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1.
Prothrombin denaturation was examined in the presence of Na2EDTA, 5mM CaCl2, and CaCl2 plus membranes containing 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-3-sn-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) in combination with either bovine brain phosphatidylserine (PS) or 1,2-dioleoyl-phosphatidylglycerol (DOPG). Heating denaturation of prothrombin produced thermograms showing two peaks, a minor one at approximately 59 degrees C previously reported to correspond to denaturation of the fragment 1 region (Ploplis, V. A., D. K. Strickland, and F. J. Castellino 1981. Biochemistry. 20:15-21), and a main one at approximately 57-58 degrees C, reportedly due to denaturation of the rest of the molecule (prethrombin 1). The main peak was insensitive to the presence of 5mM Ca2+ whereas the minor peak was shifted to higher temperature (Tm approximately 65 degrees C) by Ca2+. Sufficient concentrations of POPC/bovPS (75/25) large unilamellar vesicles to guarantee binding of 95% of prothrombin resulted in an enthalpy loss in the main endotherm and a comparable enthalpy gain in the minor endotherm accompanying an upward shift in peak temperature (Tm approximately 73 degrees C). Peak deconvolution analysis on the prothrombin denaturation profile and comparison with isolated prothrombin fragment 1 denaturation endotherms suggested that the change caused by POPC/PS vesicles reflected a shift of a portion of the enthalpy of the prethrombin 1 domain to higher temperature (Tm approximately 77 degrees C). The enthalpy associated with this high-temperature endotherm increased in proportion to the surface concentration of PS. By contrast, POPC/DOPG (50/50) membranes shifted the prethrombin 1 peak by 4 degrees C to a lower temperature and the fragment 1 peak by 5 degrees C to a higher temperature. The data lead to a hypothesis that the fragment 1 and prethrombin 1 domains of prothrombin do not denature quite independently and that binding of prothrombin to acidic-lipid membranes disrupts the interaction between these domains. It is further hypothesized that PS containing membranes exert the additional specific effect of decoupling the denaturation of two subdomains of the prethrombin 1 domain of prothrombin.  相似文献   

2.
M E Jones  B R Lentz 《Biochemistry》1986,25(3):567-574
Pyrene-labeled phospholipids have been used to test for the existence of lateral domains due to temperature-induced phase separations and binding of prothrombin fragment 1 to charged lipid vesicles. When in close proximity, pyrene-containing probes can exchange excited-state energy to form excimers; the ratio of the excimer to monomer fluorescence intensity (E/M) is proportional to the local concentration of probe in the membranes, as well as to the excimer lifetime and the probe's lateral diffusion coefficient. The ability of the pyrene-labeled phospholipids to quantitatively report the coexistence of multiple environments was demonstrated in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine multilamellar vesicle preparations of varying compositions, each of which contained coexisting fluid and gel phases. In this system, pyrene-labeled phosphatidylcholine was found to favor the fluid relative to the gel phase with a partition coefficient of 7. At 37 degrees C, in dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol (DOPG)/palmitoyloleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) large, unilamellar vesicles containing either pyrene-labeled phosphatidylglycerol (py-PG) or pyrene-labeled phosphatidylcholine (py-PC), the excimer lifetime (37 ns) and the lateral diffusion constant of the probe (5.8 X 10(-8) cm2/s) were independent of the membrane composition and the presence of fragment 1 and Ca2+. Consequently, E/M was directly proportional to only the local concentration of the py-PG or py-PC probes. When saturating amounts of fragment 1 and 5 mM Ca2+ were added to DOPG/POPC vesicles that contained either probe, no change in E/M and hence the local probe concentration was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Examination of metal ion-dependent effects on the electrophoretic mobility of bovine prothrombin and fragment 1 provides a useful and sensitive method for investigation of conformational processes in these proteins. Utilization of this method reveals a conformational change in bovine prothrombin and fragment 1 which occurs at low metal ion concentrations. Equilibrium dialysis studies indicate that the metal ion-induced shape change occurs concomitant with binding of a single calcium ion/molecule of prothrombin or fragment 1. Mixed metal electrophoretic mobility studies with Mg2+ and Ca2+ have demonstrated the "synergistic" effect for fragment 1 observed by others. Mixed metal equilibrium dialysis has provided experimental support for this observation and allows us to conclude that two tight Ca2+ sites are not affected by low Mg2+ concentrations and that the third Ca2+ site is also a tight site for Mg2+. Thus, at low Mg2+ concentrations and upon the addition of Ca2+, there are effectively three tight sites; consequently more Ca2+ will bind to the protein at lower total Ca2+ ion concentrations.  相似文献   

