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

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
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   

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 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   

8.
Membrane-mediated assembly of the prothrombinase complex   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Prothrombinase assembly was studied on macroscopic planar bilayers consisting of 20% dioleoyl-phosphatidylserine (DOPS) and 80% dioleoyl-phosphatidylcholine (DOPC). The dissociation constant for the binding of factor Xa to the bilayer, measured by ellipsometry, was Kd = 47 +/- 8 nM (mean +/- S.D.) and this value was lowered to Kd = 2.2 +/- 0.3 pM by preadsorption of factor Va. This latter value was determined from direct measurement of steady-state thrombin production. A comparable value of Kd = 1.0 +/- 0.1 pM was found by repeating these experiments in suspensions of phospholipid vesicles, and it was verified that prothrombinase assembly was not influenced by the addition of prothrombin. Using a minute amount (0.094 fmol cm-2) of preadsorbed factor Va, it was found that the rate of prothrombinase assembly exceeds the rate of collisions between Xa molecules from the buffer and the sparse Va molecules on the bilayer. Apparently, factor Xa adsorbs first to the membrane and then associates rapidly with factor Va by lateral diffusion. The data indicate almost instantaneous equilibrium of this complex formation on the surface with a lower limit for the bimolecular rate constant of kon = 2.8 x 10(13) (mol/cm2)-1 s-1. In suspensions of small phospholipid vesicles, prothrombinase assembly is collisionally limited and the value of kon should be proportional to vesicle diameter. This was verified with a method for estimation of kon values from thrombin generation curves. Values of 0.36 x 10(9) and 1.6 x 10(9) M-1 s-1 were found for vesicles of 20-30- and 60-80-nm diameter, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Stone MD  Nelsestuen GL 《Biochemistry》2005,44(10):4037-4041
The prothrombinase complex is comprised of an enzyme, factor Xa, and a cofactor, factor Va, that each bind peripherally to membranes containing phosphatidylserine (PS) and activate the substrate, prothrombin. The mechanism by which the membrane contributes to enhanced catalytic efficacy of prothrombinase is not precisely known but is generally attributed to some aspect of enzyme and substrate assembly on the multisite surface of the membrane. A recent proposal has suggested a radically different role in which individual phospholipid molecules, either in the membrane or as single soluble molecules, act by an entirely allosteric mechanism that does not involve the multisite feature of the membrane [Zhai, X., Srivastava, A., Drummond, D. C., Daleke, D., and Lentz, B. R. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 5675-5684]. Our study measured prothrombinse activity in the presence of phospholipids such as short-chain phosphatidylserine and lysophosphatidylserine (lyso-PS). Both enhanced prothrombinase activity, and the increase was consistent with the requirement for extended bilayer structure. Even then, prothrombinase activity was low when compared with activity on bilayer membranes of mixed PS and phosphatidylcholine (PC). Lyso-PS approached the activity of PS/PC membranes only when it was mixed with PC bilayers. The results suggest that the two-dimensional membrane bilayer surface is necessary for the support of full prothrombinase activity.  相似文献   

