polysaccharides, open new perspectives in medicine. Elucidation of the molecular mechanism behind this activity is desirable by itself, as well as because it allows for the design of novel compounds. In the present study, we investigated the action of an algal sulfated galactan, which potentiates alpha-thrombin inactivation by antithrombin. Our results indicate the following: 1) both the sulfated galactan and heparin potentiate protease inactivation by antithrombin at similar molar concentrations, however they differ markedly in the molecular size required for their activities; 2) this galactan interacts predominantly with exosite II on alpha-thrombin and, similar to heparin, catalyzes the formation of a covalent complex between antithrombin and the protease; 3) the sulfated galactan has a higher affinity for alpha-thrombin than for antithrombin. We propose that the preferred pathway of sulfated galactan-induced inactivation of alpha-thrombin by antithrombin starts with the polysaccharide binding to the protease through a high-affinity interaction. Antithrombin is then added to the complex and the protease is inactivated by covalent interactions. Finally, the antithrombin-alpha-thrombin covalent complex dissociates from the polysaccharide chain. This mechanism resembles the action of heparin with low affinity for antithrombin, as opposed to heparin with high affinity for serpin.  相似文献   

12.
Novel compounds presenting anticoagulant activity, such as sulfated polysaccharides, open new perspectives in medicine. Elucidation of the molecular mechanism behind this activity is desirable by itself, as well as because it allows for the design of novel compounds. In the present study, we investigated the action of an algal sulfated galactan, which potentiates α-thrombin inactivation by antithrombin. Our results indicate the following: 1) both the sulfated galactan and heparin potentiate protease inactivation by antithrombin at similar molar concentrations, however they differ markedly in the molecular size required for their activities; 2) this galactan interacts predominantly with exosite II on α-thrombin and, similar to heparin, catalyzes the formation of a covalent complex between antithrombin and the protease; 3) the sulfated galactan has a higher affinity for α-thrombin than for antithrombin. We propose that the preferred pathway of sulfated galactan-induced inactivation of α-thrombin by antithrombin starts with the polysaccharide binding to the protease through a high-affinity interaction. Antithrombin is then added to the complex and the protease is inactivated by covalent interactions. Finally, the antithrombin–α-thrombin covalent complex dissociates from the polysaccharide chain. This mechanism resembles the action of heparin with low affinity for antithrombin, as opposed to heparin with high affinity for serpin.  相似文献   

13.
The anticoagulant sulfated polysaccharide, heparin, binds to the plasma coagulation proteinase inhibitor, antithrombin, and activates it by a conformational change that results in a greatly increased rate of inhibition of target proteinases. Lys125 of antithrombin has previously been implicated in this binding by chemical modification and site-directed mutagenesis and by the crystal structure of a complex between antithrombin and a pentasaccharide constituting the antithrombin-binding region of heparin. Replacement of Lys125 with Met or Gln in this work reduced the affinity of antithrombin for full-length heparin or the pentasaccharide by 150-600-fold at I = 0.15, corresponding to a loss of 25-33% of the total binding energy. The affinity decrease was due both to disruption of approximately three ionic interactions, indicating that Lys125 and two other basic residues of antithrombin act cooperatively in binding to heparin, and to weakened nonionic interactions. The mutations caused a 10-17-fold decrease in the affinity of the initial, weak binding step of the two-step mechanism of heparin binding to antithrombin. They also increased the reverse rate constant of the second, conformational change step by 10-50-fold. Lys125 is thus a major heparin-binding residue of antithrombin, contributing an amount of binding energy comparable to that of Arg129, but less energy than Lys114. It is the first residue identified so far that has a critical role in the initial recognition of heparin by antithrombin, but also appreciably stabilizes the heparin-induced activated state of the inhibitor. These effects are exerted by interactions of Lys125 with the nonreducing end of the heparin pentasaccharide.  相似文献   

