首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Thrombomodulin is an endothelial cell surface receptor for thrombin that acts as a physiological anticoagulant. The properties of recombinant human thrombomodulin were studied in COS-7, CHO, CV-1, and K562 cell lines. Thrombomodulin was expressed on the cell surface as shown by the acquisition of thrombin-dependent protein C activation. Like native thrombomodulin, recombinant thrombomodulin contained N-linked oligosaccharides, had Mr approximately 100,000, and was inhibited or immunoprecipitated by anti-thrombomodulin antibodies. Binding studies demonstrated that nonrecombinant thrombomodulin expressed by A549 carcinoma cells and recombinant thrombomodulin expressed by CV-1 and K562 cells had similar Kd's for thrombin of 1.3 nM, 3.3 nM, and 4.7 nM, respectively. The Kd for DIP-thrombin binding to recombinant thrombomodulin on CV-1(18A) cells was identical with that of thrombin. Increasing concentrations of hirudin or fibrinogen progressively inhibited the binding of 125I-DIP-thrombin, while factor Va did not inhibit binding. Three synthetic peptides were tested for ability to inhibit DIP-thrombin binding. Both the hirudin peptide Hir53-64 and the thrombomodulin fifth-EGF-domain peptide Tm426-444 displaced DIP-thrombin from thrombomodulin, but the factor V peptide FacV30-43 which is similar in composition and charge to Hir53-64 showed no binding inhibition. The data exclude the significant formation of a ternary complex consisting of thrombin, thrombomodulin, and hirudin. These studies are consistent with a model in which thrombomodulin, hirudin, and fibrinogen compete for binding to DIP-thrombin at the same site.  相似文献   

2.
Thrombomodulin acts as a linear competitive inhibitor of thrombin with respect to the substrate fibrinogen. In the present study the effect of thrombomodulin on the activity of thrombin with fragments of the A alpha and B beta chain of fibrinogen has been examined. The cleavage of fibrinopeptide A from the N-terminal disulphide knot, fragment 1-44 and fragment 1-51 of the A alpha chain was inhibited by thrombomodulin. The average value for the inhibition constant obtained with these substrates was 0.83 +/- 0.09 nM, which was in good agreement with the values obtained previously for the inhibition of thrombin by thrombomodulin with native fibrinogen as the substrate [Hofsteenge, J., Taguchi, H. & Stone, S. R. (1986) Biochem. J. 237, 243-251]. In contrast, the cleavage of fibrinopeptide A from fragment 1-23 and fragment 1-29 of the A alpha chain was not affected by thrombomodulin. Although the cleavage of the B beta chain in the intact fibrinogen molecule was inhibited by thrombomodulin [Hofsteenge, J., Taguchi, H. & Stone, S. R. (1986) Biochem. J. 237, 243-251], the release of fibrinopeptide B from the N-terminal disulphide knot and the N-terminal 118-residue fragment of the B beta chain was not inhibited by thrombomodulin. In addition, we determined the second-order rate constants of cleavage of these substrates using human thrombin. Fragments of the A alpha chain whose cleavage was inhibited by thrombomodulin were found to have values for kcat/Km that were within one order of magnitude of that for the native fibrinogen, whereas those for A alpha chain fragments whose cleavage was not inhibited by thrombomodulin were found to be more than two orders of magnitudes lower. From these results we conclude that only a relatively small portion of the A alpha chain of the fibrinogen molecule is responsible for the specific binding to thrombin that is affected by thrombomodulin. Moreover, residues 30-44 of the A alpha chain play an important role in this thrombin-fibrinogen interaction.  相似文献   

3.
Thrombomodulin, a cofactor in the thrombin-catalyzed activation of protein C, blocks the procoagulant activities of thrombin such as fibrinogen clotting, Factor V activation, and platelet activation. The binding site for thrombomodulin within human thrombin has been localized at a region comprising residues Thr147-Ser158 of the B-chain of thrombin. The dodecapeptide sequence, TWTANVGKGQPS, corresponding to these residues inhibits thrombin binding to thrombomodulin with an apparent Ki = 94 microM (Suzuki, K., Nishioka, J., and Hayashi, T. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 13263-13267). We have found that the inhibitory effect of the dodecapeptide on the thrombin-thrombomodulin interaction is sequence-specific, and that residues Asn151, Lys154, and Gln156 are essential for thrombomodulin binding. The dodecapeptide was also found to directly block thrombin procoagulant activities, fibrinogen clotting (concentration for half-maximum inhibition, 385 microM). Factor V activation (concentration for half-maximum inhibition, 33 microM), and platelet activation (concentration for half-maximum inhibition, 645 microM). This peptide did not block thrombin inhibition by antithrombin III, but blocked thrombin inhibition by hirudin. These findings suggest that the binding site for thrombomodulin in thrombin is shared with the sites for fibrinogen, Factor V, platelets, and hirudin, and that, therefore, the inhibition of thrombin procoagulant activities by thrombomodulin in part results from blocking of the interaction between thrombin and the procoagulant protein substrates by thrombomodulin.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of bovine thrombomodulin on the specificity of bovine thrombin   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Bovine lung thrombomodulin is purified and used to investigate the basis of the change in substrate specificity of bovine thrombin when bound to thrombomodulin. Bovine thrombomodulin is a single polypeptide having an apparent molecular weight of 84,000 and associates with thrombin with high affinity and rapid equilibrium, to act as a potent cofactor for protein C activation and antagonist of reactions of thrombin with fibrinogen, heparin cofactor 2, and hirudin. Bovine thrombomodulin inhibits the clotting activity of thrombin with Kd less than 2.5 nM. Kinetic analysis of the effect of bovine thrombomodulin on fibrinopeptide A hydrolysis by thrombin indicates competitive inhibition with Kis = 0.5 nM. The active site of thrombin is little perturbed by thrombomodulin, as tosyl-Gly-Pro-Arg-p-nitroanilide hydrolysis and inhibition by antithrombin III are unaffected. Insensitivity of the reaction with antithrombin III is likewise observed with thrombin bound to thrombomodulin on intact endothelium. Antithrombin III-heparin, human heparin cofactor 2, and hirudin inhibit thrombin-thrombomodulin more slowly than thrombin. These effects may arise from a decrease in Ki of the inhibitors for thrombin-thrombomodulin or from changes in the active site not detected by tosyl-Gly-Pro-Arg-p-nitroanilide or antithrombin III. Bovine prothrombin fragment 2 inhibits thrombin clotting activity (Kd less than 7.5 microM) and acts as a competitive inhibitor of protein C activation (Kis = 2.1 microM). The data are consistent with a mechanism whereby thrombomodulin alters thrombin specificity by either binding to or allosterically altering a site on thrombin distinct from the catalytic center required for binding or steric accommodation of fibrinogen, prothrombin fragment 2, heparin cofactor 2, and hirudin.  相似文献   

5.
The peptide comprising residues 62-73 of the B-chain of human alpha-thrombin was synthesized and polyclonal antibodies raised against it. These antibodies were found to bind to the synthetic peptide, a CNBr fragment, and a proteolytic subfragment containing this sequence, as well as the entire thrombin molecule. The purified antibodies had no effect on the hydrolysis by thrombin of D-Phe-pipecolyl-Arg-p-nitroanilide and caused only a minimal decrease (20%) in the second-order rate constant for inactivation by antithrombin III. On the other hand, the antibodies competitively inhibited the binding of hirudin over the concentration range tested (0-43 nM), and a dissociation constant of 3.4 +/- 0.5 nM was found for the antibodies. The release of fibrinopeptide A from the A alpha-chain of fibrinogen by thrombin was competitively inhibited with an inhibition constant of 11.7 +/- 0.4 nM. The activation of protein C by thrombin in the presence of thrombomodulin was also inhibited by the antibodies, and an apparent inhibition constant of 10.7 +/- 1.5 nM was found. In contrast, the antibodies had no effect on the activation of protein C in the absence of thrombomodulin. These results are discussed in relation to data obtained recently on the interaction of well defined proteolytic derivatives of human alpha-thrombin with the ligands described above.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Isolation and characterization of thrombomodulin from bovine lung   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Bovine thrombomodulin was isolated from the lung by Triton X extraction, affinity chromatography on diisopropyl phosphate-thrombin-agarose, and gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA-44. The final preparation was purified 6000-fold from the membrane extract with a yield of 21%. It showed apparent Mr of 78,000 and 105,000, before and after reduction, respectively, on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in SDS. The activity of the thrombomodulin was stable under the conditions of 1% SDS, 8 M urea, pH 2 and 10, and heat treatment at 60 degrees C for 30 min, but was unstable against treatment with 2-mercaptoethanol. Activation of protein C by thrombin in the presence of the thrombomodulin depended on Ca2+, and an equimolar complex formation between thrombin and thrombomodulin was required for the maximum rate activation. The rate of protein C activation by thrombin was increased 900-fold by thrombomodulin. Thrombomodulin inhibited the thrombin-induced fibrinogen clotting and platelet activation. However, it did not affect the inhibition of thrombin by antithrombin III with or without heparin, a protein C inhibitor or several synthetic inhibitors. These properties of bovine thrombomodulin were similar to those of rabbit thrombomodulin reported earlier.  相似文献   

8.
X-ray diffraction studies of human thrombin revealed that compared with trypsin, two insertions (B and C) potentially limit access to the active site groove. When amino acids Glu146, Thr147, and Trp148, adjacent to the C-insertion (autolysis loop), are deleted the resulting thrombin (des-ETW) has dramatically altered interaction with serine protease inhibitors. Whereas des-ETW resists antithrombin III inactivation with a rate constant (Kon) approximately 350-fold slower than for thrombin, des-ETW is remarkably sensitive to the Kunitz inhibitors, with inhibition constants (Ki) decreased from 2.6 microM to 34 nM for the soybean trypsin inhibitor and from 52 microM to 1.8 microM for the bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. The affinity for hirudin (Ki = 5.6 pM) is weakened at least 30-fold compared with recombinant thrombin. The mutation affects the charge stabilizing system and the primary binding pocket of thrombin as depicted by a decrease in Kon for diisopropylfluorophosphate (9.5-fold) and for N alpha-p-tosyl-L-lysine-chloromethyl ketone (51-fold) and a 39-fold increase in the Ki for benzamidine. With peptidyl p-nitroanilide substrates, the des-ETW deletion results in changes in the Michaelis (Km) and/or catalytic (kcat) constants, worsened as much as 85-fold (Km) or 100-fold (kcat). The specific clotting activity of des-ETW is less than 5% that of thrombin and the kcat/Km for protein C activation in the absence of cofactor less than 2%. Thrombomodulin binds to des-ETW with a dissociation constant of approximately 2.5 nM and partially restores its ability to activate protein C since, in the presence of the cofactor, kcat/Km rises to 6.5% that of thrombin. This study suggests that the ETW motif of thrombin prevents (directly or indirectly) its interaction with the two Kunitz inhibitors and is not essential for the thrombomodulin-mediated enhancement of protein C activation.  相似文献   

9.
The study is devoted to the interaction of peptide inhibitor of fibrin self-assemblage with two forms of fibrin monomer: deprived of fibrinopeptides A and preserving fibrinopeptides B (desAA-monomer) and fully activated (desAABB-monomer). It is shown that peptide inhibitor hinders the coagulative conversion of fibrinogen by thrombin, limiting the enzymic and nonenzymic stages of the process. The indispensible condition for the formation of inhibitor-monomeric fibrin associates is a preliminary modification of fibrinogen by thrombin.  相似文献   

10.
Effect of heparin on the interaction between thrombin and hirudin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effect of heparin on the interaction between thrombin and hirudin has been examined by kinetic methods. Three forms of heparin fractionated on the basis of their affinity for antithrombin III and unfractionated heparin were found to act as noncompetitive inhibitors of the formation of the thrombin-hirudin complex. A three--four fold increase in the dissociation constant of the complex was observed at saturating heparin concentrations. This increase in the dissociation constant was due to a twofold decrease in the rate of association of thrombin and hirudin together with a similar increase in the rate of dissociation of the complex. Implications for the location of the heparin binding site on thrombin and the possible therapeutic use of the hirudin are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Basis for the reduced affinity of beta T- and gamma T-thrombin for hirudin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
S R Stone  J Hofsteenge 《Biochemistry》1991,30(16):3950-3955
Partial proteolysis of human alpha-thrombin by trypsin results in the formation of beta T-thrombin and gamma T-thrombin which have a reduced affinity for the inhibitor hirudin and the cell-surface cofactor thrombomodulin as well as reduced activity with fibrinogen. The basis of the reduction in affinity of these thrombin derivatives for hirudin has been investigated by examining their kinetics of interaction with a number of hirudin mutants differing in their C-terminal charge properties as well as with a truncated form of hirudin. The results indicate that the reduced affinity of beta T-thrombin for hirudin is most likely due to a decrease in the strength of nonionic interactions between thrombin and the C-terminal region of hirudin. No decrease in the strength of ionic interactions was observed with beta T-thrombin. In contrast, the reduced affinity of gamma T-thrombin was due to a decrease in the strength of both ionic and nonionic interactions. The N-terminal core region of hirudin, which interacts predominantly with the active-site cleft of thrombin, exhibited similar affinities for alpha-, beta T-, and gamma T-thrombin, indicating that thrombin-hirudin interactions within the active site are largely preserved in beta T- and gamma T-thrombin.  相似文献   

13.
Kinetics of the inhibition of thrombin by hirudin   总被引:32,自引:0,他引:32  
S R Stone  J Hofsteenge 《Biochemistry》1986,25(16):4622-4628
The dissociation constant for hirudin was determined by varying the concentration of hirudin in the presence of a fixed concentration of thrombin and tripeptidyl p-nitroanilide substrate. The estimate of the dissociation constant determined in this manner displayed a dependence on the concentration of substrate which suggested the existence of two binding sites at which the substrate was able to compete with hirudin. A high-affinity site could be correlated with the binding of the substrate at the active site, and the other site had an affinity for the substrate that was 2 orders of magnitude lower. Extrapolation to zero substrate concentration yielded a value of 20 fM for the dissociation constant of hirudin at an ionic strength of 0.125. The dissociation constant for hirudin was markedly dependent on the ionic strength of the assay; it increased 20-fold when the ionic strength was increased from 0.1 to 0.4. This increase in dissociation constant was accompanied by a decrease in the rate with which hirudin associated with thrombin. This rate could be measured with a conventional recording spectrophotometer at higher ionic strength and was found to be independent of the binding of substrate at the active site.  相似文献   

14.
The endothelial cell surface membrane protein thrombomodulin binds thrombin with high affinity and acts as both a cofactor for protein C activation and an inhibitor of fibrinogen hydrolysis. We have previously shown that bovine thrombomodulin is a competitive inhibitor of fibrinogen binding to thrombin but has no effect on thrombin activity toward tripeptide substrates or antithrombin III. Hence, thrombomodulin and fibrinogen may share macromolecular specificity sites on thrombin which are distinct from the active site. In this investigation, we have studied the interaction of thrombin-thrombomodulin with fibrinogen and various thrombin derivatives. We show that fibrinogen is a competitive inhibitor of thrombomodulin binding to thrombin, with a Kis = 10 microM. Thrombin derivatives (bovine (pyridoxal phosphate)4-thrombin and human thrombin Quick I), which bind fibrinogen with much reduced affinity, are shown to also interact with thrombomodulin with greatly reduced affinity. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that thrombomodulin and fibrinogen share macromolecular specificity sites on thrombin.  相似文献   

