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1.
Norledge BV  Petrovan RJ  Ruf W  Olson AJ 《Proteins》2003,53(3):640-648
Factor X is activated to factor Xa (fXa) in the extrinsic coagulation pathway by the tissue factor (TF)/factor VIIa (fVIIa) complex. Upon activation, the fXa molecule remains associated with the TF/fVIIa complex, and this ternary complex is known to activate protease-activated receptors (PARs) 1 and 2. Activation of fVII in the TF complex by fXa is also seen at physiologic concentrations. The ternary complexes TF/fVII/fXa, TF/fVIIa/fX, and TF/fVIIa/fXa are therefore all physiologically relevant and of interest as targets for inhibition of both coagulation and cell-signaling pathways that are important in cardiovascular disease and inflammation. We therefore present a model of the TF/fVIIa/fXa complex, built with the use of the available structures of the TF/fVIIa complex and fXa by protein-protein docking calculations with the program Surfdock. The fXa model has an extended conformation, similar to that of fVIIa in the TF/fVIIa complex, with extensive interactions with TF and the protease domain of fVIIa. All four domains of fXa are involved in the interaction. The gamma-carboxyglutamate (Gla) and epithelial growth factor (EGF1 and EGF2) domains of fVIIa are not significantly involved in the interaction. Docking of the Gla domain of fXa to TF/fVIIa has been reported previously. The docking results identify potential interface residues, allowing rational selection of target residues for site-directed mutagenesis. This combination of docking and mutagenesis confirms that residues Glu51 and Asn57 in the EGF1 domain, Asp92 and Asp95 in the EGF2 domain, and Asp 185a, Lys 186, and Lys134 in the protease domain of factor Xa are involved in the interaction with TF/fVIIa. Other fX protease domain residues predicted to be involved in the interaction come from the 160s loop and the N-terminus of the fX protease domain, which is oriented in such a way that activation of both fVII by fXa, and the reciprocal fX activation by fVIIa, is possible.  相似文献   

2.
Recombinant nematode anticoagulant protein c2 (rNAPc2) is a potent, factor Xa (fXa)-dependent small protein inhibitor of factor VIIa-tissue factor (fVIIa.TF), which binds to a site on fXa that is distinct from the catalytic center (exo-site). In the present study, the role of other fX derivatives in presenting rNAPc2 to fVIIa.TF is investigated. Catalytically active and active site blocked fXa, as well as a plasma-derived and an activation-resistant mutant of zymogen fX bound to rNAPc2 with comparable affinities (K(D) = 1-10 nm), and similarly supported the inhibition of fVIIa.TF (K(i)* = approximately 10 pm). The roles of phospholipid membrane composition in the inhibition of fVIIa.TF by rNAPc2 were investigated using TF that was either detergent-solubilized (TF(S)), or reconstituted into membranes, containing phosphatidylcholine (TF(PC)) or a mixture of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (TF(PCPS)). In the absence of the fX derivative, inhibition of fVIIa.TF was similar for all three conditions (K(i) approximately 1 microm), whereas the addition of the fX derivative increased the respective inhibition by 35-, 150-, or 100,000-fold for TF(S), TF(PC), and TF(PCPS). The removal of the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-containing domain from the fX derivative did not affect the binding to rNAPc2, but abolished the effect of factor Xa as a scaffold for the inhibition of fVIIa.TF by rNAPc2. The overall anticoagulant potency of rNAPc2, therefore, results from a coordinated recognition of an exo-site on fX/fXa and of the active site of fVIIa, both of which are properly positioned in the ternary fVIIa.TF.fX(a) complex assembled on an appropriate phospholipid surface.  相似文献   

3.
We reported previously that residue 347 in activated fX (fXa) contributes to binding of the cofactor, factor Va (fVa) (Rudolph, A. E., Porche-Sorbet, R. and Miletich, J. P. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 2861-2867). Four additional residues that participate in fVa binding have now been identified by mutagenesis. All five resulting fX species, fX(R306A), fX(E310N), fX(R347N), fX(K351A), and fX(K414A), are activated and inhibited normally. However, the rate of inhibition by antithrombin III in the presence of submaximal concentrations of heparin is reduced for all the enzymes. In the absence of fVa, all of the enzymes bind and activate prothrombin similarly except fXa(E310N), which has a reduced apparent affinity ( approximately 3-fold) for prothrombin compared with wild type fXa (fXa(WT)). In the absence of phospholipid, fVa enhances the catalytic activity of fXa(WT) significantly, but the response of the variant enzymes was greatly diminished. On addition of 100 nm PC:PS (3:1) vesicles, fVa enhanced fXa(WT), fXa(R306A), and fXa(E310N) similarly, whereas fXa(R347N), fXa(K351A), and fXa(K414A) demonstrated near-normal catalytic activity but reduced apparent affinity for fVa under these conditions. All enzymes function similarly to fXa(WT) on activated platelets, which provide saturating fVa on an ideal surface. Loss of binding affinity for fVa as a result of the substitutions in residues Arg-347, Lys-351, and Lys-414 was verified by a competition binding assay. Thus, Arg-347, Lys-351, and Lys-414 are likely part of a core fVa binding site, whereas Arg-306 and Glu-310 serve a less critical role.  相似文献   

4.
Based on homology, amino acids 326-336 (143-154 in chymotrypsin numbering) of factor X (fX) comprise a flexible surface loop, which is susceptible to self-proteolysis and influences substrate catalysis. To investigate the role of this autolysis loop in fX function, a recombinant variant with a new site for asparagine-linked glycosylation has been produced by changing glutamine 333 to asparagine. Q333N fX is activated normally by factor VIIa and tissue factor, factors IXa and VIIIa, and Russell's viper venom. Proteolysis of the loop is prevented by the mutation. Reactivity of the free enzyme toward substrates and inhibitors is attenuated 4-20-fold; relative to wild type fXa, Spectrozyme Xa(TM) hydrolysis is 25%, inhibition by antithrombin III and the tissue factor pathway inhibitor is approximately 20%, and prothrombin activation in the absence of the cofactor Va is only 5%. Surprisingly, activities of the variant and wild type enzymes are equivalent when part of the prothrombinase complex. N-Glycanase cleaves the new oligosaccharide from Q333N fXa leaving aspartic acid. Q333D fXa is approximately 1.6-fold more reactive with Spectrozyme Xa(TM), antithrombin III and tissue factor pathway inhibitor, and prothrombin than its glycosylated counterpart, Q333N fXa, but still quite abnormal relative to wild type fXa. Like Q333N fXa, Q333D fXa is fully functional as part of the prothrombinase complex. We conclude that Gln-333 is geographically close to a site of proteolytic degradation but not to activator, cofactor, or membrane binding sites. Mutation of Gln-333 impairs catalytic function, but given normal prothrombin activation by the complexed enzyme, the importance of Gln-333 for catalysis is not manifest in the prothrombinase assembly, suggesting a conformational change in complexed fXa.  相似文献   

5.
The ability to regulate proteolytic functions is critical to cell biology. We describe events that regulate the initiation of the coagulation cascade on endothelial cell surfaces. The transmembrane protease receptor tissue factor (TF) triggers coagulation by forming an enzymatic complex with the serine protease factor VIIa (VIIa) that activates substrate factor X to the protease factor Xa (Xa). Feedback inhibition of the TF-VIIa enzymatic complex is achieved by the formation of a quaternary complex of TF-VIIa, Xa, and the Kunitz-type inhibitor tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI). Concomitant with the downregulation of TF-VIIa function on endothelial cells, we demonstrate by immunogold EM that TF redistributes to caveolae. Consistently, TF translocates from the Triton X-100-soluble membrane fractions to low- density, detergent-insoluble microdomains that inefficiently support TF- VIIa proteolytic function. Downregulation of TF-VIIa function is dependent on quaternary complex formation with TFPI that is detected predominantly in detergent-insoluble microdomains. Partitioning of TFPI into low-density fractions results from the association of the inhibitor with glycosyl phosphatidylinositol anchored binding sites on external membranes. Free Xa is not efficiently bound by cell-associated TFPI; hence, we propose that the transient ternary complex of TF-VIIa with Xa supports translocation and assembly with TFPI in glycosphingolipid-rich microdomains. The redistribution of TF provides evidence for an assembly-dependent translocation of the inhibited TF initiation complex into caveolae, thus implicating caveolae in the regulation of cell surface proteolytic activity.  相似文献   

6.
R Gentry  L Ye    Y Nemerson 《Biophysical journal》1995,69(2):362-371
Blood coagulation proceeds via reactions in which zymogen coagulation factors are activated to proteases. An essential step is the activation of factor X by a complex of tissue factor and factor VIIa. This complex usually is studied using phospholipid vesicles into which tissue factor is inserted. Because factor X exists free in solution and bound to the lipid-surface, it is difficult to establish experimentally the kinetic contribution of surfaces. We therefore developed a stochastic model to simulate such reactions and generate initial velocity data from which Michaelis-Menten parameters are estimated. Simulated Km values decrease slightly when substrate binding to lipid is increased and by a factor of four when the rates of surface diffusion are increased to that of fluid phase-diffusion. Simulations with various size planar surfaces established an enzyme capture radius of 32-64 nm. Simulations with different modes of enzyme-substrate complex assembly show that if the true substrate is lipid-bound, under certain conditions, the true Kcat is not measured; rather, the product "leaving rate" from the complex is the rate-limiting step that is measured as substrate is taken to infinity. This model is applicable to any surface-bound enzyme reaction.  相似文献   

7.
Activation of coagulation factor X (fX) by activated factors IX (fIXa) and VIII (fVIIIa) requires the assembly of the enzyme-cofactor-substrate fIXa-fVIIIa-fX complex on negatively charged phospholipid membranes. Using flow cytometry, we explored formation of the intermediate membrane-bound binary complexes of fIXa, fVIIIa, and fX. Studies of the coordinate binding of coagulation factors to 0.8-microm phospholipid vesicles (25/75 phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine) showed that fVIII (fVIIIa), fIXa, and fX bind to 32 700 +/- 5000 (33 200 +/- 14 100), 20 000 +/- 4500, and 30 500 +/- 1300 binding sites per vesicle with apparent K(d) values of 76 +/- 23 (71 +/- 5), 1510 +/- 430, and 223 +/- 79 nm, respectively. FVIII at 10 nm induced the appearance of additional high-affinity sites for fIXa (1810 +/- 370, 20 +/- 5 nm) and fX (12 630 +/- 690, 14 +/- 4 nm), whereas fX at 100 nm induced high-affinity sites for fIXa (541 +/- 67, 23 +/- 5 nm). The effects of fVIII and fVIIIa on the binding of fIXa or fX were similar. The apparent Michaelis constant of the fX activation by fIXa was a linear function of the fVIIIa concentration with a slope of 1.00 +/- 0.12 and an intrinsic K(m) value of 8.0 +/- 1.5 nm, in agreement with the hypothesis that the reaction rate is limited by the fVIIIa-fX complex formation. In addition, direct correlation was observed between the fX activation rate and formation of the fVIIIa-fX complex. Titration of fX, fVIIIa, phospholipid concentration and phosphatidylserine content suggested that at high fVIIIa concentration the reaction rate is regulated by the concentration of free fX rather than of membrane-bound fX. The obtained results reveal formation of high-affinity fVIIIa-fX complexes on phospholipid membranes and suggest their role in regulating fX activation by anchoring and delivering fX to the enzymatic complex.  相似文献   

8.
The initial surface reactions of the extrinsic coagulation pathway on live cell membranes were examined under flow conditions. Generation of activated coagulation factor X (fXa) was measured on spherical monolayers of epithelial cells with a total surface area of 41-47 cm(2) expressing tissue factor (TF) at >25 fmol/cm(2). Concentrations of reactants and product were monitored as a function of time with radiolabeled proteins and a chromogenic substrate at resolutions of 2-8 s. At physiological concentrations of fVIIa and fX, the reaction rate was 3.05 +/- 0.75 fmol fXa/s/cm(2), independent of flux, and 10 times slower than that expected for collision-limited reactions. Rates were also independent of surface fVIIa concentrations within the range 0.6-25 fmol/cm(2). The transit time of fX activated on the reaction chamber was prolonged relative to transit times of nonreacting tracers or preformed fXa. Membrane reactions were modeled using a set of nonlinear kinetic equations and a lagged normal density curve to track the expected surface concentration of reactants for various hypothetical reaction mechanisms. The experimental results were theoretically predicted only when the models used a slow intermediate reaction step, consistent with surface diffusion. These results provide evidence that the transfer of substrate within the membrane is rate-limiting in the kinetic mechanisms leading to initiation of blood coagulation by the TF pathway.  相似文献   

9.
Membrane anchoring of tissue factor (TF), the cell receptor for coagulation factor VIIa (VIIa), exemplifies an effective mechanism to localize proteolysis at the cell surface. A recombinant TF mutant (TF1-219), deleted of membrane spanning and intracellular domains, was used to evaluate the role of phospholipid interactions for assembly of substrate with the catalytic TF.VIIa complex. TF1-219 was secreted by cells rather than expressed as a cell membrane protein. Unlike free VIIa, TF1-219 as well as the TF1-219.VIIa complex demonstrated no stable association with phospholipid. In the absence of lipid, kinetic evaluation of substrate factor X cleavage by free VIIa, TF.VIIa, and TF1-219.VIIa suggests that the catalytic function of VIIa rather than substrate recognition is enhanced by complex formation. Furthermore, compared with free factor X, factor X on phospholipid was preferentially cleaved as a substrate by TF1-219.VIIa. TF-dependent initiation of the coagulation protease cascades thus involves an enhancement of the activation of factor X on the cell surface by a crucial role of the TF transmembrane domain to membrane anchor the reaction, by the TF extracellular domain to provide protein-protein interactions with VIIa to enhance the activity of the catalytic domain of VIIa, and the preferential presentation of factor X as a substrate when associated with phospholipid surfaces.  相似文献   

10.
Herein we describe a recombinant factor X (fX) with a single substitution at position 347 (fXR347N). Activated fXR347N had a reduced affinity for factor Va (fVa), although the catalytic impact of fVa binding remained intact. The mutation was selective as demonstrated by normal activation and inhibition, except in the presence of subsaturating heparin where the rate of inhibition by antithrombin III (ATIII) was 15% of normal. The reactivity of fXaR347N toward prothrombin was equivalent to wild-type fXa (fXaWT) in the absence of fVa and phospholipid. Addition (without phospholipid) of fVa dramatically increased the catalytic efficiency of fXaWT toward prothrombin but had a negligible effect on fXaR347N. On addition of phosphatidylcholine:phosphatidylserine (PC:PS, 3:1) vesicles, fXaR347Ndisplayed an increased catalytic activity in response to fVa, but the apparent affinity for fVa on the phospholipid surface was 5-20-fold lower than that of fXaWT. On an activated platelet surface, however, fXaWT and fXaR347N activated prothrombin similarly. In a competitive binding assay that measures the displacement of radiolabeled fXa from fVa on a phospholipid surface, fXaR347N was approximately 10-fold less effective than fXaWT. Substitution of fXa at position 347 selectively attenuates the interaction between fXa and fVa without affecting its catalytic activity.  相似文献   

11.
The initiation of coagulation results from the activation of factor X by an enzyme complex (Xase) composed of the trypsin-like serine proteinase, factor VIIa, bound to tissue factor (TF) on phospholipid membranes. We have investigated the basis for the protein substrate specificity of Xase using TF reconstituted into vesicles of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, or pure phosphatidylcholine. We show that occupation of the active site of VIIa within Xase by a reversible inhibitor or an alternate peptidyl substrate is sufficient to exclude substrate interactions at the active site but does not alter the affinity of Xase for factor X. This is evident as classical competitive inhibition of peptidyl substrate cleavage but as classical noncompetitive inhibition of factor X activation by active site-directed ligands. This implies that the productive recognition of factor X by Xase arises from a multistep reaction requiring an initial interaction at sites on the enzyme complex distinct from the active site (exosites), followed by active site interactions and bond cleavage. Exosite interactions determine protein substrate affinity, whereas the second binding step influences the maximum catalytic rate for the reaction. We also show that competitive inhibition can be achieved by interfering with exosite binding using factor X derivatives that are expected to have limited or abrogated interactions with the active site of VIIa within Xase. Thus, substrate interactions at exosites, sites removed from the active site of VIIa within the enzyme complex, determine affinity and binding specificity in the productive recognition of factor X by the VIIa-TF complex. This may represent a prevalent strategy through which distinctive protein substrate specificities are achieved by the homologous enzymes of coagulation.  相似文献   

12.
Planar-supported phospholipid bilayers formed by the adsorption of vesicles are increasingly used in the investigation of lipid-dependent reactions. We have studied the way in which these bilayers are formed with phospholipid vesicles containing the transmembrane protein Tissue Factor (TF). TF complexed with the serine protease, factor VIIa, is the primary initiator of blood coagulation by way of activation of the zymogen factor X. TF has been shown to orient randomly on the inner and outer leaflets of vesicles. We used proteolytic digestion to produce vesicles in which the extracellular domain of TF is located on the inner leaflet. These vesicles show no cofactor activity for factor VIIa as a result of the inability of the extracellular domain of TF to bind VIIa. After freeze/thawing, 50% of the cofactor activity was regained, indicating reorientation of the sequestered, inner leaflet TF. Adsorption of these vesicles to the inner surface of glass microcapillaries results in a continuous phospholipid bilayer. The microcapillaries were perfused with a solution of factors VIIa and X, and the effluent was monitored for factor Xa production, a sensitive measure of the activity of the TF-VIIa complex. For coatings produced with the digested vesicles, minimal TF-VIIa activity was observed, showing that the supported bilayer preserves the orientation of the leaflets in the vesicles, i.e., the outer leaflet of the vesicles forms the outer leaflet of the supported bilayer.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The characteristics of a phospholipid surface are of major importance in the activation of factor X in the presence of tissue factor-factor VIIa (TF-VIIa) complex. A possible tool which provides a measure of the surface corrugation and roughness is the fractal dimension analysis. This paper uses the fractal characterization of a phospholipid surface to develop a model for analyzing surface based enzymatic reaction data. The modeling indicates that the fractal dimension (D) of a phospholipid surface is a function of the wall shear rate. The results also indicate that the fractal dimension of the phospholipid surface decreases from approximately 2.9 to 1.4 as the wall shear rate increases from 50 to 1600 sec–1. At the same time the factor Xa production increases from 1.9 to 5.8 pmoles/ (min. cm–2).The results of the fractal dimension analysis clearly indicates that the surface roughness of a phospholipid surface may have a significant effect on factor X activation.  相似文献   

14.
Although the phospholipid requirement for tissue factor (TF) activity has been well-established, the mechanism by which the surface regulates enzymatic activity remains unclear. We added phospholipid vesicles to already relipidated TF (30/70 PS/PC) and found that added lipid can both enhance and inhibit the rate of factor X (F.X) activation. Using active-site-inhibited F.Xa we demonstrate that F.Xa is a more potent inhibitor of TF/VIIa at lower lipid concentrations, and that this inhibition is attributable to high surface occupancy by F.Xa near the enzyme. We also find that exactly twice as many F.Xa molecules are bound to a lipid surface at saturation as F.X, and that a dimer model of F.Xa binding to the lipid can account for the experimentally observed, preferential binding of F.Xa (compared to F.X) to phospholipid surfaces. We manipulated the amount of phospholipid available to each TF molecule by controlling vesicle size and the number of TF molecules per vesicle and found that, as the 2D radius of phospholipid available to each TF molecule was increased, the observed k(cat) increased hyperbolically toward a maximum or "true k(cat)". At a 2D lipid radius of approximately 37 nm, the observed k(cat) was 50% of the "true k(cat)". Thus, phospholipid surface serves as a conduit for F.X presentation and F.Xa removal, and the rate at which F.Xa leaves the vicinity of the enzyme, either by lateral diffusion or desorption from the surface, regulates the rate of F.X activation. We argue that these findings require reevaluation of existing models of coagulation.  相似文献   

15.
The Ca(2+) binding 70-80 loop of factor X (fX) contains one basic (Arg(71)) and three acidic (Glu(74), Glu(76), and Glu(77)) residues whose contributions to the zymogenic and enzymatic properties of the protein have not been evaluated. We prepared four Ala substitution mutants of fX (R71A, E74A, E76A, and E77A) and characterized their activation kinetics by the factor VIIa and factor IXa in both the absence and presence of cofactors. Factor VIIa exhibited normal activity toward E74A and E76A and less than a twofold impaired activity toward R71A and E77A in both the absence and presence of tissue factor. Similarly, factor IXa in the absence of factor VIIIa exhibited normal activity toward both E74A and E76A; however, its activity toward R71A and E77A was impaired approximately two- to threefold. In the presence of factor VIIIa, factor IX activated all mutants with approximately two- to fivefold impaired catalytic efficiency. In contrast to changes in their zymogenic properties, all mutant enzymes exhibited normal affinities for factor Va, and catalyzed the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin with normal catalytic efficiencies. However, further studies revealed that the affinity of mutant enzymes for interaction with metal ions Na(+) and Ca(2+) was impaired. These results suggest that although charged residues of the 70-80 loop play an insignificant role in fX recognition by the factor VIIa-tissue factor complex, they are critical for the substrate recognition by factor IXa in the intrinsic Xase complex. The results further suggest that mutant residues do not play a specific role in the catalytic function of fXa in the prothrombinase complex.  相似文献   

16.
The role of the activation peptide in determining the substrate specificity of intrinsic pathway factor X (fX) activation was studied by using a novel derivative of fX in which 49 residues were removed enzymatically from the NH2 terminus of the 52-residue activation peptide by an enzyme from the venom of the snake Agkistrodon rhodostoma. The modified protein, designated fXdes-143-191, is inactive but is activated to alpha-fXa by either the intrinsic fX activation complex (intrinsic fXase) composed of factor IXa beta, thrombin-activated factor VIII (fVIIIaIIa), and phospholipid vesicles or by the fX coagulant protein from Russell's viper venom (RVV-XCP). Both the Km and kcat for the activation of fX by RVV-XCP were greater than for fXdes-143-191, resulting in less than a 2-fold difference in the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) suggestive of nonproductive binding of fXdes-143-191 to RVV-XCP. The activation of each substrate by intrinsic fXase revealed that the kcat was 100-fold greater for fX than fXdes-143-191 (16 and 0.16 s-1, respectively), although there was no detectable difference in Km (60 and 80 nM, respectively). Activations by fIXa beta/phospholipid in the absence of fVIIIaIIa also revealed a difference in kcat but not Km, but the difference in kcat was smaller (kcat of 0.007 and 0.002 s-1 and Km of 220 and 170 nM for fX and fXdes-143-191, respectively). Analysis of product versus time curves demonstrated that fVIIIaIIa promotes formation of the actyl-enzyme intermediate during fX activation. We conclude that the activation peptide plays a critical role during acyl-enzyme formation that is most pronounced in the presence of fVIIIaIIa. The absence of Km differences suggests that residues NH2-terminal to P3 do not contribute to the initial formation of the enzyme-substrate complex.  相似文献   

17.
T Nakagaki  D C Foster  K L Berkner  W Kisiel 《Biochemistry》1991,30(45):10819-10824
Previous studies demonstrated proteolytic activation of human blood coagulation factor VII by an unidentified protease following complex formation with tissue factor expressed on the surface of a human bladder carcinoma cell line (J82). In the present study, an active-site mutant human factor VII cDNA (Ser344----Ala) has been constructed, subcloned, and expressed in baby hamster kidney cells. Mutant factor VII was purified to homogeneity in a single step from serum-free culture supernatants by immunoaffinity column chromatography. Mutant factor VII was fully carboxylated, possessed no apparent clotting activity, and was indistinguishable from plasma factor VII by SDS-PAGE. Cell binding studies indicated that mutant factor VII bound to J82 tissue factor with essentially the same affinity as plasma factor VII and was cleaved by factor Xa at the same rate as plasma factor VII. In contrast to radiolabeled single-chain plasma factor VII that was progressively converted to two-chain factor VIIa on J82 monolayers, mutant factor VII was not cleaved following complex formation with J82 tissue factor. Incubation of radiolabeled mutant factor VII with J82 cells in the presence of recombinant factor VIIa resulted in the time-dependent and tissue factor dependent conversion of single-chain mutant factor VII to two-chain mutant factor VIIa. Plasma levels of antithrombin III had no discernible effect on the factor VIIa catalyzed activation of factor VII on J82 cell-surface tissue factor but completely blocked this reaction catalyzed by factor Xa. These results are consistent with an autocatalytic mechanism of factor VII activation following complex formation with cell-surface tissue factor, which may play an important role in the initiation of extrinsic coagulation in normal hemostasis.  相似文献   

18.
In the extrinsic pathway of blood coagulation, Factor X is activated by a complex of tissue factor, factor VII(a) and Ca2+ ions. Using purified human coagulation factors and a sensitive spectrophotometric assay for Factor Xa, we could demonstrate activation of Factor X by Factor VIIa in the absence of tissue-factor apoprotein, phospholipids and Ca2+. This finding allowed a kinetic analysis of the contribution of each of the cofactors. Ca2+ stimulated the reaction rate 10-fold at an optimum of 6 mM (Vmax. of 1.1 x 10(-3) min-1) mainly by decreasing the Km of Factor X (to 11.4 microM). In the presence of Ca2+, 25 microM-phospholipid caused a 150-fold decrease of the apparent Km and a 2-fold increase of the apparent Vmax. of the reaction; however, both kinetic parameters increased with increasing phospholipid concentration. Tissue-factor apoprotein contributed to the reaction rate mainly by an increase of the Vmax., in both the presence (40,500-fold) and absence (4900-fold) of phospholipid. The formation of a ternary complex of Factor VIIa with tissue-factor apoprotein and phospholipid was responsible for a 15 million-fold increase in the catalytic efficiency of Factor X activation. The presence of Ca2+ was absolutely required for the stimulatory effects of phospholipid and apoprotein. The data fit a general model in which the Ca2(+)-dependent conformation allows Factor VIIa to bind tissue-factor apoprotein and/or a negatively charged phospholipid surface resulting into a decreased intrinsic Km and an increased Vmax. for the activation of fluid-phase Factor X.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Protein-phospholipid as well as protein-protein interactions may be critical for tight binding of the serine protease factor VIIa (VIIa) to its receptor cofactor tissue factor (TF). To elucidate the role of protein-protein interactions, we analyzed the interaction of VII/VIIa with TF in the absence of phospholipid. Binding of VII occurred with similar affinity to solubilized and phospholipid-reconstituted TF. Lack of the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla)-domain (des-(1-38)-VIIa) resulted in a 10- to 30-fold increase of the Kd for the interaction, as did blocking the Gla-domain by Fab fragments of a specific monoclonal antibody. These results suggest that the VII Gla-domain can participate in protein-protein interaction with the TF molecule per se rather than only in interactions with the charged phospholipid surface. Gla-domain-independent, low affinity binding of VII to TF required micromolar Ca2+, indicating involvement of high affinity calcium ion binding sites suggested to be localized in VII rather than TF. Interference with Gla-domain-dependent interactions with TF did not alter the TF. VIIa-dependent cleavage of a small peptidyl substrate, whereas the proteolytic activation of the protein substrate factor X was markedly decreased, suggesting that the VIIa Gla-domain not only participates in the formation of a more stable TF. VIIa complex but contributes to extended substrate recognition.  相似文献   

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