11.
Prothrombin contains two kringle domains that are removed during activation to the blood clotting enzyme alpha-thrombin. By analogy with other kringle-containing proteins the prothrombin kringles may play a role in the protein-protein interactions necessary for prothrombin activation. Four monoclonal antibodies to prothrombin kringle 2 have been produced against human prothrombin, and a fifth monoclonal antibody was produced against a synthetic peptide consisting of amino acid residues 216-231 of kringle 2. Each antibody was tested for its ability to block prothrombin activation by factor Xa. In the presence of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine vesicles and factor Va, two of the antibodies, alpha HII-3 and alpha HII-4, inhibited prothrombin activation at a 90 and 50% level, respectively. Two other monoclonal antibodies (alpha HII-6 and alpha HII-7) and the antipeptide antibody (alpha HII-5) had no effect on prothrombin activation. When factor Xa was the catalyst alone, antibody alpha HII-3 lost the ability to inhibit prothrombin activation whereas antibody alpha HII-4 again partially inhibited the reaction. When human platelets were the reaction surface, the patterns of inhibition by the anti-fragment 2 antibodies were identical to that observed with phospholipid vesicles. These data suggest a role for prothrombin fragment 2 in activation, possibly by mediating the interaction of substrate prothrombin with factor Xa or factor Va on the phospholipid surface.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of membrane composition on the hemostatic balance   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Smirnov MD  Ford DA  Esmon CT  Esmon NL 《Biochemistry》1999,38(12):3591-3598
The phospholipid composition requirements for optimal prothrombin activation and factor Va inactivation by activated protein C (APC) anticoagulant were examined. Vesicles composed of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) supported factor Va inactivation relatively well. However, optimal factor Va inactivation still required relatively high concentrations of phosphatidylserine (PS). In addition, at a fixed concentration of phospholipid, PS, and APC, vesicles devoid of PE never attained a rate of factor Va inactivation achievable with vesicles containing PE. Polyunsaturation of any vesicle component also contributed significantly to APC inactivation of factor Va. Thus, PE makes an important contribution to factor Va inactivation that cannot be mimicked by PS. In the absence of polyunsaturation in the other membrane constituents, this contribution was dependent upon the presence of both the PE headgroup per se and unsaturation of the 1,2 fatty acids. Although PE did not affect prothrombin activation rates at optimal PS concentrations, PE reduced the requirement for PS approximately 10-fold. The Km(app) for prothrombin and the Kd(app) for factor Xa-factor Va decreased as a function of increasing PS concentration, reaching optimal values at 10-15% PS in the absence of PE but only 1% PS in the presence of PE. Fatty acid polyunsaturation had minimal effects. A lupus anticoagulant immunoglobulin was more inhibitory to both prothrombinase and factor Va inactivation in the presence of PE. The degree of inhibition of APC was significantly greater and much more dependent on the phospholipid composition than that of prothrombinase. Thus, subtle changes in the phospholipid composition of cells may control procoagulant and anticoagulant reactions differentially under both normal and pathological conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Interactions between factor Va and membrane phosphatidylserine (PS) regulate activity of the prothrombinase complex. Two solvent-exposed hydrophobic residues located in the C2 domain, Trp(2063) and Trp(2064), have been proposed to contribute to factor Va membrane interactions by insertion into the hydrophobic membrane bilayer. However, the prothrombinase activity of rHFVa W(2063, 2064)A was found to be significantly impaired only at low concentrations of PS (5 mol %). In this study, we find that 10-fold higher concentrations of mutant factor Va are required for half-maximal prothrombinase activity on membranes containing 25% PS. The ability of the mutant factor Va to interact with factor Xa on a membrane was also impaired since 4-fold higher concentrations of factor Xa were required for half-maximal prothrombinase activity. The interaction of factor Va with 25% PS membranes was also characterized using fluorescence energy transfer and surface plasmon resonance. We found that the affinity of mutant factor Va for membranes containing 25% PS was reduced at least 400-fold with a K(d) > 10(-7) M. The binding of mutant factor Va to 25% PS membranes was markedly enhanced in the presence of factor Xa, indicating stabilization of the factor Va-factor Xa-membrane complex. Our findings indicate that Trp(2063) and Trp(2064) play a critical role in the high-affinity binding of factor Va to PS membranes. It remains to be determined whether occupancy of this PS binding site in factor Va is also required for high-affinity binding to factor Xa.  相似文献   

14.
The inactivation of Factor Va by plasmin was studied in the presence and absence of phospholipid vesicles and calcium ions. The cleavage patterns of bovine Factor Va and its isolated subunits were analyzed using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the progress of inactivation was monitored by clotting assays and measurements of prothrombin activation using 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonylarginine-N-(3-ethyