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1.
Anion-binding exosite of human alpha-thrombin and fibrin(ogen) recognition   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Activation of prothrombin to alpha-thrombin generates not only the catalytic site and associated regions but also an independent site (an exosite) which binds anionic substances, such as Amberlite CG-50 resin [cross-linked poly(methylacrylic acid)]. Like human alpha-thrombin with high fibrinogen clotting activity (peak elution at I = 0.40 +/- 0.01 M, pH 7.4, approximately 23 degrees C), catalytically inactivated forms (e.g., i-Pr2P-alpha- and D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH2-alpha-thrombins) were eluted with only slightly lower salt concentrations (I = 0.36-0.39 M), while gamma-thrombin with very low clotting activity was eluted with much lower concentrations (I = 0.29 M) and the hirudin complex of alpha-thrombin was not retained by the resin. In a similar manner, hirudin complexes of alpha-, i-Pr2P-alpha-, and gamma-thrombin were not retained by nonpolymerized fibrin-agarose resin. Moreover, the ionic strengths for the elution from the CG-50 resin of seven thrombin forms were directly correlated with those from the fibrin resin (y = 0.15 + 0.96x, r = 0.95). In other experiments, the 17 through 27 synthetic peptide of the human fibrinogen A alpha chain was not an inhibitor of alpha-thrombin, while the NH2-terminal disulfide knot (NDSK) fragment was a simple competitive inhibitor of alpha-thrombin with a Ki approximately 3 microM (0.15 M NaCl, pH 7.3, approximately 23 degrees C). These data suggest that alpha-thrombin recognizes fibrin(ogen) by a negatively charged surface, noncontiguous with the A alpha cleavage site but found within the NDSK fragment. Such interaction involving an anion-binding exosite may explain the exceptional specificity of alpha-thrombin for the A alpha cleavage in fibrinogen and alpha-thrombin incorporation into fibrin clots.  相似文献   

2.
alpha-Thrombin derivatives obtained either by site-specific modification at lysyl residues (phosphopyridoxylated) or by limited trypsinolysis (gamma T-thrombin) were compared to correlate structural modifications with the functional reactivity toward fibrin(ogen) and heparin. alpha-Thrombin phosphopyridoxylated in the absence of heparin (unprotected) showed approximately 2 mol of label incorporated/mol of thrombin, but only 1 mol of label incorporated/mol of proteinase when modified in the presence of added heparin (protected). In contrast to native alpha-thrombin, both phosphopyridoxylated alpha-thrombin derivatives failed to interact with a fibrin monomer-agarose column and had reduced fibrinogen clotting activity, which is very similar to gamma T-thrombin. Heparin accelerated the rate of antithrombin III inhibition of alpha-thrombin, heparin-protected modified-alpha-thrombin, and gamma T-thrombin in a manner consistent with a template mechanism but was without effect on unprotected modified alpha-thrombin. In a heparin-catalyzed antithrombin III inhibition assay of alpha-thrombin, we found that D-Phe-Pro-Arg chloromethyl ketone-active site-inactivated gamma T-thrombin competed for heparin binding. It has been shown that limited proteolysis/autolysis of the B-chain of alpha-thrombin in the area around Arg-B73 (in beta T/beta- and gamma T/gamma-thrombin), but not that around Lys-B154 (in gamma T/gamma-thrombin), diminishes specific interactions with fibrinogen (Hofsteenge, J., Braun, P. J., and Stone , S. R. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 2144-2151). In unprotected modified alpha-thrombin, lysyl residues B21, B65, B174, and B252 were phosphopyridoxylated. In heparin-protected modified alpha-thrombin, only lysyl residues B21 and B65 were phosphopyridoxylated. These observations suggest that lysyl residues 21/65 of the B-chain of alpha-thrombin are involved in fibrin(ogen) interactions, and lysyl residues 174/252 of the B-chain are important in heparin interactions.  相似文献   

