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1.
Lys(114) of the plasma coagulation proteinase inhibitor, antithrombin, has been implicated in binding of the glycosaminoglycan activator, heparin, by previous mutagenesis studies and by the crystal structure of antithrombin in complex with the active pentasaccharide unit of heparin. In the present work, substitution of Lys(114) by Ala or Met was shown to decrease the affinity of antithrombin for heparin and the pentasaccharide by approximately 10(5)-fold at I 0.15, corresponding to a reduction in binding energy of approximately 50%. The decrease in affinity was due to the loss of two to three ionic interactions, consistent with Lys(114) and at least one other basic residue of the inhibitor binding cooperatively to heparin, as well as to substantial nonionic interactions. The mutation minimally affected the initial, weak binding of the two-step mechanism of pentasaccharide binding to antithrombin but appreciably (>40-fold) decreased the forward rate constant of the conformational change in the second step and greatly (>1000-fold) increased the reverse rate constant of this step. Lys(114) is thus of greater importance for the affinity of heparin binding than any of the other antithrombin residues investigated so far, viz. Arg(47), Lys(125), and Arg(129). It contributes more than Arg(47) and Arg(129) to increasing the rate of induction of the activating conformational change, a role presumably exerted by interactions with the nonreducing end trisaccharide unit of the heparin pentasaccharide. However, its major effect, also larger than that of these two residues, is in maintaining antithrombin in the activated state by interactions that most likely involve the reducing end disaccharide unit.  相似文献   

2.
The N-terminal region residues, Lys11, Arg13, and Arg24, of the plasma coagulation inhibitor, antithrombin, have been implicated in binding of the anticoagulant polysaccharide, heparin, from the identification of natural mutants with impaired heparin binding or by the X-ray structure of a complex of the inhibitor with a high-affinity heparin pentasaccharide. Mutations of Lys11 or Arg24 to Ala in this work each reduced the affinity for the pentasaccharide approximately 40-fold, whereas mutation of Arg13 to Ala led to a decrease of only approximately 7-fold. All three substitutions resulted in the loss of one ionic interaction with the pentasaccharide and those of Lys11 or Arg24 also in 3-5-fold losses in affinity of nonionic interactions. Only the mutation of Lys11 affected the initial, weak interaction step of pentasaccharide binding, decreasing the affinity of this step approximately 2-fold. The mutations of Lys11 and Arg13 moderately, 2-7-fold, altered both rate constants of the second, conformational change step, whereas the substitution of Arg24 appreciably, approximately 25-fold, reduced the reverse rate constant of this step. The N-terminal region of antithrombin is thus critical for high-affinity heparin binding, Lys11 and Arg24 being responsible for maintaining appreciable and comparable binding energy, whereas Arg13 is less important. Lys11 is the only one of the three residues that is involved in the initial recognition step, whereas all three residues participate in the conformational change step. Lys11 and Arg13 presumably bind directly to the heparin pentasaccharide by ionic, and in the case of Lys11, also nonionic interactions. However, the role of Arg24 most likely is indirect, to stabilize the heparin-induced P-helix by interacting intramolecularly with Glu113 and Asp117, thereby positioning the crucial Lys114 residue for optimal ionic and nonionic interactions with the pentasaccharide. Together, these findings show that N-terminal residues of antithrombin make markedly different contributions to the energetics and dynamics of binding of the pentasaccharide ligand to the native and activated conformational states of the inhibitor that could not have been predicted from the X-ray structure.  相似文献   

3.
The anticoagulant sulfated polysaccharide, heparin, binds to the plasma coagulation proteinase inhibitor, antithrombin, and activates it by a conformational change that results in a greatly increased rate of inhibition of target proteinases. Lys125 of antithrombin has previously been implicated in this binding by chemical modification and site-directed mutagenesis and by the crystal structure of a complex between antithrombin and a pentasaccharide constituting the antithrombin-binding region of heparin. Replacement of Lys125 with Met or Gln in this work reduced the affinity of antithrombin for full-length heparin or the pentasaccharide by 150-600-fold at I = 0.15, corresponding to a loss of 25-33% of the total binding energy. The affinity decrease was due both to disruption of approximately three ionic interactions, indicating that Lys125 and two other basic residues of antithrombin act cooperatively in binding to heparin, and to weakened nonionic interactions. The mutations caused a 10-17-fold decrease in the affinity of the initial, weak binding step of the two-step mechanism of heparin binding to antithrombin. They also increased the reverse rate constant of the second, conformational change step by 10-50-fold. Lys125 is thus a major heparin-binding residue of antithrombin, contributing an amount of binding energy comparable to that of Arg129, but less energy than Lys114. It is the first residue identified so far that has a critical role in the initial recognition of heparin by antithrombin, but also appreciably stabilizes the heparin-induced activated state of the inhibitor. These effects are exerted by interactions of Lys125 with the nonreducing end of the heparin pentasaccharide.  相似文献   

4.
Arocas V  Turk B  Bock SC  Olson ST  Björk I 《Biochemistry》2000,39(29):8512-8518
The interaction of a well-defined pentasaccharide sequence of heparin with a specific binding site on antithrombin activates the inhibitor through a conformational change. This change increases the rate of antithrombin inhibition of factor Xa, whereas acceleration of thrombin inhibition requires binding of both inhibitor and proteinase to the same heparin chain. An extended heparin binding site of antithrombin outside the specific pentasaccharide site has been proposed to account for the higher affinity of the inhibitor for full-length heparin chains by interacting with saccharides adjacent to the pentasaccharide sequence. To resolve conflicting evidence regarding the roles of Lys136 and Lys139 in this extended site, we have mutated the two residues to Ala or Gln. Mutation of Lys136 decreased the antithrombin affinity for full-length heparin by at least 5-fold but minimally altered the affinity for the pentasaccharide. As a result, the full-length heparin and pentasaccharide affinities were comparable. The reduced affinity for full-length heparin was associated with the loss of one ionic interaction and was caused by both a lower overall association rate constant and a higher overall dissociation rate constant. In contrast, mutation of Lys139 affected neither full-length heparin nor pentasaccharide affinity. The rate constants for inhibition of thrombin and factor Xa by the complexes between antithrombin and full-length heparin or pentasaccharide were unaffected by both mutations, indicating that neither Lys136 nor Lys139 is involved in heparin activation of the inhibitor. Together, these results show that Lys136 forms part of the extended heparin binding site of antithrombin that participates in the binding of full-length heparin chains, whereas Lys139 is located outside this site.  相似文献   

5.
An hereditary abnormal antithrombin III (ATIII Geneva) with defective heparin cofactor activity was characterized by DNA single strand amplification and subsequent direct sequencing. ATIII Geneva was found to have a G to A transition in Exon IIIa leading to an Arg-129 to Gln mutation. This amino acid is part of the ATIII region comprising residues 114-154, which contains the highest proportion of basic residues (Arg or Lys), and is known from chemical modification studies to be involved in heparin binding. The variant protein did not bind heparin-Sepharose and was isolated from the propositus plasma by immunoaffinity chromatography. High affinity (for ATIII) heparin had only a minimal effect on thrombin and activated factor X inhibition by the purified abnormal ATIII. Taken together, these results demonstrate an important role for Arg-129 in the binding and interaction of ATIII with heparin of high affinity. We propose that a cooperation between Lys-125, Arg-129, Lys-136, and Arg-47 exposed at the surface of the inhibitor allows the binding of the essential pentasaccharide domain of heparin which is specific for the ATIII interaction.  相似文献   