4.
Previous work has shown that bovine prothrombin fragment 1 binds to supported planar membranes composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine in a Ca(2+)-specific manner (Tendian et al. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 10991; Pearce et al. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 5983-5995). In the present work, fluorescence pattern photobleaching recovery has been used to examine the effect of membrane-bound fragment 1 on the translational diffusion coefficients of two fluorescent phospholipids in fluid-like phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine Langmuir-Blodgett monolayers. The results show that saturating concentrations of fragment 1, in the presence of Ca2+, reduce the diffusion coefficient of nitrobenzoxadiazolyl-conjugated phosphatidylserine (NBD-PS) and nitrobenzoxadiazolyl-conjugated phosphatidylcholine (NBD-PC) by factors of approximately four and two, respectively. Ca2+ or fragment 1 alone do not have a statistically significant effect on NBD-PS or NBD-PC diffusion. In addition, a nonspecific protein (ovalbumin) does not change the diffusion coefficients of the fluorescent phospholipids either in the absence or presence of Ca2+. The fractions of the fluorescent phospholipids that are laterally mobile are approximately 0.9 for all samples. These results are interpreted with several models for possible mechanisms by which extrinsically bound proteins might retard phospholipid diffusion in membranes.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism of binding of blood coagulation cofactor factor Va to acidic-lipid-containing membranes has been addressed. Binding isotherms were generated at room temperature using the change in fluorescence anisotropy of pyrene-labeled bovine factor Va to detect binding to sonicated membrane vesicles containing either bovine brain phosphatidylserine (PS) or 1,2-dioleoyl-3-sn-phosphatidylglycerol (DOPG) in combination with 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-3-sn-phosphatidylcholine (POPC). The composition of the membranes was varied from 0 to 40 mol% for PS/POPC and from 0 to 65 mol % for DOPG/POPC membranes. Fitting the data to a classical Langmuir adsorption model yielded estimates of the dissociation constant (Kd) and the stoichiometry of binding. The values of Kd defined in this way displayed a maximum at low acidic lipid content but were nearly constant at intermediate to high fractions of acidic lipid. Fitting the binding isotherms to a two-process binding model (nonspecific adsorption in addition to binding of acidic lipids to sites on the protein) suggested a significant acidic-lipid-independent binding affinity in addition to occupancy of three protein sites that bind PS in preference to DOPG. Both analyses indicated that interaction of factor Va with an acidic-lipid-containing membrane is much more complex than those of factor Xa or prothrombin. Furthermore, a change in the conformation of bound pyrene-labeled factor Va with surface concentration of acidic lipid was implied by variation of both the saturating fluorescence anisotropy and the binding parameters with the acidic lipid content of the membrane. Finally, the results cannot support the contention that binding occurs through nonspecific adsorption to a patch or domain of acidic lipids in the membrane. Factor Va is suggested to associate with membranes by a complex process that includes both acidic-lipid-specific and acidic-lipid-independent sites and a protein structure change induced by occupancy of acidic-lipid-specific sites on the factor Va molecule.  相似文献   