3.
We previously showed that the alpha-thrombin-antithrombin III complex causes antigenic change in vitronectin as monitored by the monoclonal anti-vitronectin antibody 8E6 (Tomasini & Mosher, 1988). We have extended these studies to other protease-serpin complexes and to gamma-thrombin, a proteolytic derivative of alpha-thrombin. In the presence of heparin, recognition of vitronectin by 8E6 was increased 64- or 52-fold by interaction with the complex of alpha-thrombin and heparin cofactor II or the Pittsburgh mutant (Met358----Arg) of alpha 1-protease inhibitor, respectively. This was comparable to the value obtained with the alpha-thrombin-antithrombin III complex. Factor Xa-serpin complexes were approximately 4-fold less effective than the corresponding thrombin complexes. alpha-Thrombin-serpin complexes but not Xa-serpin complexes formed disulfide-bonded complexes with vitronectin. Antigenic changes and disulfide-bonded complexes were not detected when trypsin- or chymotrypsin-serpin complexes were incubated with vitronectin. gamma-Thrombin caused 7- and 34-fold increases in recognition of vitronectin by MaVN 8E6 in the absence and presence of heparin, respectively. In contrast, alpha-thrombin by itself had no effect. The antigenic change induced by gamma-thrombin was maximal when gamma-thrombin and vitronectin were equimolar, was not dependent on cleavage of vitronectin, and was abolished by inhibition of gamma-thrombin with Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethyl ketone but not with diisopropyl fluorophosphate. These data indicate that alpha-thrombin is the component in alpha-thrombin-serpin complexes that induces the antigenic change in vitronectin, probably via a region that is preferentially exposed in gamma-thrombin.  相似文献   

4.
Enzymic and nonenzymic properties of human beta-thrombin   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Autolysis or tryptic hydrolysis converts human alpha-thrombin to its beta-derivative and subsequently to gamma-thrombin. Human beta-thrombin was obtained by tryptic digestion of alpha-thrombin and isolated by BioRex chromatography. The kinetic parameters for human alpha- and beta-thrombins with H-D-phenylalanyl-L-pipecolyl-L-arginine-para-nitroanilide were similar, as well as the rate of inactivation by tosyl-lysine chloromethyl ketone. By contrast, the rate of inactivation by diisopropyl fluorophosphate was reduced by half, and the inhibition constant for benzamidine was increased 2.5-fold. Moreover, the beta cleavages induced a drastic reduction in reactivity toward protein C, affinity for thrombomodulin, and fibrinogen clotting activity. Unlike alpha-thrombin, beta-thrombin was not protected from inhibition by diisopropyl fluorophosphate in the presence of fibrinogen and failed to bind to fibrin-Sepharose. Our results indicate that the beta cleavages induce multiple defects in the functions of human thrombin. Although the three catalytic residues remain in an active configuration, subtle changes are induced in the microenvironment of the active serine. However, the drastic reduction of fibrinogen clotting activity should rather be ascribed to major alterations observed in both the fibrinopeptide groove and the fibrin recognition site. These observations provide further evidence for a double-site mechanism in the interaction of fibrinogen with thrombin.  相似文献   