6.
The contribution of Arg(129) of the serpin, antithrombin, to the mechanism of allosteric activation of the protein by heparin was determined from the effect of mutating this residue to either His or Gln. R129H and R129Q antithrombins bound pentasaccharide and full-length heparins containing the antithrombin recognition sequence with similar large reductions in affinity ranging from 400- to 2500-fold relative to the control serpin, corresponding to a loss of 28-35% of the binding free energy. The salt dependence of pentasaccharide binding showed that the binding defect of the mutant serpin resulted from the loss of approximately 2 ionic interactions, suggesting that Arg(129) binds the pentasaccharide cooperatively with other residues. Rapid kinetic studies showed that the mutation minimally affected the initial low affinity binding of heparin to antithrombin, but greatly affected the subsequent conformational activation of the serpin leading to high affinity heparin binding, although not enough to disfavor activation. Consistent with these findings, the mutant antithrombin was normally activated by heparin for accelerated inhibition of factor Xa and thrombin. These results support an important role for Arg(129) in an induced-fit mechanism of heparin activation of antithrombin wherein conformational activation of the serpin positions Arg(129) and other residues for cooperative interactions with the heparin pentasaccharide so as to lock the serpin in the activated state.  相似文献   

7.
V Arocas  S C Bock  S T Olson  I Bj?rk 《Biochemistry》1999,38(31):10196-10204
Heparin greatly accelerates the reaction between antithrombin and its target proteinases, thrombin and factor Xa, by virtue of a specific pentasaccharide sequence of heparin binding to antithrombin. The binding occurs in two steps, an initial weak interaction inducing a conformational change of antithrombin that increases the affinity for heparin and activates the inhibitor. Arg46 and Arg47 of antithrombin have been implicated in heparin binding by studies of natural and recombinant variants and by the crystal structure of a pentasaccharide-antithrombin complex. We have mutated these two residues to Ala or His to determine their role in the heparin-binding mechanism. The dissociation constants for the binding of both full-length heparin and pentasaccharide to the R46A and R47H variants were increased 3-4-fold and 20-30-fold, respectively, at pH 7.4. Arg46 thus contributes only little to the binding, whereas Arg47 is of appreciable importance. The ionic strength dependence of the dissociation constant for pentasaccharide binding to the R47H variant showed that the decrease in affinity was due to the loss of both one charge interaction and nonionic interactions. Rapid-kinetics studies further revealed that the affinity loss was caused by both a somewhat lower forward rate constant and a greater reverse rate constant of the conformational change step, while the affinity of the initial binding step was unaffected. Arg47 is thus not involved in the initial weak binding of heparin to antithrombin but is important for the heparin-induced conformational change. These results are in agreement with a previously proposed model, in which an initial low-affinity binding of the nonreducing-end trisaccharide of the heparin pentasaccharide induces the antithrombin conformational change. This change positions Arg47 and other residues for optimal interaction with the reducing-end disaccharide, thereby locking the inhibitor in the activated state.  相似文献   

8.
Heparin binds to human antithrombin III and accelerates its inhibitory activity in the blood coagulation system. Previous reports (Rosenberg, R. D., and Damus, P. S. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 6490-6505; Pecon, J. M., and Blackburn, M. N. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 935-938) have shown that selective chemical modification of a limited number of lysine residues in antithrombin III causes drastic loss of its heparin cofactor activity. We have performed chemical modification of antithrombin III with trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid in order to determine the location of these lysine residues. When antithrombin III was treated with 100 M excess of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid for 10 min, about 3.2 mol of amino group per mol of antithrombin III were modified. The heparin cofactor activity dropped to about 25%, whereas the progressive inhibitory activity (in the absence of heparin) remained essentially intact (about 95%). The modified amino groups were identified to be Lys114 (75%), Lys125 (94%), and Lys287 (96%). These results were obtained by comparing and analyzing the cyanogen bromide fragments derived from native antithrombin III and the 10-min modified antithrombin III. When antithrombin III was pretreated with heparin, followed by trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid modification, the extent of modification at Lys114 and Lys125 decreased from 75% and 94% to 20% and 40%, respectively, whereas the modification at Lys287 remained nearly quantitative (greater than 95%). Based on these results, we conclude that Lys114 and Lys125 are essential for the heparin cofactor activity of human antithrombin III.  相似文献   

