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1.
Factor Va is an essential protein cofactor of the enzyme factor Xa, which activates prothrombin to thrombin during blood coagulation. Peptides with an apparent Mr of approximately 94,000 (heavy chain; HC) and approximately 74,000 or 72,000 (light chain; LC) interact in the presence of Ca2+ to form active Va. The two forms of Va-LC differ in their carboxyl-terminal C2 domain. Using Va reconstituted with either LC form, we examined the effects of the two LC species on membrane binding and on the activity of membrane-bound Va. We found that 1) Va composed of the 72,000 LC bound only slightly more tightly to membranes composed of a mixture of neutral and acidic lipids, the Kd being reduced by a factor of approximately 3 at 5 mM and by a factor of 6 at 2 mM Ca2+. 2) The two forms of Va seemed to undergo different conformational changes when bound to a membrane. 3) The activity of bovine Va varied somewhat with LC species, the difference being greatest at limiting Xa concentration. We have also addressed the role of the two Va peptides in membrane lipid rearrangements and binding: 1) Va binding increased lateral packing density in mixed neutral/acidic lipid membranes. In the solid phase, Va-HC had no effect, whereas Va-LC and whole Va had similar but small effects. In the fluid phase, Va-HC and whole Va both altered membrane packing, with Va-HC having the largest effect. 2) Va-HC bound reversibly and in a Ca2+-independent fashion to membranes composed of neutral phospholipid (Kd, approximately 0.3 microM; stoichiometry approximately 91). High ionic strength had little effect on binding. 3) The substantial effect of Va on packing within neutral phospholipid membranes was mimicked by Va-HC. 4) Based on measurements of membrane phase behavior, binding of Va or its peptide components did not induce thermodynamically discernible lateral membrane domains. These results suggest that the membrane association of factor Va is a complex process involving both chains of Va, changes in lipid packing, and changes in protein structure.  相似文献   

2.
M M Tucker  M E Nesheim  K G Mann 《Biochemistry》1983,22(19):4540-4546
The Ca2+ dependence of factor Xa binding to phospholipid vesicles was measured in the presence and absence of factor Va. The increase in polarization of a fluorescently labeled derivative of factor Xa, [5-(dimethylamino)-1-naphthalenesulfonyl] glutamylglycylarginyl factor Xa (Dns-EGR-Xa), was used as a probe to measure the interaction of factor Xa with phospholipid. The Ca2+ concentration required for half-maximal binding of Dns-EGR-Xa to phospholipid vesicles was 3.5 X 10(-4) M in the presence of factor Va and 9.5 X 10(-4) M in the absence of factor Va. At a Ca2+ concentration of 5 X 10(-4) M, the binding of Dns-EGR-Xa to phospholipid-bound factor Va was near maximal, whereas there was no detectable interaction of Dns-EGR-Xa with phospholipid alone at this Ca2+ concentration as detected by fluorescence polarization. These results were qualitatively confirmed by high-performance liquid chromatography. The rate of hydrolysis of the factor Xa synthetic substrate, benzoylisoleucylglutamylglycylarginine p-nitroanilide, by factor Xa in the presence of factor Va and phospholipid decreased in a Ca2+-dependent manner. These data were analyzed as fraction of factor Xa bound to the phospholipid. A Ca2+ concentration of 2.7 X 10(-4) M resulted in half-maximal binding by this technique. The relationship observed between rates of prothrombin activation and Ca2+ concentration could be predicted quantitatively from calculations of local enzyme and substrate concentrations.  相似文献   

3.
Factor Xa is the enzymatically active constituent of the prothrombinase complex, which catalyzes the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin. We have isolated fragments, from tryptic digests of factor X, that consists of the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) region linked to one or two epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domains. Calcium ion binding measurements indicated that these fragments have a native conformation. The factor X-GlaEGF fragments inhibit factor Xa-induced blood clotting in a manner suggesting that they compete with factor Xa for phospholipid binding sites. The same conclusion was reached when thrombin generation was studied in a system of purified components (factor Xa, factor Va, prothrombin, phospholipid, and Ca2+). There was no evidence for a strong interaction between the EGF-like domains of factor Xa and factor Va in either system. However, experiments in the purified system without phospholipid indicated a direct, albeit weak, interaction between the Gla region of factor Xa and factor Va and between the COOH-terminal EGF-like domain of factor Xa and factor Va. Using domain-specific Fab fragments, we have confirmed that the conformation of the serine protease region alters dramatically upon activation of factor X. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that the conformation of the Gla region is affected by the activation, whereas the EGF-like domains appear to be unaltered. The association constant for factor X binding to endothelial cells was two orders of magnitude lower than that for binding of factor IX to these cells. Binding of the Gla and GlaEGF fragments suggested Gla-mediated binding to phospholipid rather than binding to a specific receptor.  相似文献   

