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1.
Optimal rates of factor X (FX) activation require occupancy of receptors for factor IXa (FIXa), factor VIII (FVIII), and FX on the activated platelet surface. The presence of FVIII and FX increases 5-fold the affinity of FIXa for the surface of activated platelets, and the presence of FVIII or FVIIIa generates a high affinity, low capacity specific FX-binding site on activated platelets. We have now examined the effects of FX and active site-inhibited FIXa (EGR-FIXa) on the binding of both FVIII and FVIIIa to activated platelets and show the following: (a) von Willebrand factor inhibits FVIII binding (K(i) = 0.54 nM) but not FVIIIa binding; (b) thrombin and the thrombin receptor activation peptide (SFLLRN amide) are the most potent agonists required for FVIII-binding site expression, whereas ADP is inert; (c) FVa does not compete with FVIIIa or FVIII for functional platelet-binding sites; and (d) Annexin V is a potent inhibitor of FVIIIa binding (IC(50) = 10 nM) to activated platelets. The A2 domain of FVIII significantly increases the affinity and stoichiometry of FVIIIa binding to platelets and contributes to the stability of the FX-activating complex. Both FVIII and FVIIIa binding were specific, saturable, and reversible. FVIII binds to specific, high affinity receptors on activated platelets (n = 484 +/- 59; K(d) = 3.7 +/- 0.31 nM) and FVIIIa interacts with an additional 300-500 sites per platelet with enhanced affinity (K(d) = 1.5 +/- 0.11 nM). FVIIIa binding to activated platelets in the presence of FIXa and FX is closely coupled with rates of F-X activation. The presence of EGR-FIXa and FX increases both the number and the affinity of binding sites on activated platelets for both FVIII and FVIIIa, emphasizing the validity of a three-receptor model in the assembly of the F-X-activating complex on the platelet surface.  相似文献   

2.
Ahmad SS  Walsh PN 《Biochemistry》2005,44(42):13858-13865
Optimal rates of factor X (FX) activation require binding of factor IXa (FIXa), factor VIII(a) [FVIII(a)], and FX to activated platelet receptors. To define the FVIIIa domains that mediate platelet interactions, albumin density gradient washed, gel-filtered platelets (3.5 x 10(8)/mL) activated by the thrombin receptor peptide, SFLLRN (25 microM), were incubated with 125I-labeled FVIII C2 domain, or 125I-FVIIIa, or 125I-FVIII((LC)), or peptides from the C2 domain region, with or without anti-C2 domain monoclonal antibodies (MoAb), ESH4 or ESH8. FVIIIa (Kd approximately 1.7 nM), FVIII((LC)) (Kd approximately 3 nM), and the C2 domain (Kd approximately 16 nM) all interacted with approximately 700-800 binding sites/platelet. Unlike FVIIIa, the C2 domain did not respond to the presence of excess EGR-FIXa (45 nM) and FX (1.5 microM) with enhanced binding stoichiometry and affinity. Both the MoAb ESH4 and a synthetic peptide corresponding to FVIII residues 2303-2332 (epitope for FVIII MoAb, ESH4) inhibited FVIIIa binding to platelets, whereas MoAb ESH8 and a C2 domain peptide corresponding to residues 2248-2285 (epitope for the FVIII MoAb, ESH8) failed to inhibit FVIIIa binding. Thus, a major platelet-binding site resides within residues 2303-2332 in the C2 domain of FVIIIa, and an additional site within residues 2248-2285 increases the stoichiometry and affinity of FVIIIa binding to activated platelets only in the presence of FIXa and FX but does not directly mediate FVIIIa binding to the platelet surface.  相似文献   

