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1.
Recent studies have indicated that factor Va bound to activated platelets is partially protected from inactivation by activated protein C (APC). To explore whether this sustained factor Va activity could maintain ongoing thrombin generation, the kinetics of platelet factor Va-dependent prothrombinase activity and its inhibition by APC were studied. In an attempt to mimic physiologically relevant conditions, platelets were adhered to collagen type I-coated discs. These discs were then spun in solutions containing prothrombin and factor Xa either in the absence or presence of APC. The experiments were performed in the absence of platelet-derived microparticles, with thrombin generation and inhibition confined to the surface of the adherent platelets. APC completely inactivated platelet-associated prothrombinase activity with an overall second order rate constant of 3.3 x 10(6) m(-)1 s(-)1, which was independent of the prothrombin concentration over a wide range around the apparent K(m) for prothrombin. Kinetic studies on prothrombinase assembled at a planar phospholipid membrane composed of 25 mol % phosphatidylserine and 75 mol % phosphatidylcholine revealed a similar second order rate constant of inhibition (2.5 x 10(6) m(-1) s(-1)). Collectively, these data demonstrate that ongoing platelet factor Va-dependent thrombin generation at the surface of collagen-adherent platelets is effectively inhibited by APC. No differences were observed between the kinetics of APC inactivation of plasma-derived factor Va or platelet factor Va as part of the prothrombinase associated with, respectively, a planar membrane of synthetic phospholipids or collagen-adherent platelets.  相似文献   

2.
To test whether neutral glycosphingolipids can serve as anticoagulant cofactors, the effects of incorporation of neutral glycosphingolipids into phospholipid vesicles on anticoagulant and procoagulant reactions were studied. Glucosylceramide (GlcCer), lactosylceramide (LacCer), and globotriaosylceramide (Gb(3)Cer) in vesicles containing phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) dose dependently enhanced factor Va inactivation by the anticoagulant factors, activated protein C (APC) and protein S. Addition of GlcCer to PC/PS vesicles enhanced protein S-dependent APC cleavage in factor Va at Arg-506 by 13-fold, whereas PC/PS vesicles alone minimally affected protein S enhancement of this reaction. Incorporation into PC/PS vesicles of GlcCer, LacCer, or Gb(3)Cer, but not galactosylceramide or globotetraosylceramide, dose dependently prolonged factor Xa-1-stage clotting times of normal plasma in the presence of added APC without affecting baseline clotting times in the absence of APC, showing that certain neutral glycosphingolipids enhance anticoagulant but not procoagulant reactions in plasma. Thus, certain neutral glycosphingolipids (e.g. GlcCer, LacCer, and Gb(3)Cer) can enhance anticoagulant activity of APC/protein S by mechanisms that are distinctly different from those of phospholipids alone. We speculate that under some circumstances certain neutral glycosphingolipids either in lipoprotein particles or in cell membranes may help form antithrombotic microdomains that might enhance down-regulation of thrombin by APC in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Rate constants for human factor Va inactivation by activated human protein C (APC) were determined in the absence and presence of Ca2+ ions, protein S and varying concentrations of phospholipid vesicles of different lipid composition. APC-catalyzed factor Va inactivation in free solution (in the presence of 2 mM Ca2+) was studied under first-order reaction conditions with respect to both APC and factor Va and was characterized by an apparent second-order rate constant of 6.1 x 10(5) M-1 s-1. Stimulation of APC-catalyzed factor Va inactivation by phospholipids was dependent on the concentration and composition of the phospholipid vesicles. Optimal acceleration (230-fold) of factor Va inactivation was observed with 10 microM phospholipid vesicles composed of 20 