6.
A stable form of meizothrombin derived from an active-site (Ser528----Ala) mutant of recombinant bovine prothrombin [Pei et al. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 9598-9604] has been used to determine the physical properties and conformation of meizothrombin both in solution and when bound to a procoagulant membrane. As determined with quasi-elastic light scattering, meizothrombin and prothrombin had similar molecular dimensions normal to a membrane (9.4 +/- 1.0 nm) and similar binding affinities to procoagulant membranes (1.8 +/- 0.2 microM at 0.4 M NaCl). However, meizothrombin had a greater tendency to form oligomers or aggregates in solution. The enhanced oligomerization of meizothrombin was also evidenced by a high apparent z-weighted molecular weight in equilibrium sedimentation experiments at low spin speeds. However, velocity sedimentation experiments performed at high spin speeds demonstrated the same sedimentation coefficient for meizothrombin (s20,w(0) = 4.7 +/- 0.2 S) as for prothrombin (s20,w(0) = 4.7 +/- 0.15 S). Circular dichroism measurements revealed minor differences in protein secondary structure between meizothrombin and prothrombin either in the presence or in the absence of phospholipid membranes, as reflected in an increased theta 222/theta 208 ratio in meizothrombin relative to prothrombin. The main endotherm of the meizothrombin thermal denaturation profile in a Ca(2+)-containing buffer, as determined by differential scanning calorimetry, was indistinguishable from that of prothrombin. However, in the presence of phosphatidylserine-containing membranes, the peak temperatures of denaturation profiles of meizothrombin were distinct from those of prothrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
A monoclonal antibody JO1 X 1 was prepared against human abnormal prothrombin using the hybridoma technique. The clone secreting this antibody was selected on the basis of the ability of this antibody to bind to abnormal prothrombin, but not to prothrombin, in the presence of calcium ions. The antibodies were purified by affinity chromatography in EDTA on columns of prothrombin-Sepharose. Bound antibodies were eluted with 15 mM CaCl2. The kinetics of dissociation of antibody from the antibody-prothrombin complex with the addition of calcium ions fit a first-order kinetic model. Increasing CaCl2 concentration increased the rate of antibody-prothrombin dissociation. Ca(II) and Mn(II) inhibited antibody-prothrombin interaction; half-maximal binding was observed at 0.9 and 4 mM, respectively. Mg(II) had little effect on antibody-antigen interaction. The JO1 X 1 antibody bound fragment 1, fragment (1-39), abnormal prothrombin, and prothrombin equivalently in the presence of EDTA, but did not bind to des(1-44)prothrombin in the presence of EDTA or prothrombin in the presence of CaCl2. These results indicate that the monoclonal antibody JO1 X 1 is conformation specific for the calcium-free conformer of prothrombin and directed against an antigenic determinant near the NH2 terminus of prothrombin expressed in the 1-39 region of the protein. This analysis provides confirmation of the presence of a metal-free conformer of prothrombin.  相似文献   

8.
Circular dichroism spectroscopy was used to investigate the structure of bovine prothrombin fragment 1 (BF1) and related proteins in several environments. The conformational change induced in BF1 by the addition of Mg[II] ions was found to be different from that induced by Ca[II] or Sr[II]. The Ca[II] and Sr[II] conformations appear to differ only slightly from the apo-metal conformation. The conformation of the 1-45 fragment of prothrombin, however, is markedly different than the conformation of the same fragment in the presence of either Ca[II] of Mg[II]; both of the latter structures differ substantially from one another. The presence of phospholipids has almost no effect on the structure of either BF1 or the 1-45 fragment; in the presence of both phospholipids and Ca[II] a structural change is seen for the 1-45 fragment but not BF1 (relative to the protein alone). The addition of phospholipids to the Mg[II]/BF1 structure did not induce a CD-detectable conformational change, while the addition of phospholipids to the Ca[II]/BF1 or Sr[II]/BF1 structures induced a change to a conformation similar in secondary structure composition to the relative apometal structures.  相似文献   

9.
Some immunological studies on prothrombin fragment 1 from bovine prothrombin and its warfarin-induced precursor acarboxyprothrombin are reported. Based on the results, a rapid and simple immunoadsorption method for the isolation of prothrombin fragment 1 in good yield has been established. The method exploits the conformational change induced in the fragment by removal of Ca2+. The principle may be applicable to other gamma-carboxyglutamyl-containing proteins or fragments therof.  相似文献   

