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1.
The structure of the ternary complex of human alpha-thrombin with a covalently bound analogue of fibrinopeptide A and a C-terminal hirudin peptide has been determined by X-ray diffraction methods at 0.25 nm resolution. Fibrinopeptide A folds in a compact manner, bringing together hydrophobic residues that slot into the apolar binding site of human alpha-thrombin. Fibrinogen residue Phe8 occupies the aryl-binding site of thrombin, adjacent to fibrinogen residues Leu9 and Val15 in the S2 subsite. The species diversity of fibrinopeptide A is analysed with respect to its conformation and its interaction with thrombin. The non-covalently attached peptide fragment hirudin(54-65) exhibits an identical conformation to that observed in the hirudin-thrombin complex. The occupancy of the secondary fibrinogen-recognition exosite by this peptide imposes restrictions on the manner of fibrinogen binding. The surface topology of the thrombin molecule indicates positions P1'-P3', differ from those of the canonical serine-proteinase inhibitors, suggesting a mechanical model for the switching of thrombin activity from fibrinogen cleavage to protein-C activation on thrombomodulin complex formation. The multiple interactions between thrombin and fibrinogen provide an explanation for the narrow specificity of thrombin. Structural grounds can be put forward for certain congenital clotting disorders.  相似文献   

2.
Isetti G  Maurer MC 《Biochemistry》2004,43(14):4150-4159
In blood coagulation, thrombin helps to activate factor XIII by cleaving the activation peptide at the R37-G38 peptide bond. The residues N-terminal to the scissile bond are important in determining rates of hydrolysis. Solution studies of wild-type and mutant peptides of factor XIII AP (28-37) suggest residues P(4)-P(1) are most critical in substrate recognition. By contrast, the X-ray crystal structure of FXIII AP (28-37) displays all of the residues, P(10)-P(1), interacting with the thrombin active site in a conformation similar to that of fibrinogen Aalpha (7-16) [Sadasivan, C., and Yee, V. C. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 36942-36948]. Peptides were therefore synthesized with the N-terminal P(10)-P(6) residues removed to further characterize interactions of thrombin with factor XIII activation peptides. The truncations have no adverse effects on thrombin's ability to bind and to hydrolyze the shortened peptides. The wild-type FXIII AP (33-41) V34 sequence actually exhibits a decrease in K(m) relative to the longer (28-41) sequence whereas the cardioprotective FXIII AP (33-41) V34L exhibits a further increase in k(cat) relative to its longer parent sequence. One-dimensional proton line broadening NMR and 2D transferred-NOESY studies indicate that the shortened peptides maintain similar bound conformations as their FXIII AP (28-37) counterparts. Furthermore, the distinctive NOE between the L34 and P36 side chains is preserved. Kinetic and NMR studies thus reveal that the N-terminal portions of FXIII AP (28-37) (V34 and V34L) are not necessary for effective interaction with the thrombin active site surface. FXIII activation peptides bind to thrombin in a manner more like PAR1 than fibrinogen Aalpha.  相似文献   

3.
Factor XIII (FXIII) is a transglutaminase involved in blood coagulation. The enzyme is activated by thrombin cleaving the peptide bond R(37)-G(38). A common mutation V34L found in FXIII has been correlated with protection from myocardial infarction. Also FXIII V34L is activated more quickly than the wild type. In the present study, FXIII (28-41) V34L mutant peptide bound to thrombin has been modeled and molecular dynamics simulations were carried out using Insight II. An average structure was calculated after simulation. The structure showed significant difference from the crystal structure of the wild type FXIII (28-37) peptide bound to thrombin. In the crystal structure the peptide adopts a folded conformation in such a way that the hydrophobic side chains of V(29) and V(34) occupy the apolar binding site of thrombin. The modeled V34L peptide adopts a significantly different conformation and only the bulkier L(34) occupies the apolar binding site while V(29) side chain is exposed to the bulk solvent. Hence, this may speed up the release of FXIII from thrombin after its activation.  相似文献   