9.
Antithrombin III (ATIII) is the main inhibitor of the coagulation proteases like factor Xa and thrombin. Anticoagulant activity of ATIII is increased by several thousand folds when activated by vascular wall heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) and pharmaceutical heparins. ATIII isoforms in human plasma, alpha-ATIII and beta-ATIII differ in the amount of glycosylation which is the basis of differences in their heparin binding affinity and function. Crystal structures and site directed mutagenesis studies have mapped the heparin binding site in ATIII, however the hydrogen bond switch and energetics of interaction during the course of heparin dependent conformational change remains largely unclear. An analysis of heparin bound conformational states of ATIII using PEARLS software showed that in heparin bound intermediate state, Arg 47 and Arg 13 residues make hydrogen bonds with heparin but in the activated conformation Lys 11 and Lys 114 have more hydrogen bond interactions. In the protease bound-antithrombin-pentasaccharide complex Lys 114, Pro 12 and Lys 125 form important hydrogen bonding interactions. The results showed that A-helix and N-terminal end residues are more important in the initial interactions but D-helix is more important during the latter stage of conformational activation and during the process of protease inhibition. We carried out the residue wise Accessible Surface Area (ASA) analysis of alpha and beta ATIII native states and the results indicated major differences in burial of residues from Ser 112 to Ser 116 towards the N-terminal end. This region is involved in the P-helix formation on account of heparin binding. A cavity analysis showed a progressively larger cavity formation during activation in the region just adjacent to the heparin binding site towards the C-terminal end. We hypothesize that during the process of conformational change after heparin binding beta form of antithrombin has low energy barrier to form D-helix extension toward N and C-terminal end as compared to alpha isoform.  相似文献   

10.
The autolysis loop (residues 143-154 in chymotrypsinogen numbering) plays a pivotal role in determining the macromolecular substrate and inhibitor specificity of coagulation proteases. This loop in factor IXa (FIXa) has 3 basic residues (Arg143, Lys147, and Arg150) whose contribution to the protease specificity of factor IXa has not been studied. Here, we substituted these residues individually with Ala in Gla-domainless forms of recombinant factor IX expressed in mammalian cells. All mutants exhibited normal amidolytic activities toward a FIXa-specific chromogenic substrate. However, Arg143 and Lys147 mutants showed a approximately 3- to 6-fold impairment in FX activation, whereas the Arg150 mutant activated factor X normally both in the absence and presence of factor VIIIa. By contrast, Arg143 and Lys147 mutants reacted normally with antithrombin (AT) in both the absence and presence of the cofactor, heparin. However, the reactivity of the Arg150 mutant with AT was impaired 6.6-fold in the absence of heparin and 33- to 70-fold in the presence of pentasaccharide and full-length heparins. These results suggest that Arg143 and Lys147 of the autolysis loop are recognition sites for FX independent of factor VIIIa, and Arg150 is a specific recognition site for AT that can effectively interact with AT only if the serpin is in the heparin-activated conformation.  相似文献   

11.
We recently demonstrated that a template mechanism makes a significant contribution to the heparin-accelerated inactivation of factor Xa (FXa) by antithrombin at physiologic Ca(2+), suggesting that FXa has a potential heparin-binding site. Structural data indicate that 7 of the 11 basic residues of the heparin-binding exosite of thrombin are conserved at similar three-dimensional locations in FXa. These residues, Arg(93), Lys(96), Arg(125), Arg(165), Lys(169), Lys(236), and Arg(240) were substituted with Ala in separate constructs in Gla domainless forms. It was found that all derivatives cleave Spectrozyme FXa with similar catalytic efficiencies. Antithrombin inactivated FXa derivatives with a similar second-order association rate constant (k(2)) in both the absence and presence of pentasaccharide. In the presence of heparin, however, k(2) with certain mutants were impaired up to 25-fold. Moreover, these mutants bound to heparin-Sepharose with lower affinities. Heparin concentration dependence of the inactivation revealed that only the template portion of the cofactor effect of heparin was affected by the mutagenesis. The order of importance of these residues for binding heparin was as follows: Arg(240) > Lys(236) > Lys(169) > Arg(165) > Lys(96) > Arg(93) >/= Arg(125). Interestingly, further study suggested that certain basic residues of this site, particularly Arg(165) and Lys(169), play key roles in factor Va and/or prothrombin recognition by FXa in prothrombinase.  相似文献   

