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1.
The activation of factor X in the presence of antithrombin has been studied in order to determine the parameters that control the area under the resulting factor Xa generation curve. Generation curves were analyzed using a model containing three parameters: the total generation of factor Xa, Emax; the rate of factor Xa generation, expressed as a first-order rate constant, kappa 1; and the rate of inhibition, expressed as another first-order rate constant, kappa 2. Using factor IXa-VIIIa to activate factor X, we found the area under the generation curve to be proportional to Emax, which was varied by varying the factor IXa concentration, and inversely proportional to kappa 2, which was varied by varying the antithrombin concentration. With this activator, however, kappa 1 varied in parallel with Emax, resulting in a correlation between integrated area and kappa 1. In order to determine whether Emax or kappa 1, or both, was a controlling parameter, similar activations were done with varying concentrations of the factor X-activating enzyme of Russell's viper venom. With this activator it was possible to vary Emax and kappa 1 independently, again at varying antithrombin concentrations. These results showed the integrated area to be proportional to Emax and inversely proportional to kappa 2, as before, but independent of the activation rate, kappa 1. In this system, therefore, the area under the factor Xa generation curve is controlled by the amount of factor Xa generated and its rate of inhibition but is independent of the rate of factor Xa generation.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the kinetics of the inhibitory action of antithrombin III and antithrombin III plus heparin during the activation of factor X by factor IXa. Generation and inactivation curves were fitted to a three-parameter two-exponentional model to determine the pseudo first-order rate constants of inhibition of factor IXa and factor Xa by antithrombin III/heparin. In the absence of heparin, the second-order rate constant of inhibition of factor Xa generated by factor IXa was 2.5-fold lower than the rate constant of inhibition of exogenous factor Xa. It appeared that phospholipid-bound factor X protected factor Xa from inactivation by antithrombin III. It is, as yet, unclear whether an active site or a nonactive site interaction between factor Xa and factor X at the phospholipid surface is involved. The inactivation of factor IXa by antithrombin III was found to be very slow and was not affected by phospholipid, calcium, and/or factor X. With unfractionated heparin above 40 ng/ml and antithrombin III at 200 nM, the apparent second-order rate constant of inhibition of exogenous and generated factor Xa were the same. Thus, in this case phospholipid-bound factor X did not protect factor Xa from inhibition. In the presence of synthetic pentasaccharide heparin, however, phospholipid-bound factor X reduced the rate constant about 5-fold. Pentasaccharide had no effect on the factor IXa/antithrombin III reaction. Unfractionated heparin (1 micrograms/ml) stimulated the antithrombin III-dependent inhibition of factor IXa during factor X activation 400-fold. In the absence of reaction components this stimulated was 65-fold. We established that calcium stimulated the heparin-dependent inhibition of factor IXa.  相似文献   

3.
A method has been developed for detailed kinetic studies of the inhibition of factor Xa in human plasma. Radiolabeled enzyme is not required, and the method can be used at initial factor Xa levels of 1 nM. The method is discontinuous and based on the removal of samples into an amidolytic assay done in the presence of 1% Lubrol-PX detergent. This permits the study of inhibition in mixtures containing phospholipid, platelets, or thromboplastin. The method can be used at inhibition rates in excess of 1 min-1, and by suitable analysis can be used to estimate the contribution of inhibition by alpha 2-macroglobulin, which does not itself inhibit amidolytic activity. The method is at present limited to cases where thrombin is not generated in large excess. Factor Xa inhibition has been studied in citrated plasma as a function of total plasma concentration, and--by the use of antithrombin-depleted plasma--as a function of the antithrombin concentration of the plasma. In all situations inhibition is characterized by second-order behavior: (i) total inhibition rate is proportional to plasma concentration up to 95%, giving a maximum rate in the absence of calcium of 1 min-1; (ii) inhibition in depleted plasma reconstituted with antithrombin shows inhibition rate to remain linearly related to antithrombin concentration; and (iii) the estimated rate due to alpha 2-macroglobulin is proportional to plasma concentration. It is thus confirmed that, as in pure systems, inhibition of factor Xa in whole plasma is linearly related to the concentration of each class of inhibitor.  相似文献   

4.
Inhibition of prothrombinase complex by plasma proteinase inhibitors   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
V Ellis  M F Scully  V V Kakkar 《Biochemistry》1984,23(24):5882-5887
The rate of inactivation of human coagulation factor Xa by the plasma proteinase inhibitors antithrombin III and alpha 1-antitrypsin has been studied in the presence of the accessory components which constitute the prothrombinase complex. The rate of inactivation of factor Xa by antithrombin III was found to be decreased in the presence of phospholipid vesicles with high affinity for factor Xa. The second-order rate constant for the reaction fell from 6.21 X 10(4) to 3.40 X 10(4) M-1 min-1 in the presence of 20 microM phospholipid. Purified factor Va had no effect on the rate of inactivation of factor Xa in the absence of phospholipid. In the presence of phospholipid, factor Va increased the protective effect displayed by phospholipid, further reducing the rate constant to 2.20 X 10(4) M-1 min-1. The rate of inactivation of factor Xa by alpha 1-antitrypsin was unaffected under these conditions. Platelet-bound prothrombinase complex was formed by incubation of factor Xa with washed human platelets activated by a mixture of collagen and thrombin. The prothrombinase activity was inhibited by antithrombin III was a second-order rate constant of 0.85 X 10(4) M-1 min-1. This rate was obtained in both the presence and absence of exogenous factor Va. Platelet factor 3 vesicles, isolated from platelet aggregation supernatants, also formed prothrombinase complex in the presence of factor Va, and this was inhibited by antithrombin III at the same rate as the platelet-bound complex. There was no protection of the platelet-bound prothrombinase complex from inhibition by alpha 1-antitrypsin.  相似文献   

5.
New non-sugar, small, sulfated molecules, based on our de novo rationally designed activator (-)-epicatechin sulfate (ECS), were investigated to bind and activate antithrombin, an inhibitor of plasma coagulation enzyme factor Xa. For the activators studied, the equilibrium dissociation constant (K(D)) of the interaction with plasma antithrombin varies nearly 53-fold, with the highest affinity of 1.8 microM observed for morin sulfate, while the acceleration in factor Xa inhibition varies 2.6-fold. The results demonstrate that antithrombin binding and activation is a common property of these small sulfated molecules and suggests plausible directions for designing more potent activators.  相似文献   

6.
We have determined the rate constants of inactivation of factor Xa and thrombin by antithrombin III/heparin during the process of prothrombin activation. The second-order rate constant of inhibition of factor Xa alone by antithrombin III as determined by using the synthetic peptide substrate S-2337 was found to be 1.1 X 10(6) M-1 min-1. Factor Xa in prothrombin activation mixtures that contained prothrombin, and either saturating amounts of factor Va or phospholipid (20 mol % dioleoylphosphatidylserine/80 mol % dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, 10 microM), was inhibited by antithrombin III with a second-order rate constant that was essentially the same: 1.2 X 10(6) M-1 min-1. When both factor Va and phospholipid were present during prothrombin activation, factor Xa inhibition by antithrombin III was reduced about 10-fold, with a second-order rate constant of 1.3 X 10(5) M-1 min-1. Factor Xa in the prothrombin activation mixture that contained both factor Va and phospholipid was even more protected from inhibition by the antithrombin III-heparin complex. The first-order rate constants of these reactions at 200 nM antithrombin III and normalized to heparin at 1 microgram/mL were 0.33 and 9.5 min-1 in the presence and absence of factor Va and phospholipid, respectively. When the prothrombin concentration was varied widely around the Km for prothrombin, this had no effect on the first-order rate constants of inhibition. It is our conclusion that factor Xa when acting in prothrombinase on prothrombin is profoundly protected from inhibition by antithrombin III in the absence as well as in the presence of heparin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
B A Owen  W G Owen 《Biochemistry》1990,29(40):9412-9417
Factor Xa modified by reductive methylation (greater than 92%) loses the capacity to bind heparin as determined both by gel chromatography and by sedimentation equilibrium ultracentrifugation. The kinetic properties of methylated factor Xa differ, with respect to KM and Vmax for a synthetic tripeptide substrate and for antithrombin III inhibition rate constants, from those of the unmodified enzyme. The 10,000-fold rate enhancement elicited by the addition of heparin to the antithrombin III inhibition reaction, however, is the same. The observed second-order rate constants (k"obs) for antithrombin III inhibition of factor Xa and methylated factor Xa are 3000 and 340 M-1 s-1, respectively, whereas k"obs values for the inhibition of factor Xa or methylated factor Xa with antithrombin III-heparin are 4 X 10(7) and 3 X 10(6) M-1 s-1, respectively. These findings provide direct evidence that the interaction of factor Xa with heparin is not involved in the heparin-enhanced inhibition of this enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Inhibition of human factor Xa by various plasma protease inhibitors   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The inhibitory effects of the plasma protease inhibitors antithrombin III, alpha 2-macroglobulin and alpha 1-antitrypsin on the activity of human factor Xa have been studied using purified proteins. The rate of inhibition was determined by measuring the residual factor Xa activity at timed intervals utilizing the synthetic peptide susbtrate Bz-Ile-Glu(piperidyl)-Gly-Arg-pNA. Kinetic analysis with varying molar concentrations of inhibitors demonstrated that the inhibition of factor Xa by antithromin III, alpha 2-macroglobulin and alpha 1-antitrypsin followed second-order kinetics. Calculated values of the rate constants for the inhibition of factor Xa by antithrombin III, alpha 2-macroglobulin and alpha 1-antitrypsin were 5.8 . 10(4), 4.00 . 10(4) and 1.36 . 10(4) M -1 . min -1, respectively. The plasma concentrations of the inhibitors can be used to assess their potential relative effectiveness against factor Xa. In plasma this was found as alpha 1-antitrypsin greater than antithrombin III greater than alpha 2-macroglobulin in the ratio 4.64: 2.08: 1.0. Cephalin was shown to inhibit the rate of reaction between factor Xa and antithrombin III.  相似文献   