mol% dioleoylglycerophosphoserine (Ole2GroPSer) and 80 mol% dioleoylglycerophosphocholine (Ole2GroPCho). At higher vesicle concentrations and at higher molar fractions of Ole2GroPSer some inhibition of APC-catalyzed factor Va inactivation was observed. Membranes that contained anionic phospholipids other than phosphatidylserine also promoted factor Va inactivation. The ability of different anionic lipids to enhance factor Va inactivation increased in the order phosphatidylethanolamine less than oleic acid less than phosphatidic acid less than phosphatidylglycerol less than phosphatidylmethanol less than phosphatidylserine. APC-catalyzed factor Va inactivation in the presence of phospholipid vesicles could be saturated with respect to factor Va and the reaction obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Both the Km for factor Va and the Vmax of factor Va inactivation were a function of the phospholipid concentration. The Km increased from 1 nM at 2.5 microM phospholipid (Ole2GroPSer/Ole2GroPCho 20:80, mol/mol) to 65 nM at 250 microM phospholipid. The Vmax increased from 20 mol factor Va inactivated.min-1.mol APC-1 at 2.5 microM phospholipid to 62 mol factor Va inactivated.min-1.mol APC-1 at 10 microM phospholipid and remained constant at higher phospholipid concentrations. Protein S appeared to be a rather poor stimulator of APC-catalyzed factor Va inactivation. Protein-S-dependent rate enhancements were only observed in reaction mixtures that contained negatively charged phospholipid vesicles. Independent of the concentration and the lipid composition of the vesicles, protein S caused a twofold stimulation of APC-catalyzed factor Va inactivation. This suggests that, in the human system, enhancement of APC binding to phospholipid vesicles by protein S is of minor importance. Considering that protein S is a physiologically essential antithrombotic agent, it is likely that other factors or phenomena contribute to the in vivo antithrombotic action of protein S.  相似文献   

4.
Constituents of platelet membranes regulate the activity of the prothrombinase complex. We demonstrate that membranes containing phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) bind factor Va with high affinity (K(d) = ~10 nm) in the absence of phosphatidylserine (PS). These membranes support formation of a 60-70% functional prothrombinase complex at saturating factor Va concentrations. Although reduced interfacial packing does contribute to factor Va binding in the absence of PS, it does not correlate with the enhanced activity of the Xa-Va complex assembled on PE-containing membranes. Instead, specific protein-PE interactions appear to contribute to the effects of PE. In support of this, soluble C6PE binds to recombinant factor Va(2) (K(d) = ~6.5 μm) and to factor Xa (K(d) = ~91 μm). C6PE and C6PS binding sites of factor Xa are specific, distinct, and linked, because binding of one lipid enhances the binding and activity effects of the other. C6PE triggers assembly (K(d)(app) = ~40 nm) of a partially active prothrombinase complex between factor Xa and factor Va(2), compared with K(d)(app) for C6PS ~2 nm. These findings provide new insights into the possible synergistic roles of platelet PE and PS in regulating thrombin formation, particularly when exposed membrane PS may be limiting.  相似文献   

5.
Kinetic analyses were done to determine what effect factor Xa and protein S had on the activated protein C (APC)-catalyzed inactivation of factor Va bound to phospholipid vesicles or human platelets. In the presence of optimal concentrations of phospholipid vesicles and Ca2+, a Km of 19.7 +/- 0.6 nM factor Va and a kcat of 23.7 +/- 10 mol of factor Va inactivated/mol of APC/min were obtained. Added purified plasma protein S increased the maximal rate of factor Va inactivation only 2-fold without effect on the Km. Protein S effect was unaltered when the phospholipid concentration was varied by 2 orders of magnitude. The reaction on unactivated human platelets yielded a Km = 12.5 +/- 2.6 nM and kcat = 6.2 +/- 0.6 mol of factor Va inactivated/mol of APC/min. Added purified plasma protein S or release of platelet protein S by platelet activation doubled the kcat value without affecting the Km. Addition of a neutralizing anti-protein S antibody abrogated the effect of plasma protein S or platelet-released protein S, but was without effect in the absence of plasma protein S or platelet activation. Studies with factor Xa indicated that factor Xa protects factor Va from APC-catalyzed inactivation by lowering the effective concentration of factor Va available to interact with APC. From these data a dissociation constant of less than 0.5 nM was calculated for the interaction of factor Xa with membrane-bound factor Va. Protein S abrogated the ability of factor Xa to protect factor Va from inactivation by APC without affecting the interaction of factor Xa with factor Va. These combined data suggest that one physiological function of protein S is to allow the APC-catalyzed inactivation of factor Va in the presence of factor Xa.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Activated protein C (APC) exerts its physiologic anticoagulant role by proteolytic inactivation of the blood coagulation cofactors Va and VIIIa. The synthetic peptide-(311-325) (KRNRTFVLNFIKIPV), derived from the heavy chain sequence of APC, potently inhibited APC anticoagulant activity in activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) and Xa-1-stage coagulation assays in normal and in protein S-depleted plasma with 50% inhibition at 13 microM peptide. In a system using purified clotting factors, peptide-(311-325) inhibited APC-catalyzed inactivation of factor Va in the presence or absence of phospholipids with 50% inhibition at 6 microM peptide. However, peptide-(311-325) had no effect on APC amidolytic activity or on the reaction of APC with the serpin, recombinant [Arg358]alpha 1-antitrypsin. Peptide-(311-325) surprisingly inhibited factor Xa clotting activity in normal plasma, and in a purified system it inhibited prothrombinase activity in the presence but not in the absence of factor Va with 50% inhibition at 8 microM peptide. The peptide had no significant effect on factor Xa or thrombin amidolytic activity and no effect on the clotting of purified fibrinogen by thrombin, suggesting it does not directly inhibit these enzymes. Factor Va bound in a dose-dependent manner to immobilized peptide-(311-325). Peptide-(311-315) inhibited the binding of factor Va to immobilized APC or factor Xa.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The factor Va (FVa) inactivation by activated protein C (APC), mediated by cleavages at Arg306 and Arg506 in FVa, is inhibited by both factor Xa (FXa) and prothrombin. Although FXa is known to specifically inhibit the Arg506 cleavage, the effect of prothrombin has not been confined to one cleavage site. We used recombinant FV variants, FV:R506Q/R679Q and FV:R306Q/R679Q, to investigate the effect of prothrombin on the individual cleavage sites. The APC-mediated FVa inhibition was monitored by a prothrombinase-based FVa assay, and apparent first order rate constants were calculated for each of the cleavage sites both in the presence and absence of prothrombin. Prothrombin impaired cleavages at both Arg306 and Arg506 and the inhibition correlated with a delayed appearance of proteolytic products on Western blots. Almost complete inhibition was obtained at around 3 microm prothrombin, whereas half-maximal inhibition was obtained at 0.7 microm prothrombin. After cleavage of prothrombin by thrombin, the inhibitory activity was lost. The inhibitory effect of prothrombin on APC-mediated inhibition of FVa was seen both in the presence and absence of protein S, but in particular for the Arg306 sites, it was more pronounced in the presence of protein S. Thus, prothrombin inhibition of APC inactivation of FVa appears to be due to both impaired APC function and decreased APC cofactor function of protein S. In conclusion, FVa, being part of the prothrombinase complex, is protected from APC by both FXa and prothrombin. Release of products of prothrombin activation from the prothrombinase complex would alleviate the protection, allowing APC-mediated inactivation of FVa.  相似文献   

9.
The rates of prothrombin activation under initial conditions of invariant concentrations of prothrombin and Factor Xa were studied in the presence of various combinations of Ca2+, homogeneous bovine Factor V, Factor Va, phosphatidylcholine-phosphatidylserine vesicles, and activated bovine platelets. Reactions were monitored continuously through the enhanced fluorescence accompanying the interaction of newly formed thrombin with dansylarginine-N-(3-ethyl-1,5-pentanediyl) amide. The complete prothrombinase (Factor Xa, Ca2+, phospholipid, and Factor Va) behaved as a "typical" enzyme and catalyzed the activation of prothrombin with an apparent Vmax of 2100 mol of thrombin/min/mol of Factor Va or Factor Xa, whichever was the rate-limiting component. Regardless of whether the enzymatic complex was composed of Factor Xa, Ca2+, and plasma Factor Va plus phospholipid vesicles, or activated platelets in the place of the latter components, similar specific activity values were observed. The combination of Factor Va, Ca2+, and phospholipid enhanced the rate of the Factor Xa-catalyzed activation of prothrombin by a factor of 278,000. Factor Va itself when added to Factor Xa, Ca2+, and phospholipid, enhanced the rate of prothrombin activation by a factor of 13,000. Unactivated Factor V appears to possess 0.27% of the procoagulant activity of thrombin-activated Factor Va. From the kinetics of prothrombinase activity, an interaction between Factor Xa and both Factor V and Factor Va was observed, with apparent 1:1 stoichiometries and dissociation constants of 7.3 x 10(-10) M for Factor Va and 2.7 x 10(-9) M for Factor V. The present data, combined with data on the equilibrium binding of prothrombinase components to phospholipid, indicate that the model prothrombinase described in this paper consists of a phospholipid-bound, stoichiometric complex of Factor Va and Factor Xa, with bound Factor Va serving as the "binding site" for Factor Xa, in concert with its proposed role in platelets.  相似文献   

10.
Two different lipophilic photoreagents, [3H]adamantane diazirine and 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine (TID), have been utilized to examine the interactions of blood coagulation factor Va with calcium, prothrombin, factor Xa, and, in particular, phospholipid vesicles. With each of these structurally dissimilar reagents, the extent of photolabeling of factor Va was greater when the protein was bound to a membrane surface than when it was free in solution. Specifically, the covalent photoreaction with Vl, the smaller subunit of factor Va, was 2-fold higher in the presence of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine (PC/PS, 3:1) vesicles, to which factor Va binds, than in the presence of 100% PC vesicles, to which the protein does not bind. However, the magnitude of the PC/PS-dependent photolabeling was much less than has been observed previously with integral membrane proteins. It therefore appears that the binding of factor Va to the membrane surface exposes Vl to the lipid core of the bilayer, but that only a small portion of the Vl polypeptide is exposed to, or embedded in, the bilayer core. Addition of either prothrombin or active-site-blocked factor Xa to PC/PS-bound factor Va had little effect on the photolabeling of Vl with TID, but reduced substantially the covalent labeling of Vh, the larger subunit of factor Va. This indicates that prothrombin and factor Xa each cover nonpolar surfaces on Vh when the macromolecules associate on the PC/PS surface. It therefore seems likely that the formation of the prothrombinase complex involves a direct interaction between Vh and factor Xa and between Vh and prothrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The larger subunit of blood coagulation factor Va was covalently labeled with iodoacetamido derivatives of fluorescein and rhodamine without loss of functional activity, as measured by either the one-stage clotting assay or the ability to accelerate prothrombin activation in a purified system. The spectral properties of the dyes were not altered by the presence or absence of the smaller subunit of factor Va, Ca2+, prothrombin, factor Xa, or phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine (PC/PS, 4:1) vesicles. When fluorescein-labeled protein (factor VaF) was titrated with PC/PS vesicles containing either octadecylrhodamine or 5-(N-hexadecanoylamino)eosin, fluorescence energy transfer was observed between the protein-bound donor dyes and the acceptor dyes at the outer surface of the phospholipid bilayer. The extent of energy transfer correlated directly with the extent of protein binding to the vesicles monitored by light scattering. The distance of closest approach between the fluorescein on factor Va and the bilayer surface averaged 90 A for the two different acceptors. Association of factor VaF with factor Xa on the phospholipid surface reduced this separation by 7 A, but association with prothrombin did not alter the distance between the labeled domain on factor VaF and the surface. The efficiency of diffusion-enhanced energy transfer between rhodamine-labeled factor Va and terbium dipicolinate entrapped inside PC/PS vesicles was less than 0.01, consistent with the location of the dye far above the inner surface of the vesicle. Thus, a domain of membrane-bound factor Va is located a minimum of 90 A above the phospholipid surface.