5.
Steady-state kinetic parameters were compared for the action of alpha- and gamma-thrombin on the physiologically important thrombin substrates fibrinogen and factor XIII at 37 degrees C, pH 7.4, and 0.14 M NaCl. gamma-Thrombin, an alpha-thrombin derivative proteolytically cleaved at R-B73 and K-B154, was observed to catalyze the release of fibrinopeptide A (FPA) from fibrinogen with a specificity constant (kcat/Km) of 5 X 10(3) M-1 s-1. This value was approximately 2400-fold lower than the specificity constant for the corresponding alpha-thrombin-catalyzed reaction. The low specificity constant was attributed to an increase in Km and a decrease in kcat for gamma-thrombin-catalyzed release of FPA from fibrinogen. Conversion of alpha-thrombin to gamma-thrombin also resulted in an approximately 800-fold reduction in the specificity constant for thrombin-catalyzed release of fibrinopeptide B (FPB) from fibrin I, as well as a loss in discriminatory power. Whereas alpha-thrombin preferentially released FPA from intact fibrinogen, gamma-thrombin released FPA and FPB from intact fibrinogen at similar rates. In contrast to the large difference in specificity constants observed for alpha- and gamma-thrombin catalysis with fibrin(ogen) as substrate, the specificity constant (2.6 X 10(4) M-1 s-1) observed for gamma-thrombin-catalyzed release of activation peptide from factor XIII was only 5-fold lower than the corresponding value for the alpha-thrombin-catalyzed reaction. Additionally, the promotion of factor XIII activation by fibrin characteristic of the alpha-thrombin-catalyzed reaction did not occur in the gamma-thrombin-catalyzed reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Human alpha-thrombin increases the permeability of bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cell (CCL-209) monolayers. To determine if this increase is via an enzymatic or receptor-mediated mechanism, enzymatically active forms of alpha-thrombin and enzymatically inactive forms with cell binding activity were incubated with the monolayers. Enzymatic forms included alpha-thrombin and two digestion products, zeta-thrombin (chymotryptic product with 89% clotting activity) and gamma-thrombin (tryptic product). Enzymatically inactive forms included D-Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethylketone-(PPACK) alpha-thrombin and diisopropylphosphorofluoridate-(DIP) alpha-thrombin. Cell binding activity of alpha- and PPACK-alpha-thrombin was demonstrated to be similar to each other and comparable to that cited in the literature for DIP-alpha-thrombin. gamma-Thrombin, on the other hand, did not compete for binding of 125I-labeled alpha-thrombin. All enzymatic forms of alpha-thrombin increased endothelial permeability as assessed by the clearance of 125I-albumin across the monolayers. Coincubation of PPACK, an enzymatic site inhibitor, with alpha- or gamma-thrombin prevented the increase in permeability, further indicating that alpha-thrombin increased permeability by its enzymatic activity. Both enzymatically inactive forms of alpha-thrombin with high-affinity binding activity had no effect on permeability. To further examine whether cell binding activity of alpha-thrombin contributed to the increased permeability, a sulfated COOH-terminal fragment of hirudin (hirugen) that binds to the anion-binding site of alpha-thrombin but, unlike hirudin, does not interact with the catalytic site was coincubated with alpha-thrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
The steady-state kinetic parameters of human alpha-thrombin and the alpha-thrombin-staphylocoagulase complex as to the chromogenic substrate, H-D-Phe-Pip-Arg-p-nitroanilide (S-2238), were determined. At pH 8.0 and 37 degrees C, the Km values for alpha-thrombin and the complex for S-2238 were 7.9 microM and 7.7 microM, respectively. The kcat of this amidase reaction catalyzed by the complex was 127 s-1, which had apparently decreased from the kcat of 197 s-1 determined for free alpha-thrombin. This difference in the kinetic parameter between alpha-thrombin and the complex was also observed using the fluorogenic substrate, Boc-Val-Pro-Arg-4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide. Moreover, the fibrinogen clotting activity of the alpha-thrombin-staphylocoagulase complex was less than half that of alpha-thrombin, suggesting that the alpha-thrombin active site in the complex is different in catalytic ability from that of free alpha-thrombin. Other evidence supporting this view was as follows: The alpha-thrombin-staphylocoagulase complex is insensitive to antithrombin III, the complex shows much weaker binding to hirudin, as compared to free alpha-thrombin, and the amidase pH-profiles of the complex and free alpha-thrombin differ from each other. These results indicate that the microenvironment of the active site of alpha-thrombin is significantly altered by the complex formation with staphylocoagulase.  相似文献   

8.
The prothrombin activation intermediates meizothrombin and meizothrombin(desF1) (meizothrombin that has been autoproteolyzed to remove fragment 1) have been obtained in a relatively pure, active form with minimal autolysis, making them suitable for enzymatic characterization. When compared at equimolar concentrations, alpha-thrombin, fragment 1.2+ alpha-thrombin, meizothrombin(desF1), and meizothrombin have approximately 100, 100, 10, and 1% activity, respectively, toward the macromolecular substrates factor V, fibrinogen, and platelets. The difference in activity of these four enzymes cannot be attributed to alterations in the catalytic triad, as all four enzymes have nearly identical catalytic efficiency toward the chromogenic substrate S2238. Further, the ability of meizothrombin and meizothrombin(desF1) to activate protein C was 75% of the activity exhibited by alpha-thrombin or fragment 1.2+ alpha-thrombin. All four enzymes bind to thrombomodulin, as judged by the enhanced rate of protein C activation upon preincubation of the enzymes with thrombomodulin. The extent of rate enhancement varied, with meizothrombin/thrombomodulin exhibiting only 50% of the alpha-thrombin/thrombomodulin rate. This difference in rate is not due to a decreased affinity of the meizothrombin for thrombomodulin since the apparent dissociation constants for the alpha-thrombin-thrombomodulin complex and the meizothrombin-thrombomodulin complex are virtually identical. The difference in the observed rate is due in part to the higher Km for protein C exhibited by the meizothrombin-thrombomodulin complex. Incubation of the thrombomodulin-enzyme complex with phospholipid vesicles caused an increase in the protein C activation rates. The kinetic constants for protein C activation in the presence of phospholipid are virtually identical for these enzyme-thrombomodulin complexes. These results suggest meizothrombin generation is targeted toward anticoagulant function such as protein C activation, whereas alpha-thrombin generation is targeted toward procoagulant functions, such as fibrinogen clotting, factor V activation, and platelet aggregation.  相似文献   