10.
The first direct equilibrium dialysis titration of the blood coagulation protein bovine prothrombin fragment 1 with Mg(II) is presented. Fragment 1 has fewer thermodynamic binding sites for Mg(II) than Ca(II), less overall binding affinity, and significantly less cooperativity. Several nonlinear curve fitting models were tested for describing the binding of fragment 1 with Mg(II), Ca(II), and mixed metal binding data. The Mg(II) data is represented by essentially five equivalent, noninteracting sites; for Ca(II), a model with three tight, cooperative sites and four "loose", equal affinity, noninteracting sites provides the best model. Based on the reported equilibrium dialysis data and in conjunction with other experimental data, a model for the binding of Ca(II) and Mg(II) to bovine prothrombin fragment 1 is proposed. The key difference between the binding of these divalent ions is that Ca(II) apparently causes a specific conformational change reflected by the cooperativity observed in the Ca(II) titration. The binding of Ca(II) ions to the three tight, cooperative sites establishes a conformation that is essential for phospholipid X Ca(II) X protein binding. The filling of the loose sites with Ca(II) ions leads to charge reduction and subsequent phospholipid X Ca(II) X protein complex interaction. Binding of Mg(II) to bovine prothrombin fragment 1 does not yield a complex with the necessary phospholipid-binding conformation. However, Mg(II) is apparently capable of stabilizing the Ca(II) conformation as is observed in the mixed metal ion binding data and the synergism in thrombin formation.  相似文献   

11.
We have measured the phase behavior of mixed dipentadecanoylphosphatidylglycerol (DC15PG)/dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) small unilamellar vesicles (SUV) in the presence of saturating (greater than 98% occupancy of binding sites) concentrations of bovine prothrombin fragment 1 and 5 mM Ca2+. Binding of fragment 1 in the presence of Ca2+ was verified by an increase in 90 degrees light scattering. Only in the cases of DC15PG/DMPC SUV below their phase transition and of pure DMPC SUV were such light scattering measurements not reversible upon addition of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid to complex Ca2+. Phase-behavior changes of DC15PG/DMPC SUV as monitored by diphenylhexatriene fluorescence anisotropy occurred in concert with the binding of fragment 1. The major effects of peptide binding on SUV phase behavior were to raise the phase-transition temperature by 2-15 degrees C, depending on vesicle composition, and, in general, to make the phase diagram for these small vesicles closely resemble that of large vesicles. No evidence was obtained for the existence of lateral membrane domains with distinct compositions induced by the binding of prothrombin fragment 1 plus Ca2+. Surprisingly, fragment 1 without Ca2+ also altered the phase behavior of DC15PG/DMPC SUV. Most striking was the effect of fragment 1 (with or without Ca2+) on DMPC SUV phase behavior. Freeze-fracture electron microscopy demonstrated that pure DMPC vesicles were induced to fuse in the presence of fragment 1, while vesicles containing DC15PG remained intact. The rate of DMPC SUV fusion (followed by 90 degrees light scattering) increased with increasing fragment 1 concentration but was not saturable up to 40 microM fragment 1, suggesting a weak, nonspecific interaction between fragment 1 and the neutral phospholipid vesicle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Prothrombin is a gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-containing protein that binds to phospholipid vesicles in the presence of calcium ions after undergoing a metal ion-induced conformational transition. To integrate recent data into a scheme that is compatible with our knowledge of prothrombin-metal interaction, we have proposed a new model of prothrombin structure. In this model prothrombin undergoes two metal-dependent conformational transitions: PT----PT'----PT*. The first transition is not cation-specific, but the second transition is metal-selective for Ca(II), Sr(II), or Ba(II). Only the PT* conformer binds to phospholipid surfaces. To test this model, anti-prothrombin antibodies that only bind to prothrombin in the presence of Ca(II) but not Mg(II) (PT*-specific) were isolated, and termed anti-prothrombin X Ca(II)-specific. Half-maximal binding of antibody to prothrombin was observed at 0.1 mM CaCl2 or 1 mM SrCl2, but no binding was observed with Mg(II), Mn(II), or Ba(II). However, prothrombin in the presence of both Mg(II)/Ba(II) or Mn(II)/Ba(II) demonstrated significant interaction with the antibody. Prothrombin binding to phospholipid vesicles was inhibited by the anti-prothrombin X Ca(II)-specific antibody or its Fab fragment, but was not inhibited by anti-prothrombin X Mg(II) antibody or its Fab fragment directed at the PT' conformer. These results support this three-state model for prothrombin. The metal specificity characteristic of prothrombin-phospholipid interaction is a property required for the expression of the phospholipid-binding site in the binary prothrombin-metal complex.  相似文献   

13.
The calcium-stabilized antigenic determinants on bovine prothrombin were localized to the NH2-terminal 1-42 residues using conformation-specific antibodies. Polyclonal antibodies to the bovine prothrombin-Ca(II) complex were raised in rabbits, and purified antibody subpopulations were isolated by sequential immunoabsorption and affinity chromatography. Anti-prothrombin-Ca(II) antibodies, characterized by their absolute specificity for the prothrombin-metal complex (Tai, M. M., Furie, B. C., and Furie, B. (1980) J. Biol. Chem. 255, 2790-2795), bound to prothrombin, fragment 1, reduced and carboxymethylated fragment 1, and CNBr fragment (1-72) in solution. However, these antibodies do not bind significantly to the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-rich fragment (1-39), CNBr fragment (73-156), or prethrombin 1. To obviate the complex analysis of possible reasons for the lack of antibody binding to small peptides in solution, conformation-specific antibodies directed against defined regions of the whole prothrombin molecule were isolated. The influence of calcium ions on the binding of these site-specific antibody subpopulations to 125I-labeled prothrombin fragment 1 was evaluated. Anti-(1-39)N, anti-(1-42)N, anti-(1-72)N, and anti-(reduced and carboxymethylated fragment 1)N showed enhanced binding to prothrombin fragment 1 in the presence of Ca(II), indicating the presence of calcium-stabilized antigenic determinants within each of these regions on fragment 1. In contrast, calcium ions had no effect on the interaction of anti-des-(1-42)prothrombin, anti-prethrombin 1, anti-(43-72)N, and anti-(73-156)N antibodies with prothrombin fragment 1. These results indicate that the metal-induced conformational transition, monitored immunochemically, is localized to the NH2-terminal, gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-rich region of prothrombin between residues 1-42.  相似文献   

14.
The inhibitory influence of divalent cations on the ability of bovine alpha-thrombin to hydrolyze prothrombin showed the trend Mn2+ much greater than Ca2+ greater than or equal to Mg2+ greater than Sr2+ much greater than Ba2+. This effect was not due to an inhibition of thrombin's catalytic activity as measured by hydrolysis of a specific synthetic substrate, H-D-Phe-pipecolyl-Arg-p-nitroanilide (D-PhePipArgNA). The presence of divalent cations did not inhibit thrombic proteolysis of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla)-domainless prothrombin. Prothrombin and Gla-domainless prothrombin were used as competitive inhibitors in the thrombic hydrolysis of D-PhePipArgNA. The apparent Ki value calculated for prothrombin was 18 microM. When either Ca2+ or Mn2+ were present, there was no inhibition. The apparent Ki value determined for Gla-domainless prothrombin was 28 microM in either the absence or presence of Ca2+. Addition of divalent cations to prothrombin, but not to Gla-domainless prothrombin, resulted in an altered protein conformation as measured by high-performance size-exclusion chromatography and ultraviolet difference spectroscopy. These results suggest that a conformational change secondary to the interaction of divalent cations with the Gla-containing domain of prothrombin is required for cation-dependent inhibition of thrombin hydrolysis.  相似文献   