4.
The location of the active site of membrane-bound factor Xa relative to the phospholipid surface was determined both in the presence and absence of factor Va using fluorescence energy transfer. Factor Xa was reacted with 5-(dimethylamino)-1-naphthalenesulfonyl- glutamylglycylarginyl(DEGR) chloromethyl ketone to yield DEGR-Xa, an analogue of factor Xa with a fluorescent dye attached covalently to the active site. When DEGR-Xa was titrated with phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine vesicles containing octadecylrhodamine, fluorescence energy transfer was observed between the donor dyes in the active sites of the membrane-bound enzymes and the acceptor dyes at the outer surface of the phospholipid bilayer. Based on the dependence of the efficiency of singlet-singlet energy transfer upon the acceptor density and assuming kappa 2 = 2/3, the distance of closest approach between the active site probe and the surface of the phospholipid bilayer averaged 61 A in the absence of factor Va and 69 A in the presence of factor Va. These direct measurements show that the active site of factor Xa is located far above the membrane surface. Also, association of factor Xa with factor Va on the membrane surface to form the prothrombinase complex results in a substantial movement of the active site of the enzyme relative to the membrane surface. The 5-(dimethylamino)-1-naphthalenesulfonyl emission in the complete prothrombinase complex was distinct from that in any other combination of components. It therefore appears that the optimum conformation of the prothrombinase active site is achieved only when factor Va, Ca2+, and a membrane surface interact simultaneously with factor Xa. Thus, in addition to its previously demonstrated ability to stimulate factor Xa binding to membranes, factor Va, upon association with factor Xa on a phospholipid surface, allosterically induces a particular active site conformation in factor Xa and also positions the active site at the correct distance above the membrane for prothrombin activation.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Interaction of prothrombin with factor Va-phospholipid complexes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effects of factor Va and the phospholipid-binding fragment of factor Va [factor Va light chain (LC), Mr 80000] on the binding of prothrombin, factor X, and factor Xa to phospholipid vesicles are reported. Equilibrium binding experiments were performed that utilized large-volume vesicles, which can be removed from the bulk solution by centrifugation. Factor Va decreased the dissociation constant of the prothrombin-phospholipid complex 50-fold, from 2.0 X 10(-7) M to 4.0 X 10(-9) M. For the factor X-phospholipid complex the decrease was 60-fold (1.8 X 10(-7) M to 3.0 X 10(-9) M) and for factor Xa, 160-fold (1.6 X 10(-7) M to 1.0 X 10(-9) M). The ratios of moles of protein bound to moles of total added factor Va at saturation of phospholipid-bound factor Va indicate an 1:1 stoichiometric complex of either factor Xa, factor X, or prothrombin and phospholipid-bound factor Va. In the presence of factor Va LC, the dissociation constants of factor Xa- and prothrombin-phospholipid complexes were increased, while the maximal protein-binding capacities of the vesicles were not affected by factor Va LC. The data suggest a competitive interaction between factor Xa and factor Va LC binding as well as between prothrombin and factor Va LC binding at the phospholipid surface. From this, it is concluded that the phospholipid-binding fragment of factor Va alone does not serve as the binding site for interactions of factor Xa and prothrombin with factor Va.  相似文献   