9.
Thymosin alpha 1-inhibited fibrinogen clotting activity of alpha-thrombin, but not amidolysis of H-D-Phe-Pip-Arg-pNA. Modulation of thrombin interaction with rat peritoneal mast cells (RPMC) by suppressors of additional recognition binding site (thymosin and heparin) was studied. Thrombin-induced pHi changes of RPMC were controlled with pH-sensitive fluorescent dye, BCECF. Thrombin caused a biphasic changes in pHi: rapid cell acidification (0.02) followed by slow alkalinization (0.06 above baseline for 18 min). Thymosin suppressed thrombin-induced pHi increase above resting level. Similar changes in pHi were observed after modification of additional recognition binding site by heparin. Beta/gamma-thrombin with disrupted additional binding site was shown to induce only a decrease of pHi. It is concluded that thymosin alpha 1 is endogenous modulator of alpha-thrombin activity.  相似文献   

10.
Covalent binding of thrombin to specific sites on corneal endothelial cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Binding of 125I-labeled human alpha-thrombin to endothelial cells derived from bovine corneas was studied in tissue culture. Specific and saturable binding to the cell surface occurred at 37 degrees C but to a much smaller extent at 4 degrees C. Binding of [125I]thrombin to a specific site on these cells with formation of a 77000-dalton complex was demonstrated by NaDodSO4 (sodium dodecyl sulfate)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Binding of [125I]thrombin was blocked by a 100-fold excess of unlabeled alpha-thrombin and by the thrombin inhibitor, hirudin. There are approximately 100000 of these thrombin binding sites on the cell surface. Formation of the complex could be detected as early as 15 s, increased rapidly over the next 20-30 min, and then continued at a slower rate for the next 2.5 h. The catalytically active site of the enzyme was required for formation of the NaDodSO4-stable complex as shown by the inability of diisopropyl phosphorofluoride inactivated thrombin to form stable complexes with these cells. The complex was dissociated in NaDodSO4 with 1.0 M hydroxylamine, suggesting an acyl linkage of the enzyme to the cellular binding site. The thrombin-endothelial cell complex was distinct from the thrombin-antithrombin III complex (Mr approximately 90000) on gel electrophoresis, and its formation was not enhanced by heparin. Additional thrombin-cell complexes (Mr less than 77000) were also identified; however, they represent a small fraction of the total thrombin bound to the cells. These observations demonstrate that alpha-thrombin is capable of reacting specifically with corneal endothelial cells to form a NaDod-SO4-stable complex which requires the catalytically active enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
In the presence of 2mM-Ca2+, alpha-thrombin slowly cleaved thrombospondin (Mr 180 000) into 150 000-Mr and 30 000-Mr fragments. In the absence of Ca2+, the platelet glycoprotein was progressively and completely hydrolysed by 3 units of the enzyme/ml to 130 000-Mr, 95 000-Mr and 65 000-Mr fragments. In contrast, the nonclotting enzyme form, gamma-thrombin, did not hydrolyse the platelet protein either in the presence or in the absence of Ca2+, even at 10-fold higher concentrations of enzyme. Protein-interacting regions removed from the catalytic site, like those required for fibrinogen recognition, are necessary for thrombin proteolysis of thrombospondin.  相似文献   