15.
The present study investigates the unique contribution of the NH2-terminal 33 residues of prothrombin, the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) domain, to the Ca(II) and phospholipid-binding properties of prothrombin. Two Gla domain peptides, 1-42 and 1-45, produced by chymotryptic cleavage of prothrombin fragment 1 (residues 1-156 of the amino terminus of bovine prothrombin) and isolated by anion-exchange chromatography were utilized to characterize the Gla domain of prothrombin. This investigation utilized several experimental approaches to examine the properties of the Gla domain peptides. These studies were somewhat hampered by the metal ion-induced insolubility of the peptides. However, the 1-45 peptide was specifically radioiodinated, which facilitated the study of this peptide at low concentrations. In contrast to prothrombin fragment 1, the intrinsic fluorescence of both 1-42 and 1-45 was not quenched upon the addition of 1 mM Ca(II) or any concentration of Mg(II). Equilibrium dialysis studies revealed that the 1-42 peptide bound three Ca(II) ions noncooperatively, whereas fragment 1 binds seven Ca(II) ions in a positive cooperative manner. Ca(II)-promoted conformational changes are observed by comparison of electrophoretic mobility changes in the presence of increasing Ca(II) concentrations. Prothrombin, fragment 1, and the Gla domain peptides 1-42 and 1-45 exhibited similar electrophoretic mobility behavior in the presence of Ca(II) ions. The radiolabeled 1-45 peptide was found to comigrate with phospholipid vesicles on gel permeation chromatography in the presence of Ca(II). Fragment 1 was shown to inhibit this Ca(II)-dependent phospholipid binding of 1-45, demonstrating that the 1-45 peptide does possess the necessary phospholipid-binding structure. Furthermore, a metal ion-dependent conformational monoclonal antibody, F9.29, was inhibited from binding fragment 1 by the 1-42 peptide.  相似文献   

16.
Sedimentation equilibrium studies have demonstrated that prothrombin fragment 1 from either human or bovine plasma reversibly dimerizes in the absence of Ca2+ with an equilibrium constant of 1,000 M-1. In the presence of 10 mM Ca2+ this association constant increased to 10,000 M-1. A model for preferential binding of Ca2+ to the pre-existing dimer has been found capable of accounting quantitatively for the cooperative Ca2+ binding to this prothrombin fragment, and for the dependence of its sedimentation coefficient on protein concentration in the presence and absence of metal ion. Sedimentation equilibrium studies of intact bovine and human prothrombins have confirmed previous reports that these prothrombins dimerize. For both prothrombins the association constant is 10,000 M-1, both in the absence and presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

17.
Chemical modification of bovine prothrombin fragment 1 according to the procedure of D. J. Welsch and G. L. Nelsestuen (1988) [Biochemistry 27, 4946-4952 and ealier papers] provided a series of fragment 1 derivatives in which various nitrogen-containing side chains were N-acetylated and/or N-2,4,6-trinitrophenylated. In addition the des-[Ala-1,Asn-2]- and des-[Ala-1,Asn-2,Lys-3]-fragment 1 derivatives were prepared by limited enzymatic hydrolysis of fragment 1 using cathepsin C and plasmin, respectively. Quantitative studies on the Ca(II) binding of these proteins have been accomplished using 45Ca(II) equilibrium dialysis. Binding of these fragment 1 derivatives to phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine (PS/PC) vesicles (25:75) in the presence of Ca(II) ions has been studied using the light-scattering technique. Acylation of the 5 lysine residues of fragment 1 by the action of acetic anhydride (500-fold molar excess) in the presence of 75 mM Ca(II), pH 8.0, results in loss of positive cooperativity in Ca(II) binding (Scatchard plot) and an increase in the number of Ca(II) ions bound. The Ca(II)-dependent PS/PC binding of the acylated protein is reduced. Removal of 2 and 3 residues from the amino terminus likewise leads to loss of positive cooperativity in Ca(II) binding and reduced binding affinity to PS/PC vesicles. The important role of the amino-terminal 1-10 sequence is discussed. We conclude that positive cooperativity in Ca(II) binding is not a prerequisite for the Ca(II)-dependent binding of bovine prothrombin fragment 1 to PS/PC vesicles.  相似文献   