15.
Hirudin, a potent 65-residue polypeptide inhibitor of alpha-thrombin found in the saliva of the leech Hirudo medicinalis, and fragments thereof are potentially useful as antithrombotic agents. Hirugen, the synthetic N-acetylated COOH-terminal dodecapeptide (Ac-Asn-Gly-Asp-Phe-Glu-Glu-Ile-Pro-Glu-Glu-Tyr(SO3)-Leu) of hirudin was shown in the present study to behave as a pure competitive inhibitor (Ki = 0.54 microM) of human alpha-thrombin-catalyzed release of fibrinopeptide A from human fibrinogen. In contrast to this inhibitory activity, hirugen slightly enhanced (increased kcat/Km 1.6-fold) alpha-thrombin-catalyzed hydrolysis of the fluorogenic tripeptide substrate N-p-Tosyl-Gly-Pro-Arg-7-amino-4-methylcoumarin. These observations indicate that hirugen binds to alpha-thrombin at an exosite distinct from the active site, and that interaction with this exosite is a major determinant of the competence of alpha-thrombin to bind fibrinogen. Consistent with this view, hirugen blocked binding of fibrin II to alpha-thrombin. Studies of the effect of hirugen on the rate of inactivation of alpha-thrombin by antithrombin III (AT), the major plasma inhibitor of alpha-thrombin, indicated that binding of hirugen to alpha-thrombin results in less than a 2.5-fold decrease in the rate of inactivation of alpha-thrombin by AT, both in the absence and presence of heparin. This behavior is distinct from that of active site-directed competitive inhibitors of alpha-thrombin which bind to alpha-thrombin and block both conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin and inactivation of alpha-thrombin by AT. Hirugen, an exosite-directed competitive inhibitor, blocks the interaction of alpha-thrombin with fibrinogen while leaving alpha-thrombin competent to react with AT. Thus, unlike active site-directed competitive inhibitors, hirugen should act in concert with AT and heparin to reduce the amount of fibrinogen that is processed during the lifetime of alpha-thrombin in plasma.  相似文献   

16.
The kinetics of the thrombin-induced release of fibrinopeptides from several variants of human fibrinogen, and from the plasmin digestion fragment E thereof, have been studied by using an HPLC technique to separate the reaction products. The data were analyzed in terms of a Michaelis-Menten mechanism in which the A alpha and B beta chains compete for thrombin. Phosphorylation of Ser-3 of the A alpha chain appears to increase the rate of release of the corresponding phosphorylated peptide A from fibrinogen, due to enhanced binding of thrombin (lower value of the Michaelis-Menten constant KM). However, phosphorylation does not affect the rate of release of the unphosphorylated A or B peptides. Increase in the length of the gamma chain (at the C-terminus) does not affect the rate of release of any of the fibrinopeptides. The rate of release of the A peptide from fragment E (which is devoid of the B peptide) is similar to that for the complete fibrinogen molecule. These results are in agreement with an earlier conclusion [Martinelli, R. A., & Scheraga, H. A. (1980) Biochemistry 19, 2343] that the A alpha and B beta chains behave independently in their competition for thrombin; i.e., the hydrolyzable Arg-Gly bonds of the A alpha and B beta chains are both accessible to thrombin.  相似文献   

17.
Concanavalin A dimer interacts with fibrinogen and soluble fibrin at pH 5.2 Analysis of the binding data shows that there are in both cases four binding sites per molecule and that the dissociation constant does not change by removal of fibrinopeptides A and B. Ultracentrifugal studies shows that no aggregates of fibrinogen or fibrin are formed through concanavalin A binding and that up to four molecules of concanavalin A dimer can be bind to one molecule of fibrinogen or fibrin. These results imply that the four carbohydrate chains in the molecule are accessible to concanavalin A dimer. There is a diminution in the coagulation of fibrinogen by thrombin at low relative lectin concentrations and an increase at high concentrations. However, the lectin always favours the aggregation of fibrin monomers and does not have any inhibitory effect on the release of fibrinopeptides. We conclude that the electric charge in the neighbourhood of the carbohydrate in both chains, Bβ and γ plays an important role in the attraction between monomeric fibrin and fibrinogen-monomeric fibrin. The different effect of concanavalin A on the coagulation, depending on the relative concentration of the lectin, would be the result of the screening of this electric charge favouring either the interaction of fibrinogen-monomeric fibrin or the polymerization of monomeric fibrin.  相似文献   