12.
To identify amino acids specific for tyrosine kinase activity, the role of several conserved basic residues in kinase function was tested. Modeling of the epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase domain based on the crystal structure of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and insulin receptor revealed several basic residues present on the surface of epidermal growth factor receptor. Using the molecular modeling program, GRASP, the basic residues Arg 779, Lys 782, and Lys 855 were shown to provide an area of positive charge to the surface of the molecule. To deduce the role of these residues in ATP and substrate binding, site-directed mutants were prepared and kinetic constants were measured. Mutation of Lys 855 to Ala destabilized the enzyme and caused partial inactivation. Mutation of either Arg 779 or Lys 782 had little effect on the Km value for peptide substrate. However, alteration of Lys 782 increased the Km value for ATP 28-fold, indicating a role for Lys 782 in binding ATP. Because residues similar to Lys 782 in the sequences of mitogen-activated protein kinase and insulin receptor make contact with a ribose hydroxyl of ATP, it is proposed that Lys 782 may be one of the residues composing the ribose-binding site of epidermal growth factor receptor.  相似文献   

13.
Inhibition of thrombin by heparin cofactor (HCII) is accelerated approximately 1000-fold by heparin or dermatan sulfate. We found recently that the mutation Arg189----His decreases the affinity of HCII for dermatan sulfate but not for heparin (Blinder, M. A., Andersson, T. R., Abildgaard, U., and Tollefsen, D. M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 5128-5133). Other investigators have implicated Arg47 and Lys125 of anti-thrombin (homologous to Arg103 and Lys185 of HCII) in heparin binding. To investigate the corresponding residues in HCII, we have constructed amino acid substitutions (Arg103----Leu, Gln, or Trp; Lys185----Met, Asn, or Thr) by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis of the cDNA and expressed the products in Escherichia coli. The recombinant HCII variants were assayed for binding to heparin-Sepharose and for inhibition of thrombin in the presence of various concentrations of heparin or dermatan sulfate. All of the Arg103 variants bound to heparin with normal affinity. Furthermore, inhibition of thrombin by the Arg103----Leu variant occurred at a normal rate in the absence of a glycosaminoglycan and was accelerated by normal concentrations of heparin and dermatan sulfate. These results indicate that HCII, unlike anti-thrombin, does not require a positive charge at this position for the interaction with heparin or dermatan sulfate. The Arg103----Gln and Arg103----Trp variants inhibited thrombin at about one-third of the normal rate in the absence of a glycosaminoglycan, suggesting that these mutations exert an effect on the reactive site (Leu444-Ser445) of HCII. All of the Lys185 variants bound to heparin with decreased affinity but inhibited thrombin at approximately the normal rate in the absence of a glycosaminoglycan. These variants required greater than 10-fold higher concentrations of heparin to accelerate inhibition of thrombin and were not stimulated significantly by dermatan sulfate, suggesting that heparin and dermatan sulfate interact with Lys185 of HCII. These results provide evidence that the glycosaminoglycan-binding site in HCII includes Lys185 but not Arg103, both of which were predicted to be involved by homology to anti-thrombin.  相似文献   

14.
Manithody C  Yang L  Rezaie AR 《Biochemistry》2002,41(21):6780-6788
The autolysis loop of factor Xa (fXa) has four basic residues (Arg(143), Lys(147), Arg(150), and Arg(154)) whose contribution to protease specificity of fXa has not been examined. Here, we substituted these basic residues individually with Ala in the fX cDNA and expressed them in mammalian cells using a novel expression/purification vector system. Following purification to homogeneity and activation by the factor X activator from Russell viper venom, the mutants were characterized with respect to their ability to assemble into the prothrombinase complex to activate prothrombin and interact with target plasma fXa inhibitors, tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) and antithrombin. We show that all mutants interacted with factor Va with normal affinities and exhibited wild-type-like prothrombinase activities toward prothrombin. Lys(147) and Arg(154) mutants were inhibited by TFPI approximately 2-fold slower than wild type; however, both Arg(143) and Arg(150) mutants were inhibited normally by the inhibitor. The reactivities of Arg(143) and Lys(147) mutants were improved approximately 2-fold with antithrombin in the absence but not in the presence of heparin cofactors. On the other hand, the pentasaccharide-catalyzed reactivity of antithrombin with the Arg(150) mutant was impaired by an order of magnitude. These results suggest that Arg(150) of the autolysis loop may specifically interact with the activated conformation of antithrombin.  相似文献   