18.
The binding of 125I-labeled prothrombin fragment I. prethrombin I and alpha-thrombin to native and papain-treated tissue thromboplastin in the presence of CaCl2 of EDTA was studied. The experimental curves plotted in the Scatchard coordinates testify to the presence in thromboplastin of two types of fragment I binding sites: those with a high (Kd = 7.6 x 10(-6) M) and moderate (Kd = 1.3 x 10(-8) M) binding affinity. The parameters of fragment I binding and their changes reproduced, for the most part, the mode of prothrombin binding observed in previous studies. The experimental results provide indirect evidence in favour of a hydrophobic role of Ca(2+)-dependent binding of prothrombin fragment I to thromboplastin. The binding of prethrombin I was nonspecific and Ca(2+)-independent, whereas alpha-thrombin showed a relatively high level of nonspecific electrostatic binding which was competitively inhibited by Ca2+. Thromboplastin proteins interacted (both directly and in a Ca(2+)-independent fashion) with all the prothrombin derivatives under study.  相似文献   

19.
Previous work has shown that bovine prothrombin fragment 1 binds to substrate-supported planar membranes composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylserine (PS) in a Ca(2+)-specific manner. The apparent equilibrium dissociation constant is 1-15 microM, and the average membrane residency time is approximately 0.25 s-1. In the present work, fluorescence pattern photobleaching recovery with evanescent interference patterns (TIR-FPPR) has been used to measure the translational diffusion coefficients of the weakly bound fragment 1. The results show that the translational diffusion coefficients on fluid-like PS/PC planar membranes are on the order of 10(-9) cm2/s and are reduced when the fragment 1 surface density is increased. Control measurements were carried out for fragment 1 on solid-like PS/PC planar membranes. The dissociation kinetics were similar to those on fluid-like membranes, but protein translational mobility was not detected. TIR-FPPR was also used to measure the diffusion coefficient of the fluorescent lipid NBD-PC in fluid-like PS/PC planar membranes. In these measurements, the diffusion coefficient was approximately 10(-8) cm2/s, which is consistent with that measured by conventional fluorescence pattern photobleaching recovery. This work represents the first measurement of a translational diffusion coefficient for a protein weakly bound to a membrane surface.  相似文献   

20.
The binding of calcium to headgroup deuterated 1-palmitoyl, 2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine (POPS) was investigated by using deuterium magnetic resonance in pure POPS membranes and in mixed 1-palmitoyl, 2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC)/POPS 5:1 (m:m) bilayers. Addition of CaCl2 to pure POPS bilayers led to two component spectra attributed, respectively, to liquid-crystallin POPS (less than 15 kHz) and POPS molecules in the calcium-induced dehydrated phase (cochleate) (approximately 120 kHz). The liquid-crystalline component has nearly disappeared at a Ca2+ to POPS ratio of 0.5, indicating that, under such conditions, most of the POPS molecules are in the precipitated cochleate phase. After dilution of the POPS molecules in zwitterionic POPC membranes (POPC/POPS 5:1 m:m), single component spectra characteristic of POPS in the liquid-crystalline state were observed in the presence of Molar concentrations of calcium ions (Ca2+ to POPS ratio greater than 50), showing that the amount of dehydrated cochleate PS-Ca2+ phase, if any, was low (less than 5%) under such conditions. Deuterium NMR data obtained in the 15-50 degrees C temperature range with the mixed PC/PS membranes, either in the absence or the presence of Ca2+ ions, indicate that the serine headgroup undergoes a temperature-induced conformational change, independent of the presence of Ca2+. This is discussed in relation to other headgroup perturbations such as that observed upon change of the membrane surface charge density.  相似文献   

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