7.
The gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla)-domain region of factor X (residues 1-44 of the light chain) was selectively removed by limited proteolysis with alpha-chymotrypsin. The Gla-domainless factor X was then activated by the factor X coagulant protein of Russell's viper venom. Apparent dissociation constants Kd' values for the interaction of factor Va with either factor Xa or Gla-domainless factor Xa were determined kinetically using prothrombin as the substrate. In the absence of phospholipid, factor Va interacted with Gla-domainless factor Xa with lower affinity (Kd' 4 X 10(-6) M) than with factor Xa (Kd' = 5 X 10(-8) M). At saturating concentrations of factor Va, maximal rates of thrombin formation were similar for either enzyme. The addition of phospholipid increased the affinity of factor Va for factor Xa approximately 75-fold (Kd' = 3.3 X 10(-10) M). In contrast, phospholipid had no effect on the affinity of Gla-domainless factor Xa for factor Va (Kd' = 4 X 10(-6) M). The maximal rate of thrombin formation increased approximately 300-fold with the addition of phospholipid to the factor Xa-factor Va system. Under the same conditions, phospholipid had no effect on the rate of thrombin formation when Gla-domainless factor Xa was the enzymatic moiety. These results demonstrate phospholipid has little or no effect on factor Va function when factor Xa has lost its Gla-mediated Ca2+-binding sites.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
The strongly anticoagulant basic phospholipase A(2) (CM-IV) from Naja nigricollis venom has previously been shown to inhibit the prothrombinase complex of the coagulation cascade by a novel nonenzymatic mechanism (S. Stefansson, R. M. Kini, and H. J. Evans Biochemistry 29, 7742-7746, 1990). That work indicated that CM-IV is a noncompetitive inhibitor and thus it interacts with either factor Va or factor Xa, or both. We further examined the interaction of CM-IV and the protein components of the prothrombinase complex. Isothermal calorimetry studies indicate that CM-IV does not bind to prothrombin or factor Va, but only to factor Xa. CM-IV has no effect on the cleavage of prothrombin by factor Xa in the absence of factor Va. However, in the presence of factor Va, CM-IV inhibits thrombin formation by factor Xa. With a constant amount of CM-IV, raising the concentration of factor Va relieved the inhibition. The phospholipase A(2) enzyme inhibits by competing with factor Va for binding to factor Xa and thus prevents formation of the normal Xa-Va complex or replaces bound factor Va from the complex. Thus factor Xa is the target protein of this anticoagulant phospholipase A(2), which exerts its anticoagulant effect by protein-protein rather than protein-phospholipid interactions.  相似文献   

11.
Phospholipid-binding properties of bovine factor V and factor Va.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
J W Bloom  M E Nesheim  K G Mann 《Biochemistry》1979,18(20):4419-4425
Factor V and factor Va binding to single bilayer phospholipid vesicles was investigated by light-scattering intensity measurements. This technique allows the measurement of free and phospholipid-bound protein concentrations from which equilibrium constants can be obtained. As controls, the Ca2+-dependent phospholipid binding of prothrombin and factor X were also studied. The average values obtained for the dissociation constants (Kd) and lipid to protein ratio at saturation, moles/mole (n), for prothrombin (Kd = 2.3 X 10(-6) M, n = 104) and factor X (Kd = 2.5 X 10(-6) M, n = 46) binding to vesicles containing 25% Folch fraction III and 75% phosphatidylcholine in the presence of 2 mM Ca2+ were in agreement with those reported in the literature. The average factor V and factor Va values for the dissociation constants and lipid to protein ratio at saturation (moles/mole) were Kd = 7.2 X 10(-8) M and n = 270 for factor V and Kd = 4.4 X 10(-7) M and n = 76 for factor Va. In contrast to prothrombin and factor X, factor V and factor Va demonstrated Ca2+-independent lipid binding. In addition, the number of factor V and factor Va molecules bound per vesicle was found to be dependent both on the phosphatidylserine content of the vesicle and the ionic strength of the buffer.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
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   