4.
Trumbo TA  Maurer MC 《Biochemistry》2002,41(8):2859-2868
In blood coagulation, thrombin helps to activate factor XIII by cleaving the activation peptide at the R37-G38 peptide bond. The more easily activated factor XIII V34L has been correlated with protection from myocardial infarction. V34L and V29F factor XIII mutant peptides were designed to further characterize substrate binding to thrombin. HPLC kinetic studies have been carried out on thrombin hydrolysis of FXIII activation peptide (28-41), FXIII (28-41) V34L, FXIII (28-41) V29F, and FXIII (28-41) V29F V34L. The V34L mutations lead to improvements in both K(m) and k(cat) whereas the V29F mutation primarily affects K(m). Interactions of the peptides with thrombin have been monitored by 1D proton line broadening NMR and 2D transferred NOESY studies. The results were compared with previously published X-ray crystal structures of thrombin-bound fibrinogen Aalpha (7-16), thrombin receptor PAR1 (38-60), and factor XIII (28-37). In solution, the (34)VVPR(37) and (34)LVPR(37) segments of the factor XIII activation peptide serve as the major anchor points onto thrombin. The N-terminal segments are proposed to interact transiently with the enzyme surface. Long-range NOEs from FXIII V29 or F29 toward (34)V/LVPR(37) have not been observed by NMR studies. Overall, the kinetic and NMR results suggest that the factor XIII activation peptide binds to thrombin in a manner more similar to the thrombin receptor PAR1 than to fibrinogen Aalpha. The V29 and V34 positions affect, in different ways, the ability of thrombin to effectively hydrolyze the activation peptide. Mutations at these sites may prove useful in controlling factor XIII activation.  相似文献   

5.
In the blood coagulation cascade, thrombin cleaves fibrinopeptides A and B from fibrinogen revealing sites for fibrin polymerization that lead to insoluble clot formation. Factor XIII stabilizes this clot by catalyzing the formation of intermolecular cross-links in the fibrin network. Thrombin activates the Factor XIII a(2) dimer by cleaving the Factor XIII activation peptide segment at the Arg(37)-Gly(38) peptide bond. Using a high performance liquid chromatography assay, the kinetic constants K(m), k(cat), and k(cat)/K(m) were determined for thrombin hydrolysis of fibrinogen Aalpha-(7-20), Factor XIII activation peptide-(28-41), and Factor XIII activation peptide-(28-41) with a Val(34) to Leu substitution. This Val to Leu mutation has been correlated with protection from myocardial infarction. In the absence of fibrin, the Factor XIII activation peptide-(28-41) exhibits a 10-fold lower k(cat)/K(m) value than fibrinogen Aalpha-(7-20). With the Factor XIII V34L mutation, decreases in K(m) and increases in k(cat) produce a 6-fold increase in k(cat)/K(m) relative to the wild-type Factor XIII sequence. A review of the x-ray crystal structures of known substrates and inhibitors of thrombin leads to a hypothesis that the new Leu generates a peptide with more extensive interactions with the surface of thrombin. As a result, the Factor XIII V34L is proposed to be susceptible to wasteful conversion of zymogen to activated enzyme. Premature depletion may provide cardioprotective effects.  相似文献   