12.
The interaction of thrombin with proteins at the platelet surface was assessed by chemical cross-linking with the membrane-impermeable reagents bis(sulphosuccinimidyl)suberate and dithiobis(sulphosuccinimidyl propionate) under conditions which induced no modification of intracellular proteins and minimal cross-linking of membrane glycoproteins. The proteins covalently linked to 125I-labelled alpha and gamma-thrombin were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and crossed immunoelectrophoresis. 125I-alpha-thrombin was detected in high-molecular-mass complexes (a) at the top of a 3% acrylamide stacking gel and (b) with a Mr approximately equal to 400,000. In addition, two complexes of 240 kDa and 78 kDa were characterized. Hirudin prevented the formation of each of these complexes. The 78-kDa complex occurred spontaneously in the absence of bifunctional reagents, was only observed with active alpha-thrombin and was not dissociated by hirudin. Such characteristics are similar to those of a serpin serine-protease complex. The 240-kDa complex was formed with 0.8-100 nM alpha-thrombin, was observed after a short incubation time (30 s) and occurred with TosLysCH2Cl-inactivated alpha-thrombin. After analysis of Triton-X-100-soluble extracts of cross-linked platelets by crossed immunoelectrophoresis against a rabbit antiserum to platelets, two principal precipitates contained 125I-alpha-thrombin. These were a precipitate containing GPIIb-IIIa complexes and a precipitate in the position of GPIb. Indirect immunoprecipitation of GPIb, using a murine monoclonal antibody, confirmed it to be the major platelet component in the 240-kDa complex. Significantly, 125I-gamma-thrombin, which activates platelets with a prolonged lag phase, failed to bind to GPIb and complexes in the 240-kDa and 78-kDa molecular mass range were not observed. We conclude that several binding sites for alpha-thrombin are present at the platelet surface, and that GPIb is one of them. The studies with gamma-thrombin suggest that binding to GPIb is not obligatory for platelet activation although it could be involved in an initial step of the platelet response.  相似文献   

13.
Reactions between near equimolar amounts of antithrombin and Factors IXa or Xa resulted in the formation of a free proteolytically modified, two-chain form of the inhibitor, in addition to the inactive antithrombin-protease complexes. The modified inhibitor produced by either enzyme was electrophoretically identical with that formed in the reaction with thrombin. As in the latter reaction, the formation of the modified antithrombin by Factor Xa was increased in the presence of heparin, while only small amounts were produced by Factor IXa both in the absence and presence of the polysaccharide. NH2-terminal sequence analyses of the isolated modified inhibitor formed by Factor Xa showed that a single Arg-Ser bond in the COOH-terminal end of the inhibitor had been cleaved. This cleavage site is identical with that identified in free thrombin-modified antithrombin. The purified antithrombin-Factor IXa and antithrombin-Factor Xa complexes were dissociated by ammonia or hydroxylamine into free enzyme and a modified two-chain form of the inhibitor. Electrophoresis studies and NH2-terminal sequence analyses showed that the modified antithrombin obtained from either complex was identical with that produced in free form by the two enzymes and also with the modified inhibitor that is released from the antithrombin-thrombin complex. The fact that identical results were obtained for the reactions between antithrombin and three enzymes with different specificities strongly suggests that the observed Arg-Ser cleavage site is the active site of antithrombin.  相似文献   

14.
Human neutrophil cathepsin G or bovine chymotrypsin proteolytically cleaved human alpha-thrombin at the B-chain Trp148-Thr149 bond generating a new form, zeta-thrombin. While incubation of alpha-thrombin with cathepsin G at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C resulted in a partial loss of fibrinogen clotting activity, 86 +/- 13% of the clotting activity and 99 +/- 16% of the active sites titratable with p-nitrophenyl p-guanidinobenzoate were retained upon controlled passage of alpha-thrombin through chymotrypsin-Sepharose 4B at pH 6.2 or 7.4 and 24 degrees C (n = 15). Kinetic parameters for H-D-hexahydrotyrosyl-Ala-Arg p-nitroanilide were Km = 1.52 +/- 0.60 vs 1.32 +/- 0.18 microM and kcat = 51.9 +/- 2.9 vs 35.8 +/- 6.4 s-1 with alpha-thrombin vs chymotrypsin-prepared zeta-thrombin (n = 4 vs 3), respectively (I = 0.15 M, pH 7.4, and 24 degrees C). Some 95% of the clotting activity was lost when zeta-thrombin was passed through trypsin-Sepharose 4B under conditions for converting alpha- to nonclotting beta- and subsequently gamma-thrombin. The resulting gamma-like thrombins eluted bimodally with 260 and 310 mM NaCl when applied to Amberlite CG-50 resin [cross-linked poly(methylacrylic acid)] developed with a linear salt gradient in 50 mM Tris at pH 7.4 and 24 degrees C. These elution peaks correspond to 240, 330, and 350 mM NaCl for gamma-, alpha-, and zeta-thrombin, respectfully, implying that the anion-binding exosite is partially destroyed in gamma-like thrombins but is intact in zeta-thrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
In order to investigate ligand binding sites in alpha-thrombin that interact with nonpolymerized fibrin, fibrinogen was conjugated (with CNBr) to Sepharose 4B and converted to the nonpolymerized fibrin resin with alpha-thrombin. Human alpha-thrombin was bound to the resin at 22 degrees C and eluted with a linear NaCl gradient [50-300 mM in 50 mM tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane hydrochloride, pH 7.6] with midpeak elution occurring at an ionic strength that corresponds to 170 +/- 5 mM NaCl. Among various ligands examined, ATP and its analogues caused alpha-thrombin to elute with 125 mM or less salt. Apparent dissociation constants were estimated by the dependence of elution volume on ligand concentration. The most potent ligands for desorption from the column were anionic (e.g., adenine nucleotides), which also inhibit thrombin esterolytic/amidolytic and clotting activity [Conery, B. G., & Berliner, L. J. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 369-375]. The desorption series was at 10 mM concentrations: ATP = ADP greater than pyrophosphate greater than citrate greater than oxalate greater than PO4(3-). Contrastingly, serotonin and related apolar compounds did not cause dissociation of alpha-thrombin from the fibrin resin, even though several of these substances inhibit fibrinogen clotting and esterolytic/amidolytic activities of the enzyme. These data imply that independent sites for apolar and anionic binding in alpha-thrombin are required for converting fibrinogen into clottable fibrin and that alpha-thrombin-fibrin binding involves an anionic site.  相似文献   