9.
We have found that rat plasma corrected the non-activated PT of human normal or factor-X deficient plasma, and the factor Xa-like activity being constantly detected in every 1 ml of blood collected via the cannulated carotid artery of rats. The present study was undertaken to characterize the factor Xa-like activity in rat plasma by preparing rat factor X and a monoclonal antibody against it. Factor X was purified from a BaCl2 eluate of rat plasma by chromatographies on columns of DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B and Sulfate Cellulofine or on a column of Affi-Gel 10 conjugated with a monoclonal antibody against rat factor X. Factor Xa-like activity in rat plasma was eliminated by the treatment of rat plasma with a monoclonal antibody which recognized the heavy chain portions of rat factors X and Xa. A kinetical study demonstrated that rat factor Xa was strongly inhibited by rat antithrombin III, with a Ki of 2.2 x 10(-11) M, in the presence of heparin. However, in the absence of heparin, the second order rate constant for the inhibition of rat factor Xa by rat antithrombin III was 2.6 x 10(4) M-1.min-1, which was one forty-third that for the inhibition of human factor Xa by human antithrombin III. Furthermore, rat factor Xa was resistant to the inhibition by rat alpha-1-antitrypsin and alpha-2-macroglobulin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The synthetic antithrombin-binding heparin pentasaccharide and a full-length heparin of approximately 26 saccharides containing this specific sequence have been compared with respect to their interactions with antithrombin and their ability to promote inhibition and substrate reactions of antithrombin with thrombin and factor Xa. The aim of these studies was to elucidate the pentasaccharide contribution to heparin's accelerating effect on antithrombin-proteinase reactions. Pentasaccharide and full-length heparins bound antithrombin with comparable high affinities (KD values of 36 +/- 11 and 10 +/- 3 nM, respectively, at I 0.15) and induced highly similar protein fluorescence, ultraviolet and circular dichroism changes in the inhibitor. Stopped-flow fluorescence kinetic studies of the heparin binding interactions at I 0.15 were consistent with a two-step binding process for both heparins, involving an initial weak encounter complex interaction formed with similar affinities (KD 20-30 microM), followed by an inhibitor conformational change with indistinguishable forward rate constants of 520-700 s-1 but dissimilar reverse rate constants of approximately 1 s-1 for the pentasaccharide and approximately 0.2 s-1 for the full-length heparin. Second order rate constants for antithrombin reactions with thrombin and factor Xa were maximally enhanced by the pentasaccharide only 1.7-fold for thrombin, but a substantial 270-fold for factor Xa, in an ionic strength-independent manner at saturating oligosaccharide. In contrast, the full-length heparin produced large ionic strength-dependent enhancements in second order rate constants for both antithrombin reactions of 4,300-fold for thrombin and 580-fold for factor Xa at I 0.15. These enhancements were resolvable into a nonionic component ascribable to the pentasaccharide and an ionic component responsible for the additional rate increase of the larger heparin. Stoichiometric titrations of thrombin and factor Xa inactivation by antithrombin, as well as sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the products of these reactions, indicated that pentasaccharide and full-length heparins similarly promoted the formation of proteolytically modified inhibitor during the inactivation of factor Xa by antithrombin, whereas only the full-length heparin was effective in promoting this substrate reaction of antithrombin during the reaction with thrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The basis of the specificity of human coagulation factor Xa has been probed with a reagent that reacts with nucleophiles, N-succinimidylpropionate. At pH 8.0 and 0.25 mM N-succinimidylpropionate, 0.4 microM factor Xa lost approx. 90% of its activity toward prothrombin in 4 min. The decay was first-order, k = 0.64 min-1, which increased to 0.98 min-1 in 1 mM Ca2+, and the dependence of k upon pH was consistent with primary amines being the target. The rate of modification was unaffected by the presence of a tetrapeptide substrate during modification; likewise, activity toward a tripeptide p-nitroanilide was unaltered during exposure of factor Xa to N-succinimidylpropionate with or without Ca2+. In addition, inhibition by antithrombin III was retained with a somewhat enhanced rate after modification; however, the acceleration of this by heparin was significantly less. Kinetic determination of the number of residues modified gave a reaction order of 2.0, while reaction with N-succinimidyl[3H]propionate yielded labeled factor Xa containing 1.0 mol N-succinimidylpropionate/mol factor Xa and 50% normal clotting activity, or 2.0 mol N-succinimidylpropionate/mol and 1% activity, respectively. Thus, one nucleophilic group is required for the reaction of factor Xa with prothrombin but not for the hydrolysis of peptides or recognition of antithrombin III. The decay of clotting activity of the factor X zymogen in N-succinimidylpropionate was much slower though still Ca2+-dependent. Conversely, the reaction of a related compound--N-succinimidyl(4-hydroxyphenyl)propionate or Bolton-Hunter reagent--with factor Xa broadly resembled that of N-succinimidylpropionate but the decay curves indicated more complex kinetics. Therefore, the target groups vary in their accessibility to modification according to the structural characteristics of both the protein and the reagent.  相似文献   

12.
There is evidence that by catalyzing thrombin inhibition, several glycosaminoglycans can inhibit the thrombin-mediated amplification reactions of coagulation and thereby delay prothrombin activation. The two amplification reactions can apparently be catalysed by endogenously generated factor Xa and thrombin. This study provides evidence which suggests that on a molar basis, an agent which can only catalyse thrombin inhibition is approximately 10 times more effective than an agent which can only catalyse factor Xa inhibition in their ability to inhibit intrinsic prothrombin activation. We determined the concentrations of each of heparin, dermatan sulfate and a pentasaccharide with high affinity for antithrombin III, to delay intrinsic prothrombin activation for at least 15s. Heparin catalyses both thrombin and factor Xa inhibition; dermatan sulfate catalyses only thrombin inhibition, while the pentasaccharide only catalyses factor Xa inhibition. Efficient prothrombin activation, which coincided with both factor X activation and factor V proteolysis, was first observed 45s after CaC12 was added to contact-activated plasma. Heparin (approximately 0.1 microM) prolonged by at least 30 s the time required for the activation of the three clotting factors to begin. The minimum concentrations of the pentasaccharide and dermatan sulfate to delay the activation of prothrombin, factors X and V were approximately 50 microM and approximately 5 microM, respectively. Thus, each anticoagulant could inhibit intrinsic prothrombin activation only when it inhibited activation of both factors X and V. A combination of approximately 5 microM pentasaccharide and approximately 0.05 microM dermatan sulfate similarly delayed the activation of all three clotting factors. Thus, while catalysis of thrombin inhibition is a more effective pathway than catalysis of factor Xa inhibition for delaying prothrombin activation, the simultaneous catalysis of thrombin and factor Xa inhibition can synergistically improve the ability of a sulfated polysaccharide to delay prothrombin activation.  相似文献   