6.
The interaction of the following human fibrinogen-like peptides with bovine thrombin was studied by use of one- and two-dimensional NMR techniques in aqueous solution: Ala(1)-Asp-Ser-Gly-Glu-Gly-Asp-Phe(8)-Leu-Ala-Glu-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Arg(16 )- Gly(17)-Pro-Arg(19)-Val(20)-Val-Glu-Arg (F10), residues 1-16 of F10 (fibrinopeptide A), residues 17-23 of F10 (F12), residues 1-20 of F10 (F13), residues 6-20 of F10 with Arg(16) replaced by a Gly residue (F14), and residues 6-19 of F10 with Arg(16) replaced by a Leu residue (F15). At pH 5.3 and 25 degrees C, the Arg(16)-Gly(17) peptide bonds of both peptides F10 and F13 were cleaved instantaneously in the presence of 0.6 mM thrombin, whereas the cleavage of the Arg(19)-Val(20) peptide bonds in peptides F12, F13, and F14 took over 1 h for completion. On the basis of observations of line broadening, fibrinopeptide A was found to bind to thrombin. While resonances from residues Ala(1)-Glu(5) were little affected, binding of fibrinopeptide A to thrombin caused significant line broadening of NH and side-chain proton resonances within residues Asp(7)-Arg(16). There is a chain reversal within residues Asp(7)-Arg(16) such that Phe(8) is brought close to the Arg(16)-Gly(17) peptide bond in the thrombin-peptide complex, as indicated by transferred NOEs between the aromatic ring protons of Phe(8) and the C alpha H protons of Gly(14) and the C gamma H protons of Val(15). A similar chain reversal was obtained in the isolated peptide F10 at a subzero temperature of -8 degrees C. The titration behavior of Asp(7) in peptide F13 does not deviate from that of the reference peptide, N-acetyl-Asp-NHMe at both 25 and -8 degrees C, indicating that no strong interaction exists between Asp(7) and Arg(16) or Arg(19). Peptides with Arg(16) replaced by Gly and Leu, respectively, i.e., F14 and F15, were also found to bind to thrombin but with a different conformation, as indicated by the absence of the long-range NOEs observed with fibrinopeptide A. Residues Asp(7)-Arg(16) constitute an essential structural element in the interaction of thrombin with fibrinogen.  相似文献   

7.
In blood coagulation, thrombin helps to activate factor XIII (FXIII) by cleaving the activation peptide (AP) at the R37-G38 peptide bond. The common polymorphism V34L yields a FXIII that is more easily activated than the wild type enzyme. Peptides based on the FXIII (28-41) (28TVELQGVVPRGVNL41) sequence serve as an important model system to evaluate the substrate specificity of thrombin and thus how to regulate FXIII activation. Our previous kinetic and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies have suggested that the P4-P1 amino acids on this FXIII segment provide key anchors to the thrombin active site surface. Furthermore, the most effective amino acid to have at the P4 position is a leucine. In the current work, a peptide containing V34F was examined to probe the ability to accommodate an aromatic residue at this position. Kinetic parameters for thrombin-catalyzed hydrolysis of FXIII AP (28-41) V34F are comparable with that of the wild type V34. One-dimensional proton line-broadening studies reveal that the 34FVPR37 segment encompassing the P4-P1 positions makes the most contact with the thrombin surface. Two-dimensional transferred-nuclear overhauser effect spectroscopy (NOESY) studies indicate that when the peptide is bound to thrombin, the F34 aromatic ring is oriented to promote P4-P2 interactions with P36. This characteristic has been viewed as a hallmark for V34L. An ability to generate this interaction may promote the ability of FXIII AP (28-41) V34F to remain a viable substrate for thrombin.  相似文献   

8.
Wang SX  Esmon CT  Fletterick RJ 《Biochemistry》2001,40(34):10038-10046
The protease inhibitor ecotin fails to inhibit thrombin despite its broad specificity against serine proteases. A point mutation (M84R) in ecotin results in a 1.5 nM affinity for thrombin, 10(4) times stronger than that of wild-type ecotin. The crystal structure of bovine thrombin is determined in complex with ecotin M84R mutant at 2.5 A resolution. Surface loops surrounding the active site cleft of thrombin have undergone significant structural changes to permit inhibitor binding. Particularly, the insertion loops at residues 60 and 148 in thrombin, which likely mediate the interactions with macromolecules, are displaced when the complex forms. Thrombin and ecotin M84R interact in two distinct surfaces. The loop at residue 99 and the C-terminus of thrombin contact ecotin through mixed polar and nonpolar interactions. The active site of thrombin is filled with eight consecutive amino acids of ecotin and demonstrates thrombin's preference for specific features that are compatible with the thrombin cleavage site: negatively charged-Pro-Val-X-Pro-Arg-hydrophobic-positively charged (P1 Arg is in bold letters). The preference for a Val at P4 is clearly defined. The insertion at residue 60 may further affect substrate binding by moving its adjacent loops that are part of the substrate recognition sites.  相似文献   

9.
A blood coagulation factor, Factor XIII, was highly purified from bovine fresh plasma by a method similar to those used for human plasma Factor XIII. The isolated Factor XIII consisted of two subunit polypeptides, a and b chains, with molecular weights of 79,000 +/- 2,000 and 75,000 +/- 2,000, respectively. In the conversion of Factor XIII to the active enzyme, Factor XIIIa, by bovine thrombin [EC 3.4.21.5], a peptide was liberated. This peptide, designated tentatively as "activation peptide," was isolated by gel-filtration on a Sephadex G-75 column. It contained a total of 37 amino acid residues with a masked N-terminal residue and C-terminal arginine. The whole amino acid sequence of "Activation peptide" was established by the dansyl-Edman method and standard enzymatic techniques, and the masked N-terminal residue was identified as N-acetylserine by using a rat liver acylamino acid-releasing enzyme. This enzyme specifically cleaved the N-acetylserylglutamyl peptide bond serine and the remaining peptide, which was now reactive to 1-dimethylamino-naphthalene-5-sulfonyl chloride. A comparison of the sequences of human and bovine "Activation peptide" revealed five amino acids replacements, Ser-3 to Thr; Gly-5 to Arg; Ile-14 to Val; Thr-18 to Asn, and Pro-26 to Leu. Another difference was the deletion of Leu-34 in the human peptide. Adsorption chromatography on a hydroxylapatite column in the presence of 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate was developed as a preparative procedure for the resolution of the two subunit polypeptides, a or a' chain and b chain, constituting the protein molecule of Factor XIII or Factor XIIIa. End group analyses on the isolated pure chains revealed that the structural change of Factor XIII during activation with thrombin occurs only in the N-terminal portion of the a chain, not in the N-terminal end of the b chain or in the C-terminal ends of the a and b chains. From these results, it was concluded that the activation of bovine plasma Factor XIII by thrombin must be accompanied by a limited proteolysis of the arginyl-glycyl bond located in the N-terminal region of the a chain, liberating the "Activation peptide." The possibility of activating Factor XII with other porteinases was examined using Factor Xa [EC 3.4.21.6], Factor XIIa, kallikreins [EC 3.4.21.8], urokinase [EC 3.4.99.26], trypsin [EC 3.4.21.4], ficin [EC 3.4.22.3], papain [EC 3.4.22.2], and bromelain [EC 3.4.22.4]. Among these enzymes, only bromelain and trypsin showed clear activating effects.  相似文献   

10.
Isetti G  Maurer MC 《Biochemistry》2007,46(9):2444-2452
In the last stages of coagulation, thrombin helps to activate Factor XIII. The resultant transglutaminase introduces covalent cross-links into fibrin thus promoting clot stability. To better understand the roles of individual thrombin residues in recognition and hydrolysis of the Factor XIII activation peptide, mutations within thrombin's aryl and apolar binding site were explored. The thrombin mutants W215A, E217A, W215A/E217A, L99A, and I174A were examined through HPLC kinetics against the substrates FXIII (28-41) V34 AP and FXIII (28-41) V34L AP. Several mutants responded differently to FXIII (28-41) V34 AP vs the cardioprotective V34L AP. W215 provides an important platform for binding and directing FXIII APs for proper hydrolysis. Loss of this platform leads to decreases in kinetics, particularly to the kcat of FXIII V34L AP. E217 also plays a supporting role, but the E217A mutation is not as detrimental as W215A. W215A/E217A is unfavorable for both activation peptides and its coupling effect has been characterized. This mutant can readily bind the peptides but cannot orient them for effective hydrolysis. Kinetic studies with I174A indicate that this thrombin residue is more crucial for interactions with the larger V34L AP segment. The L99A mutation causes deleterious effects to binding and hydrolysis of both APs. The V34L, however, is able to partially compensate for the loss perhaps by increasing contact within the aryl and apolar sites. Understanding how specific FXIII and thrombin residues participate in binding and control hydrolysis may lead to the design of coagulation enzymes whose degree of activation and optimal target site can be controlled.  相似文献   