16.
Thrombin plays a central role in normal and abnormal hemostatic processes. It is assumed that alpha-thrombin activates platelets by hydrolyzing the protease-activated receptor (PAR)-1, thereby exposing a new N-terminal sequence, a tethered ligand, which initiates a cascade of molecular reactions leading to thrombus formation. This process involves cross-linking of adjacent platelets mediated by the interaction of activated glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa with distinct amino acid sequences, LGGAKQAGDV and/or RGD, at each end of dimeric fibrinogen molecules. We demonstrate here the existence of a second alpha-thrombin-induced platelet-activating pathway, dependent on GP Ib, which does not require hydrolysis of a substrate receptor, utilizes polymerizing fibrin instead of fibrinogen, and can be inhibited by the Fab fragment of the monoclonal antibody LJIb-10 bound to the GP Ib thrombin-binding site or by the cobra venom metalloproteinase, mocarhagin, that hydrolyzes the extracellular portion of GP Ib. This alternative alpha-thrombin pathway is observed when PAR-1 or GP IIb/IIIa is inhibited. The recognition sites involved in the cross-linking of polymerizing fibrin and surface integrins via the GP Ib pathway are different from those associated with fibrinogen. This pathway is insensitive to RGDS and anti-GP IIb/IIIa antibodies but reactive with a mutant fibrinogen, gamma407, with a deletion of the gamma-chain sequence, AGDV. The reaction is not due to simple trapping of platelets by the fibrin clot, since ligand binding, signal transduction, and second messenger formation are required. The GP Ib pathway is accompanied by mobilization of internal calcium and the platelet release reaction. This latter aspect is not observed with ristocetin-induced GP Ib-von Willebrand factor agglutination nor with GP Ib-von Willebrand factor-polymerizing fibrin trapping of platelets. Human platelets also respond to gamma-thrombin, an autoproteolytic product of alpha-thrombin, through PAR-4. Co-activation of the GP Ib, PAR-1, and PAR-4 pathways elicit synergistic responses. The presence of the GP Ib pathway may explain why anti-alpha-thrombin/anti-platelet regimens fail to completely abrogate thrombosis/restenosis in the cardiac patient.  相似文献   