13.
The kinetics of alpha-factor Xa inhibition by antithrombin III (AT) were studied in the absence and presence of heparin (H) with high affinity for antithrombin by stopped-flow fluorometry at I 0.3, pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C, using the fluorescence probe p-aminobenzamidine (P) and intrinsic protein fluorescence to monitor the reactions. Active site binding of p-aminobenzamidine to factor Xa was characterized by a 200-fold enhancement and 4-nm blue shift of the probe fluorescence emission spectrum (lambda max 372 nm), 29-nm red shift of the excitation spectrum (lambda max 322 nm), and dissociation constant (KD) of about 80 microM. Under pseudo-first order conditions [( AT]0, [H]0, [P]0 much greater than [Xa]0), the observed factor Xa inactivation rate constant (kobs) measured by p-aminobenzamidine displacement or residual enzymatic activity increased linearly with the "effective" antithrombin concentration (i.e. corrected for probe competition) up to 300 microM in the absence of heparin, indicating a simple bimolecular process with a rate constant of 2.1 x 10(3) M-1 s-1. In the presence of heparin, a similar linear dependence of kobs on effective AT.H complex concentration was found up to 25 microM whether the reaction was followed by probe displacement or the quenching of AT.H complex protein fluorescence due to heparin dissociation, consistent with a bimolecular reaction between AT.H complex and free factor Xa with a 300-fold enhanced rate constant of 7 x 10(5) M-1 s-1. Above 25 microM AT.H complex, an increasing dead time displacement of p-aminobenzamidine and a downward deviation of kobs from the initial linear dependence on AT.H complex concentration were found, reflecting the saturation of an intermediate Xa.AT.H complex with a KD of 200 microM and a limiting rate of Xa-AT product complex formation of 140 s-1. Kinetic studies at catalytic heparin concentrations yielded a kcat/Km for factor Xa at saturating antithrombin of 7 x 10(5) M-1 s-1 in agreement with the bimolecular rate constant obtained in single heparin turnover experiments. These results demonstrate that 1) the accelerating effect of heparin on the AT/Xa reaction is at least partly due to heparin promoting the ordered assembly of antithrombin and factor Xa in an intermediate ternary complex and that 2) heparin catalytic turnover is limited by the rate of conversion of the ternary complex intermediate to the product Xa-AT complex with heparin dissociation occurring either concomitant with this step or in a subsequent faster step.  相似文献   

14.
The interference of the heparin-neutralizing plasma component S protein (vitronectin) (Mr = 78,000) with heparin-catalyzed inhibition of coagulation factor Xa by antithrombin III was investigated in plasma and in a purified system. In plasma, S protein effectively counteracted the anticoagulant activity of heparin, since factor Xa inhibition was markedly reduced in comparison to heparinized plasma deficient in S protein. Using purified components in the presence of heparin, S protein induced a concentration-dependent reduction of the inhibition rate of factor Xa by antithrombin III. This resulted in a decrease of the apparent pseudo-first order rate constant by more than 10-fold at a physiological ratio of antithrombin III to S protein. S protein not only counteracted the anticoagulant activity of commercial heparin but also of low molecular weight forms of heparin (mean Mr of 4,500). The heparin-neutralizing activity of S protein was found to be mainly expressed in the range 0.2-10 micrograms/ml of high Mr as well as low Mr heparin. S protein and high affinity heparin reacted with apparent 1:1 stoichiometry to form a complex with a dissociation constant KD = 1 X 10(-8) M as determined by a functional assay. As deduced from dot-blot analysis, direct interaction of radiolabeled heparin with S protein revealed a dissociation constant KD = 4 X 10(-8) M. Heparin binding as well as heparin neutralization by S protein increased significantly when reduced/carboxymethylated or guanidine-treated S protein was employed indicating the existence of a partly buried heparin-binding domain in native S protein. Radiolabeled heparin bound to the native protein molecule as well as to a BrCN fragment (Mr = 12,000) containing the heparin-binding domain as demonstrated by direct binding on nitrocellulose replicas of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Kinetic analysis revealed that the heparin neutralization activity of S protein in the inhibition of factor Xa by antithrombin III could be mimicked by a synthetic tridecapeptide from the amino-terminal portion of the heparin-binding domain. These data provide evidence that the heparin-binding domain of S protein appears to be unique in binding to heparin and thereby neutralizing its anticoagulant activity in the inhibition of coagulation factors by antithrombin III. The induction of heparin binding and neutralization may be considered a possible physiological mechanism initiated by conformational alteration of the S protein molecule.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The influence of heparin on the inhibition of factor Xa has been studied under conditions where factor Xa is bound to collagen-thrombin-stimulated platelets to form the prothrombinase complex. Unfractionated heparin was found to cause a concentration-dependent acceleration of the inhibition of the platelet prothrombinase complex up to a maximum rate constant of 4.1 X 10(7) M-1 X min-1 at heparin concentrations of 0.2 microM and above. This is equivalent to a 4800-fold acceleration over the rate constant for the inhibition in the absence of heparin, and is 6.8-fold lower than the rate constant for the inhibition of uncomplexed factor Xa in the presence of saturating concentrations of heparin which was determined as 2.8 X 10(8) M-1 X min-1. The effects of three Mr fractions of heparin were also studied. These were a gel-filtered heparin of Mr 15000, a gel-filtered heparin of Mr 6000 and a heparin oligosaccharide (primarily 8-10 monosaccharide units) prepared by nitrous acid depolymerization, each with high affinity for antithrombin III. These fractions all accelerated the rate of the antithrombin III inhibition of the platelet prothrombinase complex, with maximum rate constants of 6.8 X 10(7), 1.4 X 10(7) and 9.8 X 10(6) M-1 X min-1, respectively. On comparison with the effect of these heparin fractions on the rate of inhibition of uncomplexed factor Xa a progressively increasing disparity between the rate of inhibition of uncomplexed and complexed factor Xa was observed, rising from 1.7-fold with the oligosaccharide to 6.8-fold with the unfractionated heparin. A possible mechanism for this differential activity between uncomplexed and complexed factor Xa with the various heparin fractions is discussed in terms of an involvement of heparin binding to factor Xa.  相似文献   