3.
Jenkins PV  Dill JL  Zhou Q  Fay PJ 《Biochemistry》2004,43(17):5094-5101
Contributions of factor (F) VIIIa subunits to cofactor association with FIXa were evaluated. Steady-state fluorescence resonance energy transfer using an acrylodan-labeled A3-C1-C2 subunit and fluorescein-Phe-Phe-Arg-FIXa yielded K(d) values of 52 +/- 10 and 197 +/- 55 nM in the presence and absence of phospholipid vesicles, respectively. A3-C1-C2 was an effective competitor of FVIIIa binding to FIXa as judged by inhibition of FXa generation performed in the absence of vesicles (K(i) approximately 1.6K(d) for FVIIIa-FIXa). However, the capacity for A3-C1-C2 to inhibit FVIIIa-dependent FXa generation in the presence of phospholipid was poor with a K(i) values (approximately 400 nM) that were approximately 100-fold greater than the K(d) for FVIIIa-FIXa interaction (4.2 +/- 0.6 nM). These results indicated that a significant component of the interprotein affinity is contributed by FVIIIa subunits other than A3-C1-C2 in the membrane-dependent complex. The isolated A2 subunit of FVIIIa interacts weakly with FIXa, and recent modeling studies have implicated a number of residues that potentially contact the FIXa protease domain (Bajaj et al. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 16302-16309). Site-directed mutagenesis of candidate residues in the A2 domain was performed, and recombinant proteins were stably expressed and purified. Functional affinity determinations demonstrated that one mutant, FVIII/Asp712Ala exhibited an 8-fold increased K(d) (35 +/- 1.5 nM) relative to wild-type suggesting a contribution by this residue of approximately 10% of the FVIIIa-FIXa binding energy. Thus both A2 and A3-C1-C2 subunits contribute to the affinity of FVIIIa for FIXa in the membrane-dependent FXase.  相似文献   

4.
Factor (F) VIIIa forms a number of contacts with FIXa in assembling the FXase enzyme complex. Surface plasmon resonance was used to examine the interaction between immobilized biotinylated active site-modified FIXa, and FVIII and FVIIIa subunits. The FVIIIa A2 subunit bound FIXa with high affinity (Kd = 3.9 ± 1.6 nm) that was similar to the A3C1C2 subunit (Kd = 3.6 ± 0.6 nm). This approach was used to evaluate a series of baculovirus-expressed, isolated A2 domain (bA2) variants where alanine substitutions were made for individual residues within the sequence 707-714, the C-terminal region of A2 thought to be FIXa interactive. Three of six bA2 variants examined displayed 2- to 4-fold decreased affinity for FIXa as compared with WT bA2. The variant bA2 proteins were also tested in two reconstitution systems to determine activity and affinity parameters in forming FXase and FVIIIa. Vmax values for all variants were similar to the WT values, indicating that these residues do not affect cofactor function. All variants showed substantially greater increases in apparent Kd relative to WT in reconstituting the FXase complex (8- to 26-fold) compared with reconstituting FVIIIa (1.3- to 6-fold) suggesting that the mutations altered interaction with FIXa. bA2 domain variants with Ala replacing Lys707, Asp712, and Lys713 demonstrated the greatest increases in apparent Kd (17- to 26-fold). These results indicate a high affinity interaction between the FVIIIa A2 subunit and FIXa and show a contribution of several residues within the 707-714 sequence to this binding.  相似文献   

5.
Factor VIII (FVIII) consists of a heavy chain (A1(a1)A2(a2)B domains) and light chain ((a3)A3C1C2 domains). To gain insights into a role of the FVIII C domains, we eliminated the C1 domain by replacing it with the homologous C2 domain. FVIII stability of the mutant (FVIIIC2C2) as measured by thermal decay at 55 °C of FVIII activity was markedly reduced (∼11-fold), whereas the decay rate of FVIIIa due to A2 subunit dissociation was similar to WT FVIIIa. The binding affinity of FVIIIC2C2 for phospholipid membranes as measured by fluorescence resonance energy transfer was modestly lower (∼2.8-fold) than that for WT FVIII. Among several anti-FVIII antibodies tested (anti-C1 (GMA8011), anti-C2 (ESH4 and ESH8), and anti-A3 (2D2) antibody), only ESH4 inhibited membrane binding of both WT FVIII and FVIIIC2C2. FVIIIa cofactor activity measured in the presence of each of the above antibodies was examined by FXa generation assays. The activity of WT FVIIIa was inhibited by both GMA8011 and ESH4, whereas the activity of FVIIIC2C2 was inhibited by both the anti-C2 antibodies, ESH4 and ESH8. Interestingly, factor IXa (FIXa) binding affinity for WT FVIIIa was significantly reduced in the presence of GMA8011 (∼10-fold), whereas the anti-C2 antibodies reduced FIXa binding affinity of FVIIIC2C2 variant (∼4-fold). Together, the reduced stability plus impaired FIXa interaction of FVIIIC2C2 suggest that the C1 domain resides in close proximity to FIXa in the FXase complex and contributes a critical role to FVIII structure and function.  相似文献   