14.
The distance between the phospholipid surface and the active site of membrane-bound meizothrombin, a derivative of prothrombin, was determined directly using fluorescence energy transfer. The active site of prothrombin was exposed after a single cleavage by Echis carinatus protease in the presence of [5-(dimethylamino)-1-naphthalenesulfonyl]glutamylglycylarginyl+ ++ (DEGR) chloromethyl ketone to yield DEGR-meizothrombin and thereby minimize secondary proteolysis. When DEGR-meizothrombin was titrated with 80% phosphatidylcholine, 20% phosphatidylserine vesicles containing octadecylrhodamine, singlet-singlet energy transfer was observed between the donor dyes in the active sites of the membrane-bound proteins and the acceptor dyes at the outer surface of the phospholipid bilayer. This energy transfer required both Ca2+ and phosphatidylserine. Assuming k2 = 2/3, the dependence of the efficiency of energy transfer upon the acceptor density showed that the distance of closest approach between the active site probe and the bilayer surface was 71 +/- 2 A. In the presence of factor Va, the distance was 67 +/- 3 A. These direct measurements show that the active site of meizothrombin is located far above the membrane surface. Also, association of factor Va with meizothrombin on the phospholipid surface appears to cause a slight movement of the meizothrombin protease domain toward the membrane surface. The environment of the dansyl dye covalently attached to the active site of meizothrombin was particularly sensitive to the presence of calcium: addition of Ca2+ ions to metal-free DEGR-meizothrombin reduced the dansyl fluorescence lifetime from 11.7 to 9.0 ns and the dansyl emission intensity by 24%. Hence, the conformation of the active site changed when Ca2+ ions bound to meizothrombin. Since the intensity change was half-maximal at 0.2 mM and was also elicited by the binding of Mg2+ ions, this spectral change correlates with the calcium-dependent conformational change previously observed in fragment 1. We conclude, therefore, that the binding of Ca2+ ions to meizothrombin and, by extension, perhaps to prothrombin, elicits a conformational change that extends beyond the fragment 1 domains into the distant (cf. above) active site or protease domain. The association of factor Va with membrane-bound DEGR-meizothrombin increased both the dansyl emission intensity (by 7%) and polarization. This intensity change and the factor-Va dependent change in energy transfer indicate that the cofactor of the prothrombinase complex functions to modulate the conformation and orientation of both the substrate and the enzyme of the complex.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Coagulation factor Va is a cofactor which combines with the serine protease factor Xa on a phospholipid surface to form the prothrombinase complex. The phospholipid-binding domain of bovine factor Va has been reported to be located on the light chain of the molecule and more precisely on a fragment of Mr = 30,000 which is obtained after digestion of factor Va light chain by factor Xa. This proteolytic fragment is located in the NH2-terminal part of factor Va light chain (residues 1564-1765). In order to further characterize the lipid-binding domain of bovine factor Va, isolated bovine light chain was preincubated with synthetic phospholipid vesicles (75% phosphatidylcholine, 25% phosphatidylserine) and digested with trypsin, chymotrypsin, and elastase. Two peptide regions protected from proteolytic cleavage were identified and characterized from each proteolytic digestion. A comparison of the NH2-terminal sequence and amino acid composition of the two tryptic peptides with the deduced sequence of human factor V indicates a match with residues 1657-1791 of the light chain of human factor V for one peptide and residues 1546-1656 for the other peptide. When chymotrypsin or elastase were used for digestion, the NH2-terminal sequence of one peptide showed a match with residues 1667-1797 of the light chain, while the other peptide presented an NH2-terminal sequence identical with the previously described for the bovine factor Va light chain. When these peptides were assayed for direct binding to phospholipid vesicles, only the tryptic and the chymotryptic peptides covering the middle region of the A3 domain of the bovine factor Va light chain demonstrated an ability to interact with phospholipid vesicles. Thus, knowing that the factor Xa cleavage site on the factor Va light chain is located between residues 1765 and 1766 of the light chain this lipid-binding region of the bovine factor Va is further localized to amino acid residues 1667-1765.  相似文献   

17.
The prothrombinase complex, which catalyzes the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin, consists of activated Factor X, Factor Va, a membrane surface and Ca2+. To examine the structures that support Factor Va binding to Factor X, we used in vitro mutagenesis to construct a chimeric molecule that includes regions of Factor IX and Factor X. This chimera (IXGla,E1XE2,SP) was prepared from cDNA encoding the second epidermal growth factor (EGF) and serine protease domains of Factor X linked downstream from the cDNA encoding the signal peptide, propeptide, Gla domain, and first EGF domain of Factor IX. The cDNAs encoding the Factor IX/X chimera and wild-type Factor X were each expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells and the secreted proteins purified by affinity chromatography using polyclonal anti-Factor X antibodies. The chimera migrated as a single major band corresponding to a molecular weight of 68,000. By Western blotting, the chimeric protein stained with both polyclonal anti-Factor X and anti-Factor IX antibodies. gamma-Carboxyglutamic acid analysis demonstrated near complete carboxylation of both the wild-type Factor X and the Factor IX/X chimera. Compared with Factor X, the rate of zymogen activation of the Factor IX/X chimera was about 50% that of Factor X when activated by Factor IXa, Factor VIIIa, phospholipid, and Ca2+. The enzyme form of the Factor IX/X chimera, activated Factor IX/X, generated using the coagulant protein of Russell's viper venom, expressed full amidolytic activity compared with Factor Xa. The activated Factor IX/X chimera had about 14% of the activity of Factor Xa when employed in a prothrombinase assay; this activity reached 100% with increasing concentrations of Factor Va. A binding assay was employed to test the ability of the active site-inactivated Factor IX/Xa chimera to inhibit the binding of Factor Xa to the Factor Va-phospholipid complex, thus inhibiting the activation of prothrombin to thrombin. In this assay the active site-inactivated form of the chimera competed with Factor Xa completely but with decreased affinity for the Factor Va-phospholipid complex. These data indicate that the second EGF domain and the serine protease domain of Factor Xa are sufficient to interact with Factor Va. The Factor IX/X chimera is a good substrate for the tenase complex; the defective enzymatic activity of the activated Factor IX/X chimera can be accounted for by its decreased affinity for Factor Va relative to Factor Xa.  相似文献   