16.
Because of the homology between factor IXa and factor Xa (f.IXa and f.Xa, respectively), and the critical upstream position of f.IXa in the coagulation cascade, the contribution of the heparin-derived pentasaccharide to antithrombin-mediated inhibition of f.IXa was investigated. Pentasaccharide promotes inhibition of both f.IXa and f.Xa generated in recalcified plasma. This result demonstrates that antithrombin is the predominant inhibitor of f.IXa in plasma, and that the activity of antithrombin is promoted by pentasaccharide. Kinetic experiments reveal that pentasaccharide increases the rates of antithrombin-mediated inhibition of both f.IXa and f.Xa by 2 orders of magnitude. These findings indicate that pentasaccharide-induced conformational changes in antithrombin enhance its capacity to inhibit both f.IXa and f.Xa. In the presence of Ca2+, full-length heparin produces an additional approximately 10-fold increase in the rates of inhibition of both enzymes, consistent with a template role of heparin. Heparin binding to f.Xa was previously shown to be promoted in the presence of Ca2+. Binding studies with f.IXa reveal a 10-fold higher affinity for heparin in the presence of Ca2+ compared with its absence. Thus, Ca2+ promotes heparin-catalyzed inhibition of f.IXa and f.Xa by antithrombin by augmenting the template mechanism. These results indicate that heparin-mediated catalysis of f.IXa inhibition by antithrombin reflects both pentasaccharide-induced conformational changes and heparin-mediated bridging of antithrombin to f.IXa. Furthermore, our data suggest that the efficacy of pentasaccharide for prevention and treatment of thrombotic disorders may reflect its action at two sites in the coagulation system.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of heparin fractions of different molecular weight to potentiate the action of antithrombin III against the coagulation factors thrombin and Xa has been examined in purified reaction mixtures and in plasma. Residual thrombin and Xa have been determined by their peptidase activities against the synthetic peptide substrates H-D-Phe-Pip-Arg-pNA and Bz-Ile-Gly-Arg-pNA. High molecular weight heparin fractions were found to have higher anticoagulant activities than low molecular weight heparin when studied with both thrombin and Xa incubation mixtures in purified mixtures and in plasma. The inhibition of thrombin by heparin fractions and antithrombin III was unaffected by other plasma components. However, normal human plasma contained a component that inhibited the heparin and antithrombin III inhibition of Xa particularly when the high molecular weight heparin fraction was used. Experiments using a purified preparation of platelet factor 4 suggested that the platelet-derived heparin-neutralizing protein was not responsible for the inhibition.  相似文献   