14.
A fundamental property of the secretory tetrameric extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) is its affinity for heparin and analogues, in vivo, mediating attachment to heparan sulfate proteoglycans located on cell surfaces and in the connective tissue matrix. EC-SOD is in vivo heterogeneous with regard to heparin affinity and can be divided into subclasses; A which lacks heparin affinity, B with intermediate affinity, and C with strong heparin affinity. The EC-SOD C subunits contain 222 amino acids and among the last 20 carboxyl-terminal amino acids, 10 are positively charged and six of these are located in a cluster in positions 210-215. To analyze if this local accumulation of basic amino acids is responsible for heparin binding we produced three series of recombinant EC-SOD (rEC-SOD) variants, six containing amino acid exchanges in the carboxyl-terminal end, four with truncations, and two with both truncations and substitutions. Exchange of positively or negatively charged amino acids on the carboxyl-terminal side of the cluster results in only minor modifications in heparin affinity, whereas substitution of three of the amino acids in the cluster abrogates the heparin binding. Insertions of stop codons at different positions resulted in either C or A but not B class EC-SOD. In an attempt to produce EC-SODs with intermediate heparin affinities, plasmids defining C and A class EC-SOD were cotransfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells. In addition to the parental A and C class EC-SOD forms, two variants with intermediate heparin affinities were formed. Coincubation of EC-SOD C and A resulted in the appearance of one heterotetramer with intermediate affinity for heparin. We conclude that the cluster of six basic amino acids forms the essential part of the heparin-binding domain and that the composition of the four subunits in the EC-SOD tetramer determines the affinity for heparin. This domain is different from heparin-binding domains of other proteins, and its localization allows the distribution of EC-SOD in vivo to be regulated by proteolytic processing.  相似文献   

15.
Extracellular-superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) is a secretory glycoprotein that is major SOD isozyme in extracellular fluids. We revealed the possible structure of the carbohydrate chain of serum EC-SOD with the serial lectin affinity technique. The structure is a biantennary complex type with an internal fucose residue attached to asparagine-linked N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and with terminal sialic acid linked to N-acetyllactosamine. EC-SOD in plasma is heterogeneous with regard to heparin affinity and can be divided into three fractions: A, without affinity; B, with intermediate affinity; and C, with high affinity. It appeared that this heterogeneity is not dependent on the carbohydrate structure upon comparison of EC-SOD A, B, and C. No effect of the glycopeptidase F treatment of EC-SOD C on its heparin affinity supported the results. A previous report showed that both lysine and arginine residues probably at the C-terminal end, contribute to heparin binding. Recombinant EC-SOD C treated with trypsin or endoproteinase Lys C, which lost three lysine residues (Lys-211, Lys-212, and Lys-220) or one lysine residue (Lys-220) at the C-terminal end, had no or weak affinity for the heparin HPLC column, respectively. The proteinase-treated r-EC-SOD C also lost triple arginine residues which are adjacent to double lysine residues. These results suggest that the heparin-binding site may occur on a "cluster" of basic amino acids at the C-terminal end of EC-SOD C. EC-SOD is speculated to be primarily synthesized as type C, and types A and B are probably the result of secondary modifications. It appeared that the proteolytic cleavage of the exteriorized lysine- and arginine-rich C-terminal end in vivo is a more important contributory factor to the formation of EC-SOD B and/or EC-SOD A.  相似文献   

16.
We have developed an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) approach for the study of interactions between cytokines and glycosaminoglycans. This involves, as solid phase, a synthetic heparin–bovine serum albumin (BSA) complex in which the heparin is coupled via its reducing terminus to the protein using sodium cyanoborohydride. We have investigated the sensitivity and specificity of this experimental technique, employing antithrombin (AT III) and fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF-2) as well-characterized heparin binding proteins. Using this ELISA method, we have established that human recombinant interleukin (IL-2) binds to heparin in a concentration-dependent manner. Soluble heparin competes for the binding of IL-2 to the complex with 50% inhibition at 5 μg/ml. This IC50value provides an estimate of the binding constant of around 0.5 μM. This value is at least two orders of magnitude larger than that for the binding of IL-2 to its dimeric and trimeric cell surface receptors, but similar to that for binding to the IL-2 receptor β polypeptide acting alone. Our ELISA shows that in addition to soluble heparin, fuciodan also competes for IL-2 binding, but chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate are inactive. Of six heparan sulfates tested, only one highly sulfated preparation competed for IL-2. The interaction between IL-2 and heparin-like glycosaminoglycans is likely to be an important mechanism for retaining IL-2 close to its sites of secretion, thus giving rise to localized concentration gradients in the tissues.  相似文献   