15.
The dissociation equilibrium constant for heparin binding to antithrombin III (ATIII) is a measure of the cofactor's binding to and activation of the proteinase inhibitor, and its salt dependence indicates that ionic and non-ionic interactions contribute approximately 40 and approximately 60% of the binding free energy, respectively. We now report that phenylalanines 121 and 122 (Phe-121 and Phe-122) together contribute 43% of the total binding free energy and 77% of the energy of non-ionic binding interactions. The large contribution of these hydrophobic residues to the binding energy is mediated not by direct interactions with heparin, but indirectly, through contacts between their phenyl rings and the non-polar stems of positively charged heparin binding residues, whose terminal amino and guanidinium groups are thereby organized to form extensive and specific ionic and non-ionic contacts with the pentasaccharide. Investigation of the kinetics of heparin binding demonstrated that Phe-122 is critical for promoting a normal rate of conformational change and stabilizing AT*H, the high affinity-activated binary complex. Kinetic and structural considerations suggest that Phe-122 and Lys-114 act cooperatively through non-ionic interactions to promote P-helix formation and ATIII binding to the pentasaccharide. In summary, although hydrophobic residues Phe-122 and Phe-121 make minimal contact with the pentasaccharide, they play a critical role in heparin binding and activation of antithrombin by coordinating the P-helix-mediated conformational change and organizing an extensive network of ionic and non-ionic interactions between positively charged heparin binding site residues and the cofactor.  相似文献   

16.
The Cucurbita maxima trypsin inhibitor CMTI-III molecule was used as a vehicle to design and synthesize a series of trypsin chromogenic substrates modified in position P1: Ac-Ala-Val-Abu-Pro-X-pNA, where X = Orn, Lys, Arg, Har, Arg(NO(2)), Cit, Hci, Phe(p-CN), Phe(p-NH(2)); pNA = p-nitroanilide. The most active compounds (as determined by specificity constant k(cat)/K(m)) were peptides with the Arg and Lys residues in the position discussed. Changes in the length and the decrease of the positive charge of the amino acid residue side chain in position P(1) resulted in the decrease or loss of the affinity towards bovine beta-trypsin. Among peptides containing amino acid residues with uncharged side chains in position P1, only one with p-cyano-l-Phe revealed activity. These results correspond well with trypsin inhibitory activity of CMTI-III analogues modified in the equivalent position, indicating the same type of interaction between position P1 of the substrate or inhibitor and S1 site specificity of trypsin.  相似文献   

17.
The binding of heparin causes a conformational change in antithrombin to give an increased heparin binding affinity and activate the inhibition of thrombin and factor Xa. The areas of antithrombin involved in binding heparin and stabilizing the interaction in the high-affinity form have been partially resolved through the study of both recombinant and natural variants. The role of a section of the N-terminal segment of antithrombin, residues 22-46 (segment 22-46), in heparin binding was investigated using rapid kinetic analysis of the protein cleaved at residues 29-30 by limited proteolysis with thermolysin. The cleaved antithrombin had 5.5-fold lowered affinity for heparin pentasaccharide and 1.8-fold for full-length, high-affinity heparin. It was shown that, although the initial binding of heparin is slightly enhanced by the cleavage, it dissociates much faster from the cleaved form, giving rise to the overall decrease in heparin affinity. This implies that the segment constituting residues 22-46 in the N terminus of antithrombin hinders access to the binding site for heparin, hence the increased initial binding for the cleaved form, whereas, when heparin is bound, segment 22-46 is involved in the stabilization of the binding interaction, as indicated by the increased dissociation constant. When the heparin pentasaccharide is bound to antithrombin prior to incubation with thermolysin, it protects the N-terminal cleavage site, implying that segment 22-46 moves to interact with heparin in the conformational change and thus stabilizes the complex.  相似文献   