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Vesicles composed of phospholipids with different fatty acyl side chains have been utilized to examine the importance of the nonpolar membrane region for the prothrombin-converting activity of procoagulant phospholipid vesicles. Membranes composed of phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) with unsaturated fatty acyl side chains were more active in prothrombin activation than membranes composed of phospholipids with saturated fatty acyl chains. This phenomenon was observed above the phase transition temperature, i.e., on membranes in the liquid-crystalline state. The prothrombin-converting activity of saturated phospholipids approached the activity of unsaturated phospholipids at high factor Va concentrations, which is indicative for a less favorable equilibrium constant for prothrombinase assembly on membrane surfaces composed of saturated phospholipids. The difference between saturated and unsaturated phospholipids was annulled on membranes with high mole percentages of PS. This may result from a compensating contribution of electrostatic forces to the binding equilibria involved in prothrombinase assembly. Additional effects on the prothrombin-converting activity were observed when membranes containing saturated phospholipids were studied below their phase transition temperature. In agreement with Higgins et al. [(1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 3604-3612], we found that the time required for the assembly of prothrombinase from membrane-bound factors Xa and Va is considerably prolonged on solid membranes. However, we also observed an effect of membrane fluidity on the steady-state rate of prothrombin activation. Kinetic experiments at saturating factor Va concentrations showed that the transition from the liquid-crystalline to the gel state caused a more than 9-fold decrease of the kcat of prothrombin activation without affecting the Km for prothrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The inactivation of Factor Va by plasmin was studied in the presence and absence of phospholipid vesicles and calcium ions. The cleavage patterns of bovine Factor Va and its isolated subunits were analyzed using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the progress of inactivation was monitored by clotting assays and measurements of prothrombin activation using 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonylarginine-N-(3-ethyl-1,5-penta nediyl)amide. In addition, the ability of prothrombin and Factor Xa to protect Factor Va from inactivation by human plasmin was examined. The data presented indicate that the cofactor Factor Va is inactivated rapidly upon its interaction with human plasmin. The rate of inactivation is significantly enhanced in the presence of phospholipid vesicles, suggesting that the inactivation process is a membrane-bound phenomenon. The isolated D component (heavy chain of factor Va) was found to be slowly degraded by human plasmin, giving rise to cleavage products different from those obtained with activated protein C and Factor Xa. However, the 48- and 30-kDa fragments obtained from human plasmin degradation of component E (light chain of Factor Va) appear to be similar to those obtained following the proteolysis of the same subunit by activated protein C and Factor Xa.  相似文献   

14.
The role of the Gla domain of human prothrombin in interaction with the prothrombinase complex was studied using a peptide with the sequence of the first 46 residues of human prothrombin, PT-(1-46). Intrinsic fluorescence measurements showed that PT-(1-46) undergoes a conformational alteration upon binding calcium; this conclusion is supported by one-dimensional (1)H NMR spectroscopy, which identifies a change in the chemical environment of tryptophan 41. PT-(1-46) binds phospholipid membranes in a calcium-dependent manner with a K(d) of 0.5 microm and inhibits thrombin generation by the prothrombinase complex with a K(i) of 0.8 microm. In the absence of phospholipid membranes, PT-(1-46) inhibits thrombin generation by factor Xa in the presence but not absence of factor Va, suggesting that PT-(1-46) inhibits prothrombin-factor Va binding. The addition of factor Va to PT-(1-46) labeled with the fluorophore sulfosuccinimidyl-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin-3-acetic acid (PT-(1-46)AMCA) caused a concentration-dependent quenching of AMCA fluorescence, providing direct evidence of a PT-(1-46)-factor Va interaction. The K(d) for this interaction was 1.3 microm. These results indicate that the N-terminal Gla domain of human prothrombin is a functional unit that has a binding site for factor Va. The prothrombin Gla domain is important for interaction of the substrate with the prothrombinase complex.  相似文献   

15.