18.
A monoclonal antibody which inhibits the factor Va:factor Xa interaction   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
An immunoprecipitation technique has been used to determine the subunit specificity of two of the monoclonal antibodies to bovine Factor V(Va) developed by this laboratory. One of the antibodies is specific for the 74,000-dalton subunit (the E chain) of Factor Va, and the other antibody is specific for the 94,000-dalton subunit (the D chain). The binding of Factor Va to phospholipid was studied by light scattering, and the interaction of Factor Xa with phospholipid-bound Factor Va was examined using 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl-glutamyl-glycyl-arginyl-Xa (Dns-EGR-Xa). Neither the antibody specific for the E chain nor the antibody specific for the D chain inhibit the binding of Factor Va to phospholipid vesicles. The antibody specific for the E chain blocks the increase in fluorescence polarization seen when Factor Va is added to a solution of Dns-EGR-Xa, phospholipid vesicles and calcium. This antibody also inhibits the association of Dns-EGR-Xa with phospholipid-bound Factor Va as determined by gel-exclusion high pressure liquid chromatography. The antibody specific for the D chain of Factor Va does not block the increase in polarization seen when Factor Va is added to a solution of Dns-EGR-Xa, phospholipid, and calcium. It was concluded that the antibody specific for the E chain of Factor Va binds at or near the Factor Xa-binding site on the E chain and that the Factor Va E chain plays a significant role in binding Factor Xa.  相似文献   

19.
Cells of monocytic differentiation can promote proteolytic activation of factor X following binding to the adhesive receptor Mac-1. We now show that the product, factor Xa, binds to a second receptor on these cells in a Ca2+-dependent reaction. Functionally, this results in the capacity to convert prothrombin to thrombin. The factor Xa receptor was identified by monoclonal antibody (7G12) reactive with plasma factor V/Va, but selected for reactivity with THP-1 cells. It reacted with 71.2 +/- 10.1% of monocytes, bound 153,600 +/- 33,500 sites/THP-1 cell, blocked binding of 125I-factor Xa, inhibited formation of thrombin, and immunoprecipitated 125I-factor Xa chemically cross-linked to its receptor on THP-1 cells. Following surface iodination or intrinsic labeling of THP-1 cells, antibody 7G12 immunoprecipitated a 74-kDa molecular species, similar to plasma factor Va light chain. Thus, monocytes and monocyte-like cells synthesize and express a factor V/Va-like receptor for factor Xa and organize a functional prothrombinase complex. The simultaneous membrane coexpression of a factor X receptor (Mac-1) and a factor Xa receptor as demonstrated by two-color flow cytofluorometric analysis of monocytes or THP-1 cells is consistent with a sequential receptor cascade for coordinated molecular assembly of coagulation proteins on specialized cells.  相似文献   

20.
The inactivation of human coagulation factor Xa by the plasma proteinase inhibitors alpha 1-antitrypsin, antithrombin III and alpha 2-macroglobulin in purified systems was found to be accelerated by the divalent cations Ca2+, Mn2+ and Mg2+. The rate constant for the inhibition of factor Xa by antithrombin III rose from 2.62 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 in the absence of divalent cations to a maximum of 6.40 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 5 mM Ca2+, 8.10 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 5 mM Mn2+, with a slight decrease in rate at higher cation concentrations. Mg2+ caused a gradual rise in rate constant to 5.65 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 20 mM. The rate constant for the inhibition of factor Xa by alpha 1-antitrypsin in the absence of divalent cations was 5.80 X 10(3) M-1 X min-1. Ca2+ increased the rate to 1.50 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 5 mM and Mn2+ to 2.40 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 6 mM. The rate constant for these cations again decreased at higher concentrations. Mg2+ caused a gradual rise in rate constant to 1.08 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 10 mM. The rate constant for the factor Xa-alpha 2-macroglobulin reaction was raised from 6.70 X 10(3) M-1 X min-1 in the absence of divalent cations to a maximum of 4.15 X 10(4) M-1 X min-1 at 4 mM Ca2+, with a decrease to 3.05 X 10(4) M-1 at 10 mM. These increases in reaction rate were correlated to the binding of divalent cations to factor Xa by studying changes in the intrinsic fluorescence and dimerization of factor Xa. The changes in fluorescence suggested a conformational change in factor Xa which may be responsible for the increased rate of reaction, whilst the decrease in rate constant at higher concentrations of Ca2+ and Mn2+ may be due to factor Xa dimerization.  相似文献   

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