11.
Promotion of thrombin-catalyzed activation of factor XIII by fibrinogen   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
T J Janus  S D Lewis  L Lorand  J A Shafer 《Biochemistry》1983,22(26):6269-6272
High-performance liquid chromatography was used to analyze the kinetics of the thrombin-catalyzed release of the activation peptide from the factor XIII zymogen (fibrin-stabilizing factor). The specificity constant (kcat/Km) for this reaction, measured at factor XIII concentrations much below Km, was (0.13-0.16) X 10(6) M-1 s-1 at pH 7.4, mu = 0.15, and 37 degrees C. Separate estimates, obtained from the dependence of the initial rates of release of the activation peptide on the concentration of factor XIII, gave values of 10 (+/- 3) s-1 for kcat and 84 (+/- 30) microM for Km, in terms of ab protomers of the zymogen. The thrombin-mediated release of the activation peptide was dramatically enhanced in the presence of fibrinogen. Furthermore, the time course of release, in relation to that of fibrinopeptide A, suggested that some des-A-fibrinogen species (e.g., alpha 2B beta 2 gamma 2) may be the true activator for promoting the cleavage of the Arg-36 peptide bonds in the a subunits of factor XIII. This observation suggests that generation of factor XIIIa and its substrate (fibrin) is coordinated so that thrombin-mediated zymogen activation proceeds efficiently only after the process of clotting has been initiated by the removal of fibrinopeptide A from fibrinogen.  相似文献   

12.
Thrombin is a serine protease that plays a central role in blood coagulation. It is inhibited by hirudin, a polypeptide of 65 amino acids, through the formation of a tight, noncovalent complex. Tetragonal crystals of the complex formed between human alpha-thrombin and recombinant hirudin (variant 1) have been grown and the crystal structure of this complex has been determined to a resolution of 2.95 A. This structure shows that hirudin inhibits thrombin by a previously unobserved mechanism. In contrast to other inhibitors of serine proteases, the specificity of hirudin is not due to interaction with the primary specificity pocket of thrombin, but rather through binding at sites both close to and distant from the active site. The carboxyl tail of hirudin (residues 48-65) wraps around thrombin along the putative fibrinogen secondary binding site. This long groove extends from the active site cleft and is flanked by the thrombin loops 35-39 and 70-80. Hirudin makes a number of ionic and hydrophobic interactions with thrombin in this area. Furthermore hirudin binds with its N-terminal three residues Val, Val, Tyr to the thrombin active site cleft. Val1 occupies the position P2 and Tyr3 approximately the position P3 of the synthetic inhibitor D-Phe-Pro-ArgCH2Cl. Thus the hirudin polypeptide chain runs in a direction opposite to that expected for fibrinogen and that observed for the substrate-like inhibitor D-Phe-Pro-ArgCH2Cl.  相似文献   

13.
Elevated levels of heterodimeric gamma(A)/gamma' fibrinogen 2 have been associated with an increased incidence of coronary artery disease, whereas a lowered content of gamma' chains is associated with an increased risk of venous thrombosis. Both situations may be related to the unique features of thrombin binding to variant gamma' chains. The gamma' peptide is an anionic fragment that binds thrombin with high affinity without interfering directly with substrate binding. Here we report the crystal structure of thrombin bound to the gamma' peptide, solved at 2.4 A resolution. The complex reveals extensive interactions between thrombin and the gamma' peptide mediated by electrostatic contacts with residues of exosite II and hydrophobic interactions with a pocket in close proximity to the Na(+) binding site. In its binding mode, the gamma' peptide completely overlaps with heparin bound to exosite II. These findings are consistent with functional data and broaden our understanding of how thrombin interacts with fibrinogen at the molecular level.  相似文献   

14.
W Bode  A Z Wei  R Huber  E Meyer  J Travis    S Neumann 《The EMBO journal》1986,5(10):2453-2458
Orthorhombic crystals diffracting beyond 1.7 A resolution, have been grown from the stoichiometric complex formed between human leukocyte elastase (HLE) and the third domain of turkey ovomucoid inhibitor (OMTKY3). The crystal and molecular structure has been determined with the multiple isomorphous replacement technique. The complex has been modeled using the known structure of OMTKY3 and partial sequence information for HLE, and has been refined. The current crystallographic R-value is 0.21 for reflections from 25 to 1.8 A resolution. HLE shows the characteristic polypeptide fold of trypsin-like serine proteinases and consists of 218 amino acid residues. However, several loop segments, mainly arranged around the substrate binding site, have unique conformations. The largest deviations from the other vertebrate proteinases of known spatial structure are around Cys168. The specificity pocket is constricted by Val190, Val216 and Asp226 to preferentially accommodate medium sized hydrophobic amino acids at P1. Seven residues of the OMTKY3-binding segment are in specific contact with HLE. This interaction and geometry around the reactive site are similar as observed in other complexes. It is the first serine proteinase glycoprotein analysed, having two sugar chains attached to Asn159 and to residue 109.  相似文献   

15.
A conserved cis proline residue located in the active site of Thermotoga maritima acetyl esterase (TmAcE) from the carbohydrate esterase family 7 (CE7) has been substituted by alanine. The residue was known to play a crucial role in determining the catalytic properties of the enzyme. To elucidate the structural role of the residue, the crystal structure of the Pro228Ala variant (TmAcEP228A) was determined at 2.1 Å resolution. The replacement does not affect the overall secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures and moderately decreases the thermal stability. However, the wild type cis conformation of the 227–228 peptide bond adopts a trans conformation in the variant. Other conformational changes in the tertiary structure are restricted to residues 222–226, preceding this peptide bond and are located away from the active site. Overall, the results suggest that the conserved proline residue is responsible for the cis conformation of the peptide and shapes the geometry of the active site. Elimination of the pyrrolidine ring results in the loss of van der Waals and hydrophobic interactions with both the alcohol and acyl moeities of the ester substrate, leading to significant impairment of the activity and perturbation of substrate specificity. Furthermore, a cis‐to‐trans conformational change arising out of residue changes at this position may be associated with the evolution of divergent activity, specificity, and stability properties of members constituting the CE7 family. Proteins 2017; 85:694–708. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
F Ni  D R Ripoll  P D Martin  B F Edwards 《Biochemistry》1992,31(46):11551-11557
NMR experiments were carried out to study the interaction of thrombin with a synthetic peptide, ESKATNATLDPR, derived from the newly-identified platelet receptor for thrombin [Vu, T.-K. H., Hung, D. T., Wheaton, V. I., & Coughlin, S. R. (1991) Cell 64, 1057-1068]. On the basis of the observation of the thrombin-induced line broadening and transferred NOEs, binding of the peptide was found to be located exclusively within residues LDPR of the proteolytic cleavage site LDPR/S essential for receptor activation by thrombin. Measurement of transferred NOEs and molecular modeling indicate that the side chain of the Asp(P3) residue may form a hydrogen bond with thrombin and, by doing so, it is brought near a positively-charged thrombin residue Arg(221A), thereby partially neutralizing the negative charge of an Asp residue at this site of protein substrates. The hydrophobic side chains of residues Leu(P4) and Pro(P2) reside on the same side of the peptide backbone as indicated by transferred NOEs and were found by modeling to fit into a hydrophobic cage around the thrombin active site. These results suggest that the interaction of thrombin with protein substrates such as prothrombin, protein C, protein S, the platelet receptor, and the A alpha- and B beta-chains of fibrinogen all follow the same canonical binding mode in that the substrate forms an antiparallel beta-strand with thrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Divergence of substrate specificity within the context of a common structural framework represents an important mechanism by which new enzyme activity naturally evolves. We present enzymological and x-ray structural data for hamster chymase-2 (HAM2) that provides a detailed explanation for the unusual hydrolytic specificity of this rodent alpha-chymase. In enzymatic characterization, hamster chymase-1 (HAM1) showed typical chymase proteolytic activity. In contrast, HAM2 exhibited atypical substrate specificity, cleaving on the carboxyl side of the P1 substrate residues Ala and Val, characteristic of elastolytic rather than chymotryptic specificity. The 2.5-A resolution crystal structure of HAM2 complexed to the peptidyl inhibitor MeOSuc-Ala-Ala-Pro-Ala-chloromethylketone revealed a narrow and shallow S1 substrate binding pocket that accommodated only a small hydrophobic residue (e.g. Ala or Val). The different substrate specificities of HAM2 and HAM1 are explained by changes in four S1 substrate site residues (positions 189, 190, 216, and 226). Of these, Asn(189), Val(190), and Val(216) form an easily identifiable triplet in all known rodent alpha-chymases that can be used to predict elastolytic specificity for novel chymase-like sequences. Phylogenetic comparison defines guinea pig and rabbit chymases as the closest orthologs to rodent alpha-chymases.  相似文献   

18.
Classic major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins associate with antigen- and self-derived peptides in an allele-specific manner. Herein we present the crystal structure of the MHC class I protein H-2K(d) (K(d)) expressed by BALB/c mice in complex with an antigenic peptide derived from influenza A/PR/8/34 nucleoprotein (Flu, residues 147-155, TYQRTRALV). Analysis of our structure in conjunction with the sequences of naturally processed epitopes provides a comprehensive understanding of the dominant K(d) peptide-binding motif. We find that Flu residues Tyr(P2), Thr(P5), and Val(P9) are sequestered into the B, C, and F pockets of the K(d) groove, respectively. The shape and chemistry of the polymorphic B pocket make it an optimal binding site for the side chain of Tyr(P2) as the dominant anchoring residue of nonameric peptides. The non-polar F pocket limits the amino acid repertoire at P9 to hydrophobic residues such as Ile, Leu, or Val, whereas the C pocket restricts the size of the P5-anchoring side chain. We also show that Flu is accommodated in the complex through an unfavorable kink in the otherwise extended peptide backbone due to the presence of a prominent ridge in the K(d) groove. Surprisingly, this backbone conformation is strikingly similar to D(b)-presented peptides despite the fact that these proteins employ distinct motif-anchoring strategies. The results presented in this study provide a solid foundation for the understanding of K(d)-restricted antigen presentation and recognition events.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Earthworm fibrinolytic enzyme component A (EFEa) from Eisenia fetida is a strong fibrinolytic enzyme that not only directly degrades fibrin, but also activates plasminogen. Proteolytic assays further revealed that it cleaved behind various P1 residue types. The crystal structure of EFEa was determined using the MIR method and refined to 2.3A resolution. The enzyme, showing the overall polypeptide fold of chymotrypsin-like serine proteases, possesses essential S1 specificity determinants characteristic of elastase. However, the beta strand at the west rim of the S1 specificity pocket is significantly elongated by a unique four-residue insertion (Ser-Ser-Gly-Leu) after Val217, which not only provides additional substrate hydrogen binding sites for distal P residues, but also causes extension of the S1 pocket at the south rim. The S2 subsite of the enzyme was partially occluded by the bulky side-chain of residue Tyr99. Structure-based inhibitor modeling demonstrated that EFEa's S1 specificity pocket was preferable for elastase-specific small hydrophobic P1 residues, while its accommodation of long and/or bulky P1 residues was also feasible if enhanced binding of the substrate and induced fit of the S1 pocket were achieved. EFEa is thereby endowed with relatively broad substrate specificity, including the dual fibrinolysis. The presence of Tyr99 at the S2 subsite indicates a preference for P2-Gly, while an induced fit of Tyr99 was also suggested for accommodation of bigger P2 residues. This structure is the first reported for an earthworm fibrinolytic enzyme component and serine protease originating from annelid worms.  相似文献   

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