17.
An electrophoretic method for the quantitation and preparation of antithrombin III-high-affinity heparin using agarose beds is described. The method allows the determination of high-affinity heparin fractions in several samples in one single step. The incubation mixture containing heparin and antithrombin III is submitted to agarose gel electrophoresis in 0.06 m barbital buffer, pH 8.6. A sharp separation between free antithrombin III, the complex antithrombin III-heparin, and free heparin occurs under these conditions. Around 30% of heparin molecules present in commerical preparations bind to antithrombin. This bound heparin has an anticoagulant activity of 240 IU. Negligible binding of other sulfated mucopolysaccharides to antithrombin III was observed. The whole procedure takes less than 6 h and can also be used as a semipreparative method for high-affinity heparin.  相似文献   

18.
Antithrombin III exists in plasma as major and minor isoforms differing in affinity for heparin. The nature of the binding of each purified isoform to immobilized heparins was investigated. Unfractionated, mixed-affinity heparin bound each isoform with both high affinity and concentration-dependent low affinity. The isoforms were resolved when filtered through low-affinity heparin (heparin repeatedly passed over immobilized antithrombin III) columns. Following chemical modification of a specific tryptophan residue required for heparin binding, each isoform failed to bind to either low-affinity or mixed-affinity heparin-agarose, but elution of the modified higher-affinity isoform was retarded on both gels. Because the modified lower-affinity isoform eluted with the similarly sized bovine serum albumin in these experiments, the difference in isoform affinity for heparin appears to be the result of a unique, secondary heparin-binding site in the higher-affinity isoform that can bind a heparin site with low affinity for antithrombin III. This interpretation was supported by the chromatographic behavior of the isoforms on mixed-affinity agarose during reverse gradient elution. Two other populations of each of the tryptophan-modified isoforms were identified. Since these isoforms bound tightly to mixed-affinity heparin-agarose but eluted at lower salt concentrations than the corresponding unmodified isoforms, both isoforms may contain additional secondary sites that interact weakly with heparin. A general model of heparin-antithrombin III interaction is proposed in which a high-affinity heparin site initially interacts with a primary site on antithrombin III. The subsequent conformational change leads to a cooperative, entropy-driven association between secondary sites on the protein and low-affinity sites on heparin, stabilizing antithrombin III in its activated form.  相似文献   

19.
Yamamoto M  Hara H  Adachi T 《FEBS letters》2000,486(2):159-162
Homocysteine is known to be a risk factor for several vascular diseases. Previously, we found a significant association between plasma homocysteine and plasma extracellular-superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) levels. The binding of EC-SOD to human and bovine aortic endothelial cell cultures showed significant decreases after incubation with 10 microM homocysteine, whereas the expression of EC-SOD in fibroblast cell cultures was inhibited with a high concentration (1 mM) of homocysteine. Furthermore, binding of EC-SOD to heparin immobilized on plates was decreased with homocysteine. These observations suggested that homocysteine decreases the binding of EC-SOD to vascular endothelial cell surfaces by degradation of endothelial heparan sulfate proteoglycan, which results in a loss of the ability to protect endothelial cell surfaces from oxidative stress.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of various well-characterized heparin preparations on the inactivation of human Factor XIa by human antithrombin III was studied. The heparin preparations used were unfractionated heparin and four heparin fractions obtained after anion-exchange chromatography. Inactivation of Factor XIa was monitored with S2366 as chromogenic substrate and followed pseudo-first-order reaction kinetics under all reaction conditions tested. Enhancement of the rate of inhibition of Factor XIa in the presence of unfractionated heparin correlated to the binding of antithrombin III to heparin. From the kinetic data a binding constant of 0.1 microM was inferred. The maximum rate enhancement, achieved at saturating heparin concentrations, was 30-fold. The rate enhancement achieved in the presence of each of the heparin fractions could also be correlated to the binding of antithrombin III to the heparin. The binding constant inferred from the kinetic data varied from 0.10 to 0.28 microM and the number of binding sites for antithrombin III varied from 0.06 to 0.74 site per heparin molecule. The maximum rate enhancements, achieved at saturating heparin concentrations, were strongly dependent on the type of heparin used and varied from 7-fold for fraction A to 41-fold for fraction D. Therefore, although the stimulation of Factor XIa inactivation by antithrombin III could be quantitatively correlated to the binding of antithrombin III to heparin, the heparin-catalysed inhibition of Factor XIa is dependent not only upon the degree of binding of antithrombin III to heparin but also upon the type of heparin to which antithrombin III is bound.  相似文献   

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