18.
Heparin and heparin fragments in the molecular mass range 1,700-20,000 Da were examined for their ability to accelerate the antithrombin III (AT III)-dependent inhibition of human factor Xa and the prothrombin converting complex (prothrombinase) during human prothrombin activation. The prothrombinase reaction was modeled by a 3-parameter 2-exponential equation to determine the initial rate of prothrombin activation and the pseudo-first order rate constants of inhibition of prothrombinase and in situ generated thrombin activity. The catalytic specific activities of the heparins increased with increasing molecular size for both the inhibition of prothrombinase and factor Xa. A 10-fold increase over the entire Mr range was found. In contrast to results obtained by others (Ellis, V., Scully, M. F., and Kakkar, V. V. (1986) Biochem. J. 233, 161-165; Barrowcliffe, T. W., Havercroft, S. J., Kemball-Cook, G., and Lindahl, U. (1987) Biochem. J. 243, 31-37), all the heparins showed a 5-fold higher rate of inhibition of factor Xa when compared with the inhibition of prothrombinase, indicating that the factor Va-mediated protection of factor Xa from inhibition by AT III/heparin is independent of the molecular size of the heparin. Our original approach has also revealed a hitherto unrecognized phenomenon, namely, in addition to the accelerating effect of the heparins on the rate of formation of the inactive AT III-factor Xa complex, heparins with Mr greater than 4,500 reduce the initial rate of thrombin generation in the presence of AT III in a concentration-dependent way. We hypothesize that the formation of the dissociable ternary AT III-heparin-factor Xa complex results in a (partial) loss of factor Xa activity towards its natural substrate prothrombin.  相似文献   

19.
Protease cascades and their inhibitors are a common feature of many biological regulatory systems, and the various components of such cascades have been subjected to a long and concerted evolution. We present here evidence that in the coagulation cascade, the sequence of the protease-binding reactive-site loop of antithrombin has evolved such that the majority of its residues has been acquired not for the efficient inhibition of its target proteases, thrombin and factor Xa, but to avoid the inhibition of activated protein C (APC). We substituted residues of the reactive-site loop of antithrombin into α1-antitrypsin and tested the chimeras against thrombin, factor Xa, and APC. With respect to factor Xa and thrombin, the difference in association rate between the fastest and the slowest inhibitors was 5.5- and 88-fold, respectively. However, with respect to APC the difference was 12,500-fold. While most of the variation in the inhibition rates of thrombin could be accounted for by P2 Gly-to-Pro substitutions, for APC almost every residue had an effect on inhibition. In 22 of 25 direct comparisons of antitrypsin residues with antithrombin residues, either singly or in blocs, the antithrombin residues caused a decrease in the rate of inhibition of APC. The antithrombin residue Asn393, at position P′3, emerged as particularly important for avoiding the inhibition of APC, however, its 190-fold effect was seen only when in conjunction with antithrombin P7 to P′2 residues. Cooperative effects among residues of the reactive-site loop thus emerged as critical for restricting the activity of this sequence against APC. Received: 15 November 1999 / Accepted: 2 August 2000  相似文献   

20.
A sequence-specific heparin pentasaccharide activates the serpin, antithrombin, to inhibit factor Xa through an allosteric mechanism, whereas full-length heparin chains containing this sequence further activate the serpin to inhibit thrombin by an alternative bridging mechanism. To test whether the factor Xa specificity of allosterically activated antithrombin is encoded in the serpin reactive center loop, we mutated the factor Xa-preferred P2 Gly to the thrombin-preferred P2 Pro. Kinetic studies revealed that the mutation maximally enhanced the reactivity of antithrombin with thrombin 15-fold and decreased its reactivity toward factor Xa 2-fold when the serpin was activated by heparin pentasaccharide, thereby transforming antithrombin into an allosterically activated inhibitor of both factor Xa and thrombin. Surprisingly, the enhanced thrombin specificity of the mutant antithrombin was attenuated when a full-length bridging heparin was the activator, due both to a reduced rate of covalent reaction of the mutant serpin and thrombin and preferred reaction of the mutant serpin as a substrate. These results demonstrate that the reactive center loop sequence determines the specificity of allosterically activated antithrombin for factor Xa and that the conformational flexibility of the P2 Gly may be critical for optimal bridging of antithrombin and thrombin by physiologic heparin and for preventing antithrombin from reacting as a substrate in the bridging complex.  相似文献   

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