The mechanism of inactivation of bovine factor Va by plasmin was studied in the presence and absence of phospholipid vesicles (PCPS vesicles). Following 60-min incubation with plasmin (4 nm) membrane-bound factor Va (400 nm) is completely inactive, whereas in the absence of phospholipid vesicles following a 1-h incubation period, the cofactor retains 90% of its initial cofactor activity. Amino acid sequencing of the fragments deriving from cleavage of factor Va by plasmin demonstrated that while both chains of factor Va are cleaved by plasmin, only cleavage of the heavy chain correlates with inactivation of the cofactor. In the presence of a membrane surface the heavy chain of the bovine cofactor is first cleaved at Arg(348) to generate a fragment of M(r) 47,000 containing the NH(2)-terminal part of the cofactor (amino acid residues 1-348) and a M(r) 42,000 fragment (amino acid residues 349-713). This cleavage is associated with minimal loss in cofactor activity. Complete loss of activity of the membrane-bound cofactor coincides with three cleavages at the COOH-terminal portion of the M(r) 47,000 fragment: Lys(309), Lys(310), and Arg(313). These cleavages result in the release of the COOH terminus of the molecule and the production of a M(r) 40,000 fragment containing the NH(2)-terminal portion of the factor Va molecule. Factor Va was treated with plasmin in the absence of phospholipid vesicles followed by the addition of PCPS vesicles and activated protein C (APC). A rapid inactivation of the cofactor was observed as a result of cleavage of the M(r) 47,000 fragment at Arg(306) by APC and appearance of a M(r) 39,000 fragment. These data suggest a critical role of the amino acid sequence 307-348 of factor Va. A 42-amino acid peptide encompassing the region 307-348 of human factor Va (N42R) was found to be a good inhibitor of factor Va clotting activity with an IC(50) of approximately 1.3 microm. These data suggest that plasmin is a potent inactivator of factor Va and that region 307-348 of the cofactor plays a critical role in cofactor function and may be responsible for the interaction of the cofactor with factor Xa and/or prothrombin.  相似文献   

16.
Incorporation of prothrombin into the prothrombinase complex is essential for rapid thrombin generation at sites of vascular injury. Prothrombin binds directly to anionic phospholipid membrane surfaces where it interacts with the enzyme, factor Xa, and its cofactor, factor Va. We demonstrate that HD1, a thrombin-directed aptamer, binds prothrombin and thrombin with similar affinities (K(d) values of 86 and 34 nm, respectively) and attenuates prothrombin activation by prothrombinase by over 90% without altering the activation pathway. HD1-mediated inhibition of prothrombin activation by prothrombinase is factor Va-dependent because (a) the inhibitory activity of HD1 is lost if factor Va is omitted from the prothrombinase complex and (b) prothrombin binding to immobilized HD1 is reduced by factor Va. These data suggest that HD1 competes with factor Va for prothrombin binding. Kinetic analyses reveal that HD1 produces a 2-fold reduction in the k(cat) for prothrombin activation by prothrombinase and a 6-fold increase in the K(m), highlighting the contribution of the factor Va-prothrombin interaction to prothrombin activation. As a high affinity, prothrombin exosite 1-directed ligand, HD1 inhibits prothrombin activation more efficiently than Hir(54-65)(SO(3)(-)). These findings suggest that exosite 1 on prothrombin exists as a proexosite only for ligands whose primary target is thrombin rather than prothrombin.  相似文献   

17.
Phosphatidylserine (PS) plays a crucial role, in the conversion of prothrombin into thrombin by the protease, factor Xa. Physiologically, the conversion occurs in the prothrombinase complex. The question of how water-soluble proteins that normally circulate in plasma bind remains to be unambiguously determined. We previously found that the amphitropic proteins (prothrombin, factors V and Va) penetrate into phospholipid layers. AC polarography has allowed the detection for the first time of insertion of factor Xa into condensed monolayers containing phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) either 100% PS or 25% PS in the presence of Ca2+. This observation demonstrates that part of factor Xa can cross the phospholipid polar headgroup/hydrocarbon chain interface. In parallel experiments, radioactive surface measurements permitted measuring binding of tritium-labeled factor Xa onto a PS monolayer and calculate an association constant, 6x10(6) M(-1). Penetration of factor Xa into PS-containing vesicles was investigated also using photoactivable 5-[125I]iodonaphthalene-1-azide, which binds selectively to the lipid embedded domains of the protein. These experiments suggest that Factor Xa penetrates preferentially by its heavy chain, an alternative mode of binding to the commonly accepted binding via its Gla domain. Interaction of factor Xa with PS vesicles also changes its apparent K(m) for S 2222.  相似文献   

18.