17.
Thrombin binds to platelets and induces platelet activation, but the relationship of binding to activation is not clear. To better define this relationship, we have analyzed parameters of binding and activation by alpha-thrombin and by three analogous proteases that activate platelets somewhat differently. The proteases were nitro-alpha-thrombin, a derivative with nitrated tyrosine, gamma-thrombin, a product of partial proteolysis of alpha-thrombin, and trypsin, a homologous protease. Nitro-alpha-thrombin and native alpha-thrombin activated platelets similarly, whereas gamma-thrombin and trypsin activated to a slightly lesser extent than alpha-thrombin and only after a distinctive delay. alpha-Thrombin and nitro-alpha-thrombin bound to platelets to about the same extent, but only alpha-thrombin showed evidence of saturable binding. Hirudin, a thrombin inhibitor, blocked both platelet activation and saturable binding by alpha-thrombin. With nitro-alpha-thrombin, hirudin blocked platelet activation, but it had no effect on binding. gamma-Thrombin and trypsin bound less than alpha-thrombin and with no evidence of saturable binding. There were identical relationships between the total amount bound and the extent of platelet activation for the four proteases (some show no saturable binding) but distinct differences in the relationships of total amount bound and the rate of activation; similar rates of activation required the binding of three to five times more gamma-thrombin or trypsin than alpha-thrombin. That is, without saturable binding, activation was slower. These data thus show a correlation between total amount bound and extent of activation but no correlation between amount saturably bound and the extent of platelet activation. Conversely, the rate of activation is more closely correlated with saturable binding than with total binding. We conclude that high-affinity saturable binding is not essential for thrombin-induced platelet activation but that it may accelerate the reaction.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of native alpha- and non-coagulating gamma-thrombin to catalyze the hydrolysis of nonspecific high molecular weight substrates was studied using chymotrypsinogen and the oxidized insulin B-chain as substrates. The effect of thrombin on chymotrypsinogen was estimated by the appearance of caseinolytic activity measured by the increase in the number of terminal NH2-groups in the 2,4,6-trinitrobenzol sulfonic acid reaction. The same reaction was used to study the hydrolysis of insulin by thrombin. It was found that the destruction of the additional center necessary for fibrinogen proteolysis during the alpha-thrombin conversion to the gamma-form did not affect the enzyme ability to hydrolyze nonspecific protein substrates. It was assumed that the low efficiency of non-physiological high molecular weight substrate hydrolysis by thrombin is due to the lack of specific remote interactions in the regulatory site outside the enzyme active center.  相似文献   

19.
Thrombin acts on many protein substrates during the hemostatic process. Its specificity for these substrates is modulated through interactions at regions remote from the active site of the thrombin molecule, designated exosites. Exosite interactions can be with the substrate, cofactors such as thrombomodulin, or fragments from prothrombin. The relative activity of alpha-thrombin for fibrinogen is 10 times greater than that for protein C. However, the relative activity of meizothrombin for protein C is 14 times greater than that for fibrinogen. Modulation of thrombin specificity is linked to its Na(+)-binding site and residues in autolytic loop-2 that interact with the Na(+)-binding site. Recombinant prothrombins that yield recombinant meizothrombin (rMT) and rMT des-fragment 1 (rMT(desF1)) enable comparisons of the effects of mutations at the Na(+)-binding residue (Asp(554)) and deletion of loop-2 (Glu(466)-Thr(469)) on the relative activity of meizothrombin for several substrates. Hydrolysis of t-butoxycarbonyl-VPR-p-nitroanilide by alpha-thrombin, recombinant alpha-thrombin, or rMT(desF1) was almost identical, but that by rMT was only 40% of that by alpha-thrombin. Clotting of fibrinogen by rMT and rMT(desF1) was 12-16% of that by alpha-thrombin, as already known. Strikingly, however, although meizothrombins modified by substitution of Asp(554) with either Ala or Leu or by deletion of loop-2 had 6-8 and <1%, respectively, of the clotting activity of alpha-thrombin, the activity of these meizothrombins for protein C was increased to >10 times that of alpha-thrombin. It is proposed that interactions within thrombin that involve autolytic loop-2 and the Na(+)-binding site primarily enhance thrombin action on fibrinogen, but impair thrombin action on protein C.  相似文献   

20.
A protease nexin released by activated platelets forms stable complexes with alpha-thrombin. Active-site-blocked thrombin does not form the stable complex, but it inhibits formation of the stable complex by active alpha-thrombin. gamma-Thrombin, which has a damaged substrate recognition site (the anion-binding exosite), did not form the complex and did not inhibit formation of the stable complex by alpha-thrombin. Complex formation was inhibited by the C-terminal dodecapeptide of hirudin, which has been shown to bind to the anion-binding exosite. A monoclonal antibody that blocks reactions of thrombin that involve the anion-binding exosite also inhibited formation of a stable complex of alpha-thrombin and the platelet-derived protease nexin. It is concluded that the anion-binding exosite of thrombin, a site that confers a high degree of specificity for substrates with a complementary site, binds to the platelet nexin prior to reaction of the catalytic site with the serpin.  相似文献   

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