18.
Factor IXa (FIXa) is known to have a binding site for heparin that has not been mapped by a mutagenesis study. By homology modeling based on structural data, we identified eight basic residues in the catalytic domain of FIXa that can potentially bind to heparin. These residues, Lys(98), Lys(126), Arg(165), Arg(170), Lys(173), Lys(230), Arg(233), and Lys(239) (chymotrypsin numbering) were substituted with Ala in separate constructs in Gla-domainless forms. Following activation, it was found that all FIXa derivatives cleaved the chromogenic substrate CBS 31.39 with near normal catalytic efficiencies. Similarly, antithrombin inactivated FIXa derivatives with a similar second-order association rate constant (k(2)) in both the absence and presence of pentasaccharide. In the presence of a full-length heparin, however, k(2) values were dramatically impaired with certain mutants. Direct binding studies revealed that the same mutants lost their affinities for binding to heparin-Sepharose. Both kinetic and direct binding data indicated that five basic residues of FIXa in the following order of importance, Arg(233) > Arg(165) > Lys(230) > Lys(126) > Arg(170) are critical for binding to heparin. Consistent with these results, examination of the crystal structure of the catalytic domain of FIXa indicated that all five basic residues are spatially aligned in a manner optimal for interaction with heparin.  相似文献   

19.
X J Sun  J Y Chang 《Biochemistry》1990,29(38):8957-8962
Arginyl residues of human antithrombin III have been implicated to involve in the heparin binding site [Jorgensen, A. M., Borders, C. L., & Fish, W. W. (1985) Biochem, J. 231, 59-63]. We have performed chemical modification of antithrombin with (p-hydroxyphenyl)glyoxal (HPG) in order to determine the locations of these arginine residues. Antithrombin was modified with 12 mM HPG in the absence and presence of heparin (2-fold by weight to antithrombin). In the absence of heparin, about 3-4 mol of arginines/mol of antithrombin were modified within 60 min, and the modification led to the loss of 95% of the inhibitor's heparin cofactor activity as well as heparin-induced fluorescence enhancement and 50% of its progressive inhibitory activity. In the presence of heparin, the extent of modification was diminished by 30% and modified antithrombin retained approximately 70% of its heparin cofactor activity. Peptide mapping and subsequent sequence analysis revealed that selective HPG modification occurred at Arg129 and Arg145 and that their modifications were protected upon binding of heparin to antithrombin. We conclude that Arg129 and Arg145 are situated within the heparin binding site of human antithrombin III.  相似文献   

20.
Antithrombin requires heparin for efficient inhibition of the final two proteinases of the blood coagulation cascade, factor Xa and thrombin. Antithrombin binds heparin via a specific pentasaccharide domain in a two-step mechanism whereby initial weak binding is followed by a conformational change and subsequent tight binding. The goal of this study is to investigate the role of a reducing-end extension in the binding of the longer oligosaccharides that contain the cognate pentasaccharide sequence. We determined the antithrombin binding properties of a synthetic heptasaccharide containing the natural pentasaccharide sequence (DEFGH) and an additional reducing-end disaccharide (DEFGHG'H'). Binding at low ionic strength is unaffected by the disaccharide addition, but at ionic strengths >/=0.2 the mode of heptasaccharide binding changes resulting in a 2-fold increase in affinity due to a decrease in the off-rate caused by a greater nonionic contribution to binding. Molecular modeling of possible binding modes for the heptasaccharide at high ionic strength indicates a possible shift in position of the pentasaccharide domain to occupy the extended heparin-binding site. This conclusion supports the likely presence of a range of sequences that can bind to and activate antithrombin in the natural heparan sulfates that line the vascular endothelium.  相似文献   

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