6.
The factor VIII (FVIII) crystal structure suggests a possible bonding interaction of His281 (A1 domain) with Ser524 (A2 domain), although the resolution of the structure (∼4 Å) does not firmly establish this bonding. To establish that side chains of these residues participate in an interdomain bond, we prepared and examined the functional properties of a residue swap variant (H281S/S524H) where His281 and Ser524 residues were exchanged with one another and a disulfide-bridged variant (H281C/S524C) where the two residues were replaced with Cys. The latter variant showed efficient disulfide bonding of the A1 and A2 domains. The swap variant showed WT-like FVIII and FVIIIa stability, which were markedly reduced for H281A and S524A variants in an earlier study. The disulfide-bridged variant showed ∼20% increased FVIII stability, and FVIIIa did not decay during the time course measured. This variant also yielded 35% increased thrombin peak values compared with WT in a plasma-based thrombin generation assay. Binding analyses of H281S-A1/A3C1C2 dimer with S524H-A2 subunit yielded a near WT-like affinity value, whereas combining the variant dimer or A2 subunit with the WT complement yielded ∼5- and ∼10-fold reductions, respectively, in affinity. Other functional properties including thrombin generation potential, FIXa binding affinity, Km for FX of FXase complexes, thrombin activation efficiency, and down-regulation by activated protein C showed similar results for the two variants compared with WT FVIII. These results indicate that the side chains of His281 and Ser524 are in close proximity and contribute to a bonding interaction in FVIII that is retained in FVIIIa.  相似文献   

7.
Factor (F)VIII can be activated to FVIIIa by FXa following cleavages at Arg(372), Arg(740), and Arg(1689). FXa also cleaves FVIII/FVIIIa at Arg(336) and Arg(562) resulting in inactivation of the cofactor. These inactivating cleavages occur on a slower time scale than the activating ones. We assessed the contributions to cleavage rate and cofactor function of residues flanking Arg(336), the primary site yielding FVIII(a) inactivation, following replacement of these residues with those flanking the faster-reacting Arg(740) and Arg(372) sites and the slower-reacting Arg(562) site. Replacing P4-P3' residues flanking Arg(336) with those from Arg(372) or Arg(740) resulted in ~4-6-fold increases in rates of FXa-catalyzed inactivation of FVIIIa, which paralleled the rates of proteolysis at Arg(336). Examination of partial sequence replacements showed a predominant contribution of prime residues flanking the scissile bonds to the enhanced rates. Conversely, replacement of this sequence with residues flanking the slow-reacting Arg(562) site yielded inactivation and cleavage rates that were ~40% that of the WT values. The capacity for FXa to activate FVIII variants where cleavage at Arg(336) was accelerated due to flanking sequence replacement showed marked reductions in peak activity, whereas reducing the cleavage rate at this site enhanced peak activity. Furthermore, plasma-based thrombin generation assays employing the variants revealed significant reductions in multiple parameter values with acceleration of Arg(336) cleavage suggesting increased down-regulation of FXase. Overall, these results are consistent with a model of competition for activating and inactivating cleavages catalyzed by FXa that is modulated in large part by sequences flanking the scissile bonds.  相似文献   

8.
The A2 domain rapidly dissociates from activated factor VIII (FVIIIa) resulting in a dampening of the activity of the activated factor X-generating complex. The amino acid residues that affect A2 domain dissociation are therefore critical for FVIII cofactor function. We have now employed chemical footprinting in conjunction with mass spectrometry to identify lysine residues that contribute to the stability of activated FVIII. We hypothesized that lysine residues, which are buried in FVIII and surface-exposed in dissociated activated FVIII (dis-FVIIIa), may contribute to interdomain interactions. Mass spectrometry analysis revealed that residues Lys(1967) and Lys(1968) of region Thr(1964)-Tyr(1971) are buried in FVIII and exposed to the surface in dis-FVIIIa. This result, combined with the observation that the FVIII variant K1967I is associated with hemophilia A, suggests that these residues contribute to the stability of activated FVIII. Kinetic analysis revealed that the FVIII variants K1967A and K1967I exhibit an almost normal cofactor activity. However, these variants also showed an increased loss in cofactor activity over time compared with that of FVIII WT. Remarkably, the cofactor activity of a K1968A variant was enhanced and sustained for a prolonged time relative to that of FVIII WT. Surface plasmon resonance analysis demonstrated that A2 domain dissociation from activated FVIII was reduced for K1968A and enhanced for K1967A. In conclusion, mass spectrometry analysis combined with site-directed mutagenesis studies revealed that the lysine couple Lys(1967)-Lys(1968) within region Thr(1964)-Tyr(1971) has an opposite contribution to the stability of FVIIIa.  相似文献   

9.
Factor VIII (FVIII) consists of a heavy (A1A2B domains) and light chain (A3C1C2 domains), whereas the contiguous A1A2 domains are separate subunits in the cofactor, FVIIIa. FVIII x-ray structures show close contacts between A1 and C2 domains. To explore the role of this region in FVIII(a) stability, we generated a variant containing a disulfide bond between A1 and C2 domains by mutating Arg-121 and Leu-2302 to Cys (R121C/L2302C) and a second variant with a bulkier hydrophobic group (A108I) to better occupy a cavity between A1 and C2 domains. Disulfide bonding in the R121C/L2302C variant was >90% efficient as judged by Western blots. Binding affinity between the A108I A1 and A3C1C2 subunits was increased ~3.7-fold in the variant as compared with WT as judged by changes in fluorescence of acrylodan-labeled A1 subunits. FVIII thermal and chemical stability were monitored following rates of loss of FVIII activity at 57 °C or in guanidinium by factor Xa generation assays. The rate of decay of FVIIIa activity was monitored at 23 °C following activation by thrombin. Both R121C/L2302C and A108I variants showed up to ~4-fold increases in thermal stability but minimal improvements in chemical stability. The purified A1 subunit of A108I reconstituted with the A3C1C2 subunit showed an ~4.6-fold increase in thermal stability, whereas reconstitution of the variant A1 with a truncated A3C1 subunit showed similar stability values as compared with WT A1. Together, these results suggest that altering contacts at this A1-C2 junction by covalent modification or increasing hydrophobicity increases inter-chain affinity and functionally enhances FVIII stability.  相似文献   

10.
Protein Z-dependent protease inhibitor (ZPI) is a serpin inhibitor of coagulation factor (F) Xa dependent on protein Z, Ca2+, and phospholipids. In new studies, ZPI inhibited FIXa in the FXase complex. Since this observation could merely represent inhibition of the FXa product whose activity was measured, inhibition of FIXa was investigated five ways. 1) FXase incubation mixtures with/without ZPI/protein Z were diluted in EDTA; FXa activity was measured after reversal of its inhibition. 2) FXase incubation mixtures were immunoblotted for FXa product. 3) FX activation peptide region was 3H-labeled; release of 3H was used to measure FXase activity. 4) Activity was monitored in a FIXa-based clotting assay. 5) FIXa amidolytic activity was measured. In all cases, FIXa was inhibited by subphysiologic levels of ZPI. Unlike inhibition of FXa, inhibition of FIXa did not strictly require protein Z. Low concentrations of FVIIIa increased the efficiency of ZPI inhibition of FIXa; FVIIIa in molar excess was not protective of FIXa unless FIXa/FVIIIa interacted prior to ZPI exposure. Unusual time courses were observed for inhibition of both FIXa in the FXase complex and FXa in the prothrombinase complex. Activity loss stabilized in <100 s at a level dependent on ZPI concentration, suggesting equilibrium interactions rather than typical covalent serpin-protease interactions. Surface plasmon resonance binding experiments revealed binding and dissociation of ZPI/FIXa with Kd (app) of 9-12 nm, similar to the concentration of ZPI needed for 50% inhibition. ZPI may be an unusual physiologic regulator of both the intrinsic FXase and the prothrombinase complexes.  相似文献   

11.
Factor VIII (FVIII, other clotting factors are named similarly) is a glycoprotein that circulates in the plasma bound to von Willebrand factor. During the blood coagulation cascade, activated FVIII (FVIIIa) binds to FIXa and activates FX in the presence of calcium ions and phospholipid membranes. The C1 and C2 domains mediate membrane binding that is essential for activation of the FVIIIa–FIXa complex. Here, 1H, 13C, and 15N backbone chemical shift assignments are reported for the C2 domain of FVIII, including assignments for the residues in solvent-exposed loops. The NMR resonance assignments, along with further structural studies of membrane-bound FVIII, will advance understanding of blood-clotting protein interactions.  相似文献   

12.
Factor (F) VIII consists of a heavy chain (A1A2B domains) and light chain (A3C1C2 domains). The activated form of FVIII, FVIIIa, functions as a cofactor for FIXa in catalyzing the membrane-dependent activation of FX. Whereas the FVIII C2 domain is believed to anchor FVIIIa to the phospholipid surface, recent x-ray crystal structures of FVIII suggest that the C1 domain may also contribute to this function. We constructed a FVIII variant lacking the C2 domain (designated ΔC2) to characterize the contributions of the C1 domain to function. Binding affinity of the ΔC2 variant to phospholipid vesicles as measured by energy transfer was reduced ∼14-fold. However, the activity of ΔC2 as measured by FXa generation and one-stage clotting assays retained 76 and 36%, respectively, of the WT FVIII value. Modest reductions (∼4-fold) were observed in the functional affinity of ΔC2 FVIII for FIXa and rates of thrombin activation. On the other hand, deletion of C2 resulted in significant reductions in FVIIIa stability (∼3.6-fold). Thrombin generation assays showed peak thrombin and endogenous thrombin potential were reduced as much as ∼60-fold. These effects likely result from a combination of the intermolecular functional defects plus reduced protein stability. Together, these results indicate that FVIII domains other than C2, likely C1, make significant contributions to membrane-binding and membrane-dependent function.  相似文献   

13.
Fribourg C  Meijer AB  Mertens K 《Biochemistry》2006,45(35):10777-10785
The light chain of activated factor IX (FIXa) is involved in a number of functional properties, including FIXa enzymatic activity. This suggests the existence of a functional link between the FIXa light chain and the catalytic domain. The FIXa structure includes a few putative interactions between EGF2 and the protease domain. The role thereof has been addressed in this study. Recombinant FIX variants FIX-N92A, FIX-N92H, FIX-Y295A, and FIX-F299A were produced in 293 cells. After activation, the purified mutants were analyzed for a variety of functional parameters. None of these substitutions had a major effect on the interaction with antithrombin or the cleavage of the chromogenic substrate CH(3)SO(2)-d-CHG-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide. All FIXa mutants, however, exhibited a reduced level of factor X (FX) activation. Defective proteolytic activity occurred both in the absence and in the presence of activated factor VIII (FVIIIa). All mutants also exhibited a reduced level of FX activation in the absence of phospholipids. This suggests that putative interdomain contacts involving residues Asn(92), Tyr(295), and Phe(299) affect reactivity toward FX. Detailed kinetic studies in the presence of phospholipids and FVIIIa revealed substrate inhibition, particularly for mutants FIXa-N92A and FIXa-N92H. Surface plasmon resonance demonstrated that the same replacements weaken the association with the isolated factor VIII (FVIII) A2 domain and the FVIII light chain. This implies a defect in the formation of the FX-activating complex that is membrane-independent. We conclude that contacts between EGF2 and the protease domain of FIXa are crucial for FIXa enzymatic activity and for the assembly of the FX-activating complex.  相似文献   

14.
During blood coagulation, factor IXa (FIXa) activates factor X (FX) requiring Ca2+, phospholipid, and factor VIIIa (FVIIIa). The serine protease domain of FIXa contains a Ca2+ site and is predicted to contain a Na+ site. Comparative homology analysis revealed that Na+ in FIXa coordinates to the carbonyl groups of residues 184A, 185, 221A, and 224 (chymotrypsin numbering). Kinetic data obtained at several concentrations of Na+ and Ca2+ with increasing concentrations of a synthetic substrate (CH3-SO2-d-Leu-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide) were fit globally, assuming rapid equilibrium conditions. Occupancy by Na+ increased the affinity of FIXa for the synthetic substrate, whereas occupancy by Ca2+ decreased this affinity but increased k(cat) dramatically. Thus, Na+-FIXa-Ca2+ is catalytically more active than free FIXa. FIXa(Y225P), a Na+ site mutant, was severely impaired in Na+ potentiation of its catalytic activity and in binding to p-aminobenzamidine (S1 site probe) validating that substrate binding in FIXa is linked positively to Na+ binding. Moreover, the rate of carbamylation of NH2 of Val16, which forms a salt-bridge with Asp194 in serine proteases, was faster for FIXa(Y225P) and addition of Ca2+ overcame this impairment only partially. Further studies were aimed at delineating the role of the FIXa Na+ site in macromolecular catalysis. In the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid, with or without saturating FVIIIa, FIXa(Y225P) activated FX with similar K(m) but threefold reduced k(cat). Further, interaction of FVIIIa:FIXa(Y225P) was impaired fourfold. Our previous data revealed that Ca2+ binding to the protease domain increases the affinity of FIXa for FVIIIa approximately 15-fold. The present data indicate that occupancy of the Na+ site further increases the affinity of FIXa for FVIIIa fourfold and k(cat) threefold. Thus, in the presence of Ca2+, phospholipid, and FVIIIa, binding of Na+ to FIXa increases its biologic activity by approximately 12-fold, implicating its role in physiologic coagulation.  相似文献   

15.
Factor VIII (FVIII) is the blood coagulation protein which when defective or deficient causes for hemophilia A, a severe hereditary bleeding disorder. Activated FVIII (FVIIIa) is the cofactor to the serine protease factor IXa (FIXa) within the membrane‐bound Tenase complex, responsible for amplifying its proteolytic activity more than 100,000 times, necessary for normal clot formation. FVIII is composed of two noncovalently linked peptide chains: a light chain (LC) holding the membrane interaction sites and a heavy chain (HC) holding the main FIXa interaction sites. The interplay between the light and heavy chains (HCs) in the membrane‐bound state is critical for the biological efficiency of FVIII. Here, we present our cryo‐electron microscopy (EM) and structure analysis studies of human FVIII‐LC, when helically assembled onto negatively charged single lipid bilayer nanotubes. The resolved FVIII‐LC membrane‐bound structure supports aspects of our previously proposed FVIII structure from membrane‐bound two‐dimensional (2D) crystals, such as only the C2 domain interacts directly with the membrane. The LC is oriented differently in the FVIII membrane‐bound helical and 2D crystal structures based on EM data, and the existing X‐ray structures. This flexibility of the FVIII‐LC domain organization in different states is discussed in the light of the FVIIIa–FIXa complex assembly and function. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 99: 448–459, 2013.  相似文献   

16.
BackgroundFactor (F)VIII functions as a cofactor in the tenase complex responsible for conversion of FX to FXa by FIXa. Earlier studies indicated that one of the FIXa-binding sites is located in residues 1811–1818 (crucially F1816) of the FVIII A3 domain. A putative, three-dimensional structure model of the FVIIIa molecule suggested that residues 1790–1798 form a V-shaped loop, and juxtapose residues 1811–1818 on the extended surface of FVIIIa.AimTo examine FIXa molecular interactions in the clustered acidic sites of FVIII including residues 1790–1798.Methods and resultsSpecific ELISA's demonstrated that the synthetic peptides, encompassing residues 1790–1798 and 1811–1818, competitively inhibited the binding of FVIII light chain to active-site-blocked Glu-Gly-Arg-FIXa (EGR-FIXa) (IC50; 19.2 and 42.9 μM, respectively), in keeping with a possible role for the 1790–1798 in FIXa interactions. Surface plasmon resonance-based analyses demonstrated that variants of FVIII, in which the clustered acidic residues (E1793/E1794/D1793) or F1816 contained substituted alanine, bound to immobilized biotin labeled-Phe-Pro-Arg-FIXa (bFPR-FIXa) with a 1.5–2.2-fold greater KD compared to wild-type FVIII (WT). Similarly, FXa generation assays indicated that E1793A/E1794A/D1795A and F1816A mutants increased the Km by 1.6–2.8-fold relative to WT. Furthermore, E1793A/E1794A/D1795A/F1816A mutant showed that the Km was increased by 3.4-fold and the Vmax was decreased by 0.75-fold, compared to WT. Molecular dynamics simulation analyses revealed the subtle changes between WT and E1793A/E1794A/D1795A mutant, supportive of the contribution of these residues for FIXa interaction.ConclusionThe 1790–1798 region in the A3 domain, especially clustered acidic residues E1793/E1794/D1795, contains a FIXa-interactive site.  相似文献   

17.
A recent chemical footprinting study in our laboratory suggested that region 1803–1818 might contribute to A2 domain retention in activated factor VIII (FVIIIa). This site has also been implicated to interact with activated factor IX (FIXa). Asn-1810 further comprises an N-linked glycan, which seems incompatible with a role of the amino acids 1803–1818 for FIXa or A2 domain binding. In the present study, FVIIIa stability and FIXa binding were evaluated in a FVIII-N1810C variant, and two FVIII variants in which residues 1803–1810 and 1811–1818 are replaced by the corresponding residues of factor V (FV). Enzyme kinetic studies showed that only FVIII/FV 1811–1818 has a decreased apparent binding affinity for FIXa. Flow cytometry analysis indicated that fluorescent FIXa exhibits impaired complex formation with only FVIII/FV 1811–1818 on lipospheres. Site-directed mutagenesis revealed that Phe-1816 contributes to the interaction with FIXa. To evaluate FVIIIa stability, the FVIII/FV chimeras were activated by thrombin, and the decline in cofactor function was followed over time. FVIII/FV 1803–1810 and FVIII/FV 1811–1818 but not FVIII-N1810C showed a decreased FVIIIa half-life. However, when the FVIII variants were activated in presence of FIXa, only FVIII/FV 1811–1818 demonstrated an enhanced decline in cofactor function. Surface plasmon resonance analysis revealed that the FVIII variants K1813A/K1818A, E1811A, and F1816A exhibit enhanced dissociation after activation. The results together demonstrate that the glycan at 1810 is not involved in FVIII cofactor function, and that Phe-1816 of region 1811–1818 contributes to FIXa binding. Both regions 1803–1810 and 1811–1818 contribute to FVIIIa stability.  相似文献   

18.
Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (GPtdIns-PLC) is found in the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei. A region of protein sequence similarity exists between the protozoan enzyme and eubacterial phosphatidylinositol-phospholipases C. The functional relevance of Cys80 and Gln81 of GPtdIns-PLC, both in this region, was tested with a panel of mutations at each position. Gln81Glu, Gln81Ala, Gln81Gly, Gln81Lys and Gln81Leu mutants were inactive. Cleavage of GPtdIns was detectable in Gln81Asn, although the specific activity decreased 500-fold, and kcat was reduced 50-fold. Thus an amide side-chain at residue 81 is essential for catalysis by GPtdIns-PLC. Sulfhydryl reagents inactivate GPtdIns-PLC, suggesting that a Cys could be close to the enzyme active site. Surprisingly, p-chloromercuriphenyl sulfonate (p-CMPS) is significantly more potent than N-ethylmaleimide, the less bulky compound. This knowledge prompted us to test whether replacement of Cys80 with an amino acid possessing a bulky side-chain would inactivate GPtdIns-PLC: Cys80Ala, Cys80Thr, Cys80Phe, Cys184Ala, and Cys269-270-273Ser were constructed for that purpose. Cys80Phe lacked enzyme activity, while Cys80Ala, Cys80Thr and Cys269-270-273Ser retained 33 to 100% of wild-type activity. Interestingly, the Cys80Ala and Cys80Thr mutants became resistant to p-CMPS, as predicted if the sulfhydryl reagent reacted with Cys80 in the wild-type enzyme to form a cysteinyl mercurylphenylsulfonate moiety, a bulky adduct that inactivated GPtdIns-PLC, similar to the Cys80Phe mutation. We conclude that a bulky side-chain (or adduct) at position 80 of GPtdIns-PLC abolishes enzyme activity. Together, these observations place Cys80 and Gln81 at, or close to, the active site of GPtdIns-PLC from T. brucei.  相似文献   

19.
Tryptic peptides which account for all five cysteinyl residues in ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from Rhodospirillum rubrum have been purified and sequenced. Collectively, these peptides contain 94 of the approximately 500 amino acid residues per molecule of subunit. Due to one incomplete cleavage at a site for trypsin and two incomplete chymotryptic-like cleavages, eight major radioactive peptides (rather than five as predicted) were recovered from tryptic digests of the enzyme that had been carboxymethylated with [3H]iodoacetate. The established sequences are: GlyTyrThrAlaPheValHisCys1Lys TyrValAspLeuAlaLeuLysGluGluAspLeuIleAla GlyGlyGluHisValLeuCys1AlaTyr AlaGlyTyrGlyTyrValAlaThrAlaAlaHisPheAla AlaGluSerSerThrGlyThrAspValGluValCys1 ThrThrAsxAsxPheThrArg AlaCys1ThrProIleIleSerGlyGlyMetAsnAla LeuArg ProPheAlaGluAlaCys1HisAlaPheTrpLeuGly GlyAsnPheIleLys In these peptides, radioactive carboxymethylcysteinyl residues are denoted with asterisks and the sites of incomplete cleavage with vertical wavy lines. None of the peptides appear homologous with either of two cysteinyl-containing, active-site peptides previously isolated from spinach ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase.  相似文献   

20.
Factors VII, IX, and X play key roles in blood coagulation. Each protein contains an N-terminal gamma-carboxyglutamic acid domain, followed by EGF1 and EGF2 domains, and the C-terminal serine protease domain. Protein C has similar domain structure and functions as an anticoagulant. During physiologic clotting, the factor VIIa-tissue factor (FVIIa*TF) complex activates both factor IX (FIX) and factor X (FX). FVIIa represents the enzyme, and TF represents the membrane-bound cofactor for this reaction. The substrates FIX and FX may utilize multiple domains in binding to the FVIIa*TF complex. To investigate the role of the EGF1 domain in this context, we expressed wild type FIX (FIX(WT)), FIX(Q50P), FIX(PCEGF1) (EGF1 domain replaced with that of protein C), FIX(DeltaEGF1) (EGF1 domain deleted), FX(WT), and FX(PCEGF1). Complexes of FVIIa with TF as well as with soluble TF (sTF) lacking the transmembrane region were prepared, and activations of WT and mutant proteins were monitored by SDS-PAGE and by enzyme assays. FVIIa*TF or FVIIa*sTF activated each mutant significantly more slowly than the FIX(WT) or FX(WT). Importantly, in ligand blot assays, FIX(WT) and FX(WT) bound to sTF, whereas mutants did not; however, all mutants and WT proteins bound to FVIIa. Further experiments revealed that the affinity of the mutants for sTF was reduced 3-10-fold and that the synthetic EGF1 domain (of FIX) inhibited FIX binding to sTF with K(i) of approximately 60 microm. Notably, each FIXa or FXa mutant activated FVII and bound to antithrombin, normally indicating correct folding of each protein. In additional experiments, FIXa with or without FVIIIa activated FX(WT) and FX(PCEGF1) normally, which is interpreted to mean that the EGF1 domain of FX does not play a significant role in its interaction with FVIIIa. Cumulatively, our data reveal that substrates FIX and FX in addition to interacting with FVIIa (enzyme) interact with TF (cofactor) using, in part, the EGF1 domain.  相似文献   

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