Factor Xa catalyzed prothrombin activation is strongly stimulated by the presence of negatively charged membranes plus calcium ions. Here we report experiments in which we determined the prothrombin-converting activity of phosphatidylcholine (PC) membranes that contain varying amounts of different anionic lipids, viz., phosphatidylserine (PS), phosphatidic acid (PA), phosphatidylmethanol (MePA), phosphatidylglycerol (PG), phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidyl-beta-lactate (PLac), sulfatides (SF), sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and oleic acid. All anionic lipids tested were able to accelerate factor Xa catalyzed prothrombin activation, in both the absence and presence of the protein cofactor Va. This shows that the prothrombin-converting activity of negatively charged membranes is not strictly dependent on the presence of a phosphate group but that lipids which contain a carboxyl or sulfate moiety are also able to promote the formation of a functionally active prothrombinase complex. In the absence of factor Va, the prothrombin-converting activity of membranes with MePA, PG, PE, PLac, SF, or SDS was strongly inhibited at high ionic strength, while the activity of PS- and PA-containing membranes was hardly affected by ionic strength variation. This suggests that in the case of the ionic strength sensitive lipids electrostatic forces play an important role in the formation of the membrane-bound prothrombinase complex. For PS and to a lesser extent for PA we propose that the formation of a coordinated complex (chelate complex) with Ca2+ as central ion and ligands provided by the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues of prothrombin and factor Xa and the polar head group of phospholipids is the major driving force in protein-membrane association. Our data indicate that the anionic lipids used in this study can be useful tools for further investigation of the molecular interactions that play a role in the assembly of a membrane-bound prothrombinase complex. Membranes that were solely composed of PC can also considerably enhance prothrombin activation in the presence of factor Va. This activity of PC is only observed on membranes which are composed of PC that contains unsaturated hydrocarbon side chains. Membranes prepared from phosphocholine-containing lipids with saturated hydrocarbon side chains such as dimyristoyl-PC, dipalmitoyl-PC, distearoyl-PC, and dioctadecylglycerophosphocholine hardly accelerated prothrombin activation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
The kinetic parameters of bovine prothrombin activation by factor Xa were determined in the absence and presence of factor Va as a function of the phospholipid concentration and composition. In the absence of factor Va, the Km for prothrombin increases proportionally with the phospholipid concentration and correlates well with the affinity of prothrombin for the different membranes. Phospholipid vesicles with a high affinity for prothrombin yield low Km values compared to membranes with less favorable binding parameters. At limited phospholipid concentrations, the Vmax of prothrombin activation correlates with the binding affinity of factor Xa for the various phospholipid vesicles. Membranes with a high affinity for factor Xa have high Vmax values, while for membranes with a low affinity a low Vmax is observed. Extrapolation of double-reciprocal plots of 1/Vmax vs. 1/[phospholipid] to infinite phospholipid concentrations, a condition at which all factor Xa would participate in prothrombin activation, yields a kcat of 2-4 min-1 independent of the type and amount of acidic phospholipid present in the vesicles. Also, in the presence of factor Va the Km for prothrombin varies proportionally with the phospholipid concentration. There is, however, no correlation between the binding parameters and the Km. Factor Va drastically lowers the Km for prothrombin for vesicles that have a low affinity for prothrombin. Vesicles composed of 20 mol % phosphatidylglycerol and 80 mol % phosphatidylcholine have a Km of 0.04 microM when factor Va is present, compared to 2.2 microM determined in the absence of factor Va.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
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   

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