18.
Thrombomodulin, an endothelial cell-surface anticoagulant, has been postulated to contain a glycosaminoglycan. Thrombomodulin function was therefore studied in endothelial cells treated with beta-D-xyloside, an inhibitor of glycosaminoglycan attachment to proteoglycan core proteins. Beta-D-xyloside caused a reproducible 3 to 5-fold increase in the Km of thrombomodulin for thrombin and a 20-30% decrease in the rate of protein C activation by the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex. These results support a role for glycosaminoglycans in thrombomodulin function and suggest that beta-D-xylosides can be used to investigate both the anticoagulant mechanisms and the biosynthesis of cell-surface thrombomodulin.  相似文献   

19.
The time dependence of the release of fibrinopeptides from fibrinogen was studied as a function of the concentration of fibrinogen, thrombin, and Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro, an inhibitor of fibrin polymerization. The release of fibrinopeptides during fibrin assembly was shown to be a highly ordered process. Rate constants for individual steps in the formation of fibrin were evaluated at pH 7.4, 37 degrees C, gamma/2 = 0.15. The initial event, thrombin-catalyzed proteolysis at Arg-A alpha 16 to release fibrinopeptide A (kcat/Km = 1.09 X 10(7) M-1s-1) was followed by association of the resulting fibrin I monomers. Association of fibrin I was found to be a reversible process with rate constants of 1 X 10(6) M-1s-1 and 0.064 s-1 for association and dissociation, respectively. Assuming random polymerization of fibrin I monomer, the equilibrium constant for fibrin I association (1.56 X 10(7) M-1) indicates that greater than 80% of the fibrin I protofibrils should contain more than 10 monomeric units at 37 degrees C, pH 7.4, when the fibrin I concentration is 1.0 mg/ml. Association of fibrin I monomers was shown to result in a 6.5-fold increase in the susceptibility of Arg-B beta 14 to thrombin-mediated proteolysis. The 6.5-fold increase in the observed specificity constant from 6.5 X 10(5) M-1s-1 to 4.2 X 10(6) M-1s-1 upon association of fibrin I monomers and the rate constant for fibrin association indicates that most of the fibrinopeptide B is released after association of fibrin I monomers. The interaction between a pair of polymerization sites in fibrin I dimer was found to be weaker than the interaction of fibrin I with Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro and weaker than the interaction of fibrin I with fibrinogen.  相似文献   

20.
Thrombin bound to thrombomodulin activates thrombin-activable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) and protein C much more efficiently than thrombin alone. Although thrombomodulin has been proposed to alter the thrombin active site, the recently determined structure of the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex does not support this proposal. In this study, the contribution of amino acids near the activation site of TAFI toward thrombomodulin dependence was determined, utilizing four variants of TAFI with specific substitutions in the P6-P'3 region surrounding the Arg-92 cleavage site. Two point mutants had either the Ser-90 or Asp-87 of TAFI replaced with Ala, a third mutant had the thrombin activation site of the fibrinogen Bbeta-chain substituted into positions 91-95 of TAFI, and a fourth mutant had the thrombin activation site of protein C substituted into positions 90-95 of TAFI. Each of these mutants was expressed, purified, and characterized with respect to activation kinetics and functional properties of the enzyme. Even though fibrinogen is poorly cleaved by thrombin-thrombomodulin, the fibrinogen activation site does not significantly alter the thrombomodulin dependence of TAFI activation. The TAFI variant with the protein C activation sequence is only slowly activated by thrombin-thrombomodulin, and not at all by free thrombin. Mutating Asp-87 to Ala increases the catalytic efficiency of activation 3-fold both in the presence and absence of thrombomodulin, whereas mutating Ser-90 to Ala effects only minor kinetic differences compared with wild type TAFI. The thermal stabilities and antifibrinolytic properties of the enzymes were not substantially altered by any of the mutations that allowed for efficient activation of the enzyme. We conclude that residues in the P6-P'3 region of TAFI do not determine the thrombomodulin dependence of activation, which lends support to the argument that the role of thrombomodulin is to optimally orient thrombin and its substrate, rather than to allosterically alter the specificity of the thrombin active site.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号