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1.
Jin DY  Tie JK  Stafford DW 《Biochemistry》2007,46(24):7279-7283
Vitamin K epoxide (or oxido) reductase (VKOR) is the target of warfarin and provides vitamin K hydroquinone for the carboxylation of select glutamic acid residues of the vitamin K-dependent proteins which are important for coagulation, signaling, and bone metabolism. It has been known for at least 20 years that cysteines are required for VKOR function. To investigate their importance, we mutated each of the seven cysteines in VKOR. In addition, we made VKOR with both C43 and C51 mutated to alanine (C43A/C51A), as well as a VKOR with residues C43-C51 deleted. Each mutated enzyme was purified and characterized. We report here that C132 and C135 of the CXXC motif are essential for both the conversion of vitamin K epoxide to vitamin K and the conversion of vitamin K to vitamin K hydroquinone. Surprisingly, conserved cysteines, 43 and 51, appear not to be important for either reaction. For the in vitro reaction driven by dithiothreitol, the 43-51 deletion mutation retained 85% and C43A/C51A 112% of the wild-type activity. The facile purification of the nine different mutations reported here illustrates the ease and reproducibility of VKOR purification by the method reported in our recent publication [Chu, P.-H., Huang, T.-Y., Williams, J., and Stafford, D. W. (2006) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U S A. 103, 19308-19313].  相似文献   

2.
The vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation system in the endoplasmic reticulum membrane responsible for gamma-carboxyglutamic acid modification of vitamin K-dependent proteins includes gamma-carboxylase and vitamin K 2,3-epoxide reductase (VKOR). An understanding of the mechanism by which this system works at the molecular level has been hampered by the difficulty of identifying VKOR involved in warfarin sensitive reduction of vitamin K 2,3-epoxide to reduced vitamin K(1)H(2), the gamma-carboxylase cofactor. Identification and cloning of VKORC1, a proposed subunit of a larger VKOR enzyme complex, have provided opportunities for new experimental approaches aimed at understanding the vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation system. In this work we have engineered stably transfected baby hamster kidney cells containing gamma-carboxylase and VKORC1 cDNA constructs, respectively, and stably double transfected cells with the gamma-carboxylase and the VKORC1 cDNA constructs in a bicistronic vector. All engineered cells showed increased activities of the enzymes encoded by the cDNAs. However increased activity of the gamma-carboxylation system, where VKOR provides the reduced vitamin K(1)H(2) cofactor, was measured only in cells transfected with VKORC1 and the double transfected cells. The results show that VKOR is the rate-limiting step in the gamma-carboxylation system and demonstrate successful engineering of cells containing a recombinant vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation system with enhanced capacity for gamma-carboxyglutamic acid modification. The proposed thioredoxin-like (132)CXXC(135) redox center in VKORC1 was tested by expressing the VKORC1 mutants Cys(132)/Ser and Cys(135)/Ser in BHK cells. Both of the expressed mutant proteins were inactive supporting the existence of a CXXC redox center in VKOR.  相似文献   

3.
Vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKOR) catalyzes the conversion of vitamin K 2,3-epoxide into vitamin K in the vitamin K redox cycle. Recently, the gene encoding the catalytic subunit of VKOR was identified as a 163-amino acid integral membrane protein. In this study we report the experimentally derived membrane topology of VKOR. Our results show that four hydrophobic regions predicted as the potential transmembrane domains in VKOR can individually insert across the endoplasmic reticulum membrane in vitro. However, in the intact enzyme there are only three transmembrane domains, residues 10-29, 101-123, and 127-149, and membrane-integration of residues 75-97 appears to be suppressed by the surrounding sequence. Results of N-linked glycosylation-tagged full-length VKOR shows that the N terminus of VKOR is located in the endoplasmic reticulum lumen, and the C terminus is located in the cytoplasm. Further evidence for this topological model of VKOR was obtained with freshly prepared intact microsomes from insect cells expressing HPC4-tagged full-length VKOR. In these experiments an HPC4 tag at the N terminus was protected from proteinase K digestion, whereas an HPC4 tag at the C terminus was susceptible. Altogether, our results suggest that VKOR is a type III membrane protein with three transmembrane domains, which agrees well with the prediction by the topology prediction program TMHMM.  相似文献   

4.
Vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKOR) is essential for the production of reduced vitamin K that is required for modification of vitamin K-dependent proteins. Three- and four-transmembrane domain (TMD) topology models have been proposed for VKOR. They are based on in vitro glycosylation mapping of the human enzyme and the crystal structure of a bacterial (Synechococcus) homologue, respectively. These two models place the functionally disputed conserved loop cysteines, Cys-43 and Cys-51, on different sides of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. In this study, we fused green fluorescent protein to the N or C terminus of human VKOR, expressed these fusions in HEK293 cells, and examined their topologies by fluorescence protease protection assays. Our results show that the N terminus of VKOR resides in the ER lumen, whereas its C terminus is in the cytoplasm. Selective modification of cysteines by polyethylene glycol maleimide confirms the cytoplasmic location of the conserved loop cysteines. Both results support a three-TMD model of VKOR. Interestingly, human VKOR can be changed to a four-TMD molecule by mutating the charged residues flanking the first TMD. Cell-based activity assays show that this four-TMD molecule is fully active. Furthermore, the conserved loop cysteines, which are essential for intramolecular electron transfer in the bacterial VKOR homologue, are not required for human VKOR whether they are located in the cytoplasm (three-TMD molecule) or the ER lumen (four-TMD molecule). Our results confirm that human VKOR is a three-TMD protein. Moreover, the conserved loop cysteines apparently play different roles in human VKOR and in its bacterial homologues.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

Human vitamin K epoxide reductase (hVKOR) is a small integral membrane protein involved in recycling vitamin K. hVKOR produces vitamin K hydroquinone, a crucial cofactor for γ-glutamyl carboxylation of vitamin K dependent proteins, which are necessary for blood coagulation. Because of this, hVKOR is the target of a common anticoagulant, warfarin. Spurred by the identification of the hVKOR gene less than a decade ago, there have been a number of new insights related to this protein. Nonetheless, there are a number of key issues that have not been resolved; such as where warfarin binds hVKOR, or if human VKOR shares the topology of the structurally characterized but distantly related prokaryotic VKOR. The pharmacogenetics and single nucleotide polymorphisms of hVKOR used in personalized medicine strategies for warfarin dosing should be carefully considered to inform the debate. The biochemical and cell biological evidence suggests that hVKOR has a distinct fold from its ancestral protein, though the controversy will likely remain until structural studies of hVKOR are accomplished. Resolving these issues should impact development of new anticoagulants. The paralogous human protein, VKOR-like1 (VKORL1) was recently shown to also participate in vitamin K recycling. VKORL1 was also recently characterized and assigned a functional role as a housekeeping protein involved in redox homeostasis and oxidative stress with a potential role in cancer regulation. As the physiological interplay between these two human paralogs emerge, the impacts could be significant in a number of diverse fields from coagulation to cancer.  相似文献   

6.
Vitamin K carboxylase (VKC) is believed to convert vitamin K, in the vitamin K cycle, to an alkoxide-epoxide form which then reacts with CO2 and glutamate to generate γ-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla). Subsequently, vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKOR) is thought to convert the alkoxide-epoxide to a hydroquinone form. By recycling vitamin K, the two integral-membrane proteins, VKC and VKOR, maintain vitamin K levels and sustain the blood coagulation cascade. Unfortunately, NMR or X-ray crystal structures of the two proteins have not been characterized. Thus, our understanding of the vitamin K cycle is only partial at the molecular level. In this study, based on prior biochemical experiments on VKC and VKOR, we propose a hetero-dimeric form of VKC and VKOR that may explain the efficient oxidation and reduction of vitamin K during the vitamin K cycle.  相似文献   

7.
Carboxylation of vitamin K-dependent (VKD) proteins is required for their activity and depends on reduced vitamin K generated by vitamin K oxidoreductase (VKOR) and a redox protein that regenerates VKOR activity. VKD protein carboxylation is inefficient in mammalian cells, and to understand why carboxylation becomes saturated, we developed an approach that directly measures the extent of intracellular VKD protein carboxylation. Analysis of factor IX (fIX)-expressing BHK cells indicated that slow egress of fIX from the endoplasmic reticulum and preferential secretion of the carboxylated form contribute to secreted fIX being more fully carboxylated. The analysis also revealed the first reported in vivo VKD protein turnover, which was 14-fold faster than that which occurs in vitro, suggesting facilitation of this process in vivo. r-VKORC1 expression increased the rate of fIX carboxylation and the extent of secreted carboxylated fIX approximately 2-fold, which shows that carboxylation is the rate-limiting step in fIX turnover and which was surprising because turnover in vitro is limited by release of carboxylated fIX. Interestingly, the increases were significantly smaller than the amount of VKOR overexpression (15-fold). However, when cell extracts were tested in single-turnover experiments in vitro, where redox protein is functionally substituted with dithiothreitol, VKOR overexpression increased the fIX carboxylation rate 14-fold, showing r-VKORC1 is functional for supporting fIX carboxylation. These data indicate that the effect of VKOR overexpression is limited in vivo, possibly because a carboxylation component like the redox protein becomes saturated or because another step is now rate-limiting. The studies illustrate the complexity of carboxylation and potential importance of component stoichiometry to overall efficiency.  相似文献   

8.
The vitamin K-dependent (VKD) carboxylase converts clusters of Glu residues to gamma-carboxylated Glu residues (Glas) in VKD proteins, which is required for their activity. VKD precursors are targeted to the carboxylase by their carboxylase recognition site, which in most cases is a propeptide. We have identified a second tethering site for carboxylase and VKD proteins that is required for carboxylase activity, called the vitamin K-dependent protein site of interaction (VKS). Several VKD proteins specifically bound an immobilized peptide comprising amino acids 343-355 of the human carboxylase (CVYKRSRGKSGQK) but not a scrambled peptide containing the same residues in a different order. Association with the 343-355 peptide was independent of propeptide binding, because the VKD proteins lacked the propeptide and because the 343-355 peptide did not disrupt association of a propeptide factor IX-carboxylase complex. Analysis with peptides that overlapped amino acids 343-355 indicated that the 343-345 CVY residues were necessary but not sufficient for prothrombin binding. Ionic interactions were also suggested because peptide-VKD protein binding could be disrupted by changes in ionic strength or pH. Mutagenesis of Cys(343) to Ser and Tyr(345) to Phe resulted in 7-11-fold decreases in vitamin K epoxidation and peptide (EEL) substrate and carboxylase carboxylation, and kinetic analysis showed 5-6-fold increases in K(m) values for the Glu substrate. These results suggest that Cys(343) and Tyr(345) are near the catalytic center and affect the active site conformation required for correct positioning of the Glu substrate. The 343-355 VKS peptide had a higher affinity for carboxylated prothrombin (K(d) = 5 microm) than uncarboxylated prothrombin (K(d) = 60 microm), and the basic VKS region may also facilitate exiting of the Gla product from the catalytic center by ionic attraction. Tethering of VKD proteins to the carboxylase via the propeptide-binding site and the VKS region has important implications for the mechanism of VKD protein carboxylation, and a model is proposed for how the carboxylase VKS region may be required for efficient and processive VKD protein carboxylation.  相似文献   

9.
T L Carlisle  J W Suttie 《Biochemistry》1980,19(6):1161-1167
Vitamin K dependent carboxylation of an exogenous peptide substrate and endogenous protein substrates, vitamin K epoxidation, and reduction of vitamin K epoxide were measured in subcellular fractions from rat liver. The rough microsomal fraction was highly enriched in all four activities; lower levels were found in smooth microsomes. Mitochondria, nuclei, and cytosol had negligible activities. The addition of 0.2% Triton X-100 to intact microsomes resulted in a 10-20-fold stimulation in carboxylation of a peptide substrate. This marked latency suggests that the active site of the carboxylase may be accessible only from the lumen of the microsomal membrane. A lumen-facing orientation of the carboxylase was also supported by its inaccessibility to trypsin in intact microsomes contrasted with marked inhibition by trypsin in detergent-permeabilized microsomes. Vitamin K epoxidase and epoxide reductase activities were also inhibited by trypsin much more effectively in permeabilized than in intact microsomes, although some degree of exposure at the cytosolic surface was also indicated. These data suggest that carboxylation is an early event in prothrombin synthesis occurring primarily on the lumen side of the rough endoplasmic reticulum membrane. The location of the vitamin K epoxidation-reduction cycle enzymes is consistent with their possible role in the carboxylation reaction.  相似文献   

10.
Vitamin K dependent in vitro production of prothrombin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
J C Swanson  J W Suttie 《Biochemistry》1982,21(23):6011-6018
During prothrombin biosynthesis, glutamyl residues in prothrombin precursor proteins are carboxylated to gamma-carboxyglutamyl residues by a vitamin K dependent carboxylase. Calcium-dependent and calcium-independent rat prothrombin antibody subpopulations have been produced and utilized to study the liver microsomal precursors of prothrombin that accumulate when vitamin K action is blocked. A substantial portion of the precursor pool accumulating in the vitamin K deficient or warfarin-treated rat will react with a Ca2+-dependent antibody at high calcium concentration and appears to be partially carboxylated. During in vitro incubation in the presence of vitamin K, the fraction of the precursor pool which is tightly bound to the microsomal membrane appears to be the preferred substrate for the vitamin K dependent carboxylation. A small amount of completely carboxylated rather than a large amount of partially carboxylated products are produced during these incubations. Treatment with a Sepharose-bound prothrombin antibody demonstrated that about 20-25% of the total carboxylated microsomal protein precursor pool consists of prothrombin precursors. This treatment removes an equal amount of total carboxylase activity, and the enzyme is active in this carboxylase precursor-antibody complex.  相似文献   

11.
In contrast to other fat-soluble vitamins, dietary vitamin K is rapidly lost to the body resulting in comparatively low tissue stores. Deficiency is kept at bay by the ubiquity of vitamin K in the diet, synthesis by gut microflora in some species, and relatively low vitamin K cofactor requirements for γ-glutamyl carboxylation. However, as shown by fatal neonatal bleeding in mice that lack vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKOR), the low requirements are dependent on the ability of animals to regenerate vitamin K from its epoxide metabolite via the vitamin K cycle. The identification of the genes encoding VKOR and its paralog VKOR-like 1 (VKORL1) has accelerated understanding of the enzymology of this salvage pathway. In parallel, a novel human enzyme that participates in the cellular conversion of phylloquinone to menaquinone (MK)-4 was identified as UbiA prenyltransferase-containing domain 1 (UBIAD1). Recent studies suggest that side-chain cleavage of oral phylloquinone occurs in the intestine, and that menadione is a circulating precursor of tissue MK-4. The mechanisms and functions of vitamin K recycling and MK-4 synthesis have dominated advances made in vitamin K biochemistry over the last five years and, after a brief overview of general metabolism, are the main focuses of this review.  相似文献   

12.
Vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase is a 758 amino acid integral membrane glycoprotein that catalyzes the post-translational conversion of certain protein glutamate residues to gamma-carboxyglutamate. Carboxylase has ten cysteine residues, but their form (sulfhydryl or disulfide) is largely unknown. Pudota et al. in Pudota, B. N., Miyagi, M., Hallgren, K. W., West, K. A., Crabb, J. W., Misono, K. S., and Berkner, K. L. (2000) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 97, 13033-13038 reported that Cys-99 and Cys-450 are the carboxylase active site residues. We determined the form of all cysteines in carboxylase using in-gel protease digestion and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry. The spectrum of non-reduced, trypsin-digested carboxylase revealed a peak at m/z 1991.9. Only this peak disappeared in the spectrum of the reduced sample. This peak's m/z is consistent with the mass of peptide 92-100 (Cys-99) disulfide-linked with peptide 446-453 (Cys-450). To confirm its identity, the m/z 1991.9 peak was isolated by a timed ion selector as the precursor ion for further MS analysis. The fragmentation pattern exhibited two groups of triplet ions characteristic of the symmetric and asymmetric cleavage of disulfide-linked tryptic peptides containing Cys-99 and Cys-450. Mutation of either Cys-99 or Cys-450 caused loss of enzymatic activity. We created a carboxylase variant with both C598A and C700A, leaving Cys-450 as the only remaining cysteine residue in the 60-kDa fragment created by limited trypsin digestion. Analysis of this fully active mutant enzyme showed a 30- and the 60-kDa fragment were joined under non-reducing conditions, thus confirming Cys-450 participates in a disulfide bond. Our results indicate that Cys-99 and Cys-450 form the only disulfide bond in carboxylase.  相似文献   

13.
The vitamin K oxidoreductase (VKORC1) recycles vitamin K to support the activation of vitamin K-dependent (VKD) proteins, which have diverse functions that include hemostasis and calcification. VKD proteins are activated by Glu carboxylation, which depends upon the oxygenation of vitamin K hydroquinone (KH2). The vitamin K epoxide (KO) product is recycled by two reactions, i.e. KO reduction to vitamin K quinone (K) and then to KH2, and recent studies have called into question whether VKORC1 reduces K to KH2. Analysis in insect cells lacking endogenous carboxylation components showed that r-VKORC1 reduces KO to efficiently drive carboxylation, indicating KH2 production. Direct detection of the vitamin K reaction products is confounded by KH2 oxidation, and we therefore developed a new assay that stabilized KH2 and allowed quantitation. Purified VKORC1 analyzed in this assay showed efficient KO to KH2 reduction. Studies in 293 cells expressing tagged r-VKORC1 revealed that VKORC1 is a multimer, most likely a dimer. A monomer can only perform one reaction, and a dimer is therefore interesting in explaining how VKORC1 accomplishes both reactions. An inactive mutant (VKORC1(C132A/C135A)) was dominant negative in heterodimers with wild type VKORC1, resulting in decreased KO reduction in cells and carboxylation in vitro. The results are significant regarding human VKORC1 mutations, as warfarin-resistant patients have mutant and wild type VKORC1 alleles. A VKORC1 dimer indicates a mixed population of homodimers and heterodimers that may have different functional properties, and VKORC1 reduction may therefore be more complex in these patients than appreciated previously.  相似文献   

14.
Liver microsomes contain a vitamin K and O2-dependent carboxylase that converts peptide-bound glutamyl residues to γ-carboxyglutamyl residues. The peptide Boc-O-phospho—Ser-O-phospho—Ser—Leu-OMe has now been synthesized. This peptide inhibits the carboxylation of endogenous protein precursors by a detergent-solubilized preparation of the carboxylase and is an apparent competitive inhibitor of the carboxylation of Phe—Leu—Glu—Glu—Leu.  相似文献   

15.
The vitamin K dependent carboxylase of liver microsomes is involved in the posttranslational modification of certain serine protease zymogens which are critical components of the blood clotting cascade. During coupled carboxylation/oxygenation this carboxylase converts glutamate residues, dihydrovitamin K, CO2, and O2 to a gamma-carboxyglutamyl (Gla) residue, vitamin K (2R,3S)-epoxide, and H2O with a stoichiometry of 1:1 for all substrates and products. In this paper we investigate the role of molecular oxygen in the reaction by following the course of the oxygen atoms using 18O2. Two different mass spectroscopic techniques, electron ionization positive ion mass spectrometry and supercritical fluid chromatography-negative ion chemical ionization mass spectrometry, were used to quantitate the amount of 18O incorporation into the various oxygens of the vitamin K epoxide product. We found that 0.95 mol atoms of oxygen were incorporated into the epoxide oxygen, 0.05 mol atoms of oxygen were incorporated into the quinone oxygen of vitamin K epoxide, and the remaining ca. 1.0 mol atoms of oxygen were incorporated into H2O. No incorporation of oxygen into vitamin K epoxide from 50% H2(18)O was observed. Thus, the carboxylase operates as a dioxygenase 5% of the time during carboxylation/oxygenation. The relevance of these findings with respect to the nonenzymic "basicity enhancement" model proposed by Ham and Dowd [(1990) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 112, 1660-1661] is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Primary structure of human alpha 2-macroglobulin. V. The complete structure   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The primary structure of the tetrameric plasma glycoprotein human alpha 2-macroglobulin has been determined. The identical subunits contain 1451 amino acid residues. Glucosamine-based oligosaccharide groups are attached to asparagine residues 32, 47, 224, 373, 387, 846, 968, and 1401. Eleven intrachain disulfide bridges have been placed (Cys25-Cys63, Cys228-Cys276, Cys246-Cys264, Cys255-Cys408, Cys572-Cys748, Cys619-Cys666, Cys798-Cys826, Cys824-Cys860, Cys898-Cys1298, Cys1056-Cys1104, and Cys1329-Cys1444). Cys-447 probably forms an interchain bridge with Cys-447 from another subunit. The beta-SH group of Cys-949 is thiol esterified to the gamma-carbonyl group of Glx-952, thus forming an activatable reactive site which can mediate covalent binding of nucleophiles. A putative transglutaminase cross-linking site is constituted by Gln-670 and Gln-671. The primary sites of proteolytic cleavage in the activation cleavage area (the "bait" region) are located in the sequence: -Arg681-Val-Gly-Phe-Tyr-Glu-. The molecular weight of the unmodified alpha 2-macroglobulin subunit is 160,837 and approximately 179,000, including the carbohydrate groups. The presence of possible internal homologies within the alpha 2-macroglobulin subunit is discussed. A comparison of stretches of sequences from alpha 2-macroglobulin with partial sequence data for complement components C3 and C4 indicates that these proteins are evolutionary related. The properties of alpha 2-macroglobulin are discussed within the context of proteolytically regulated systems with particular reference to the complement components C3 and C4.  相似文献   

17.
Human vitamin K 2,3-epoxide reductase complex subunit 1-like 1 (VKORC1L1), expressed in HEK 293T cells and localized exclusively to membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum, was found to support both vitamin K 2,3-epoxide reductase (VKOR) and vitamin K reductase enzymatic activities. Michaelis-Menten kinetic parameters for dithiothreitol-driven VKOR activity were: K(m) (μM) = 4.15 (vitamin K(1) epoxide) and 11.24 (vitamin K(2) epoxide); V(max) (nmol·mg(-1)·hr(-1)) = 2.57 (vitamin K(1) epoxide) and 13.46 (vitamin K(2) epoxide). Oxidative stress induced by H(2)O(2) applied to cultured cells up-regulated VKORC1L1 expression and VKOR activity. Cell viability under conditions of no induced oxidative stress was increased by the presence of vitamins K(1) and K(2) but not ubinquinone-10 and was specifically dependent on VKORC1L1 expression. Intracellular reactive oxygen species levels in cells treated with 2,3-dimethoxy-1,4-naphthoquinone were mitigated in a VKORC1L1 expression-dependent manner. Intracellular oxidative damage to membrane intrinsic proteins was inversely dependent on VKORC1L1 expression and the presence of vitamin K(1). Taken together, our results suggest that VKORC1L1 is responsible for driving vitamin K-mediated intracellular antioxidation pathways critical to cell survival.  相似文献   

18.
Vitamin K is involved in the γ-carboxylation of the vitamin K-dependent proteins, and vitamin K epoxide is a by-product of this reaction. Due to the limited intake of vitamin K, its regeneration is necessary and involves vitamin K 2,3-epoxide reductase (VKOR) activity. This activity is known to be supported by VKORC1 protein, but recently a second gene, VKORC1L1, appears to be able to support this activity when the encoded protein is expressed in HEK293T cells. Nevertheless, this protein was described as being responsible for driving the vitamin K-mediated antioxidation pathways. In this paper we precisely analyzed the catalytic properties of VKORC1L1 when expressed in Pichia pastoris and more particularly its susceptibility to vitamin K antagonists. Vitamin K antagonists are also inhibitors of VKORC1L1, but this enzyme appears to be 50-fold more resistant to vitamin K antagonists than VKORC1. The expression of Vkorc1l1 mRNA was observed in all tissues assayed, i.e. in C57BL/6 wild type and VKORC1-deficient mouse liver, lung, and testis and rat liver, lung, brain, kidney, testis, and osteoblastic cells. The characterization of VKOR activity in extrahepatic tissues demonstrated that a part of the VKOR activity, more or less important according to the tissue, may be supported by VKORC1L1 enzyme especially in testis, lung, and osteoblasts. Therefore, the involvement of VKORC1L1 in VKOR activity partly explains the low susceptibility of some extrahepatic tissues to vitamin K antagonists and the lack of effects of vitamin K antagonists on the functionality of the vitamin K-dependent protein produced by extrahepatic tissues such as matrix Gla protein or osteocalcin.  相似文献   

19.
Ma S  Hill KE  Burk RF  Caprioli RM 《Biochemistry》2003,42(32):9703-9711
Rat selenoprotein P is an extracellular glycoprotein of 366 amino acid residues that is rich in cysteine and selenocysteine. Plasma contains four isoforms that differ principally by length at the C-terminal end. Mass spectrometry was used to identify sites of glycosylation on the full-length protein. Of the potential N-glycosylation sites, three located at residues 64, 155, and 169 were occupied, while the two at residues 351 and 356 were not occupied. Threonine 346 was variably O-glycosylated. Thus, full-length selenoprotein P is both N- and O-glycosylated. The shortest isoform of selenoprotein P, which terminates at residue 244, was analyzed for selenide-sulfide and disulfide linkages. In this isoform, a single selenocysteine and seven cysteines are present. Mass spectrometric analysis indicated that a selenide-sulfide bond exists between Sec40 and Cys43. Two disulfides were also detected as Cys149-Cys167 and Cys153-Cys156. The finding of a selenide-sulfide bond in the shortest isoform is compatible with a redox function of this pair that might be analogous to the selenol-thiol pair near the C terminus of animal thioredoxin reductase. The disulfide formed by Cys153-Cys156 also has some characteristics of a redox active pair.  相似文献   

20.
The rat liver microsomal vitamin K-dependent carboxylase catalyzes the carboxylation of glutamyl to gamma-carboxyglutamyl residues in the presence of reduced vitamin K, O2 and CO2. The specificity of the enzyme for the vitamin substrate has been probed by the synthesis of the trifluoromethyl analogs of menaquinone-2 (2-methyl-3-geranyl-1,4-naphthoquinone) and phylloquinone (2-methyl-3-phytyl-1,4-naphthoquinone). The reduced (naphthohydroquinone) forms of the trifluoromethyl analogs of the natural vitamins had no substrate activity but were competitive inhibitors of the reaction with a Ki in the same range as the Km of the normal substrate. The oxidized form of the trifluoromethyl analogs of vitamin K also caused inhibition by a mechanism that could not be established. Under the incubation conditions utilized, fluorine was lost from the trifluoromethyl group by a process that was dithiothreitol and high pH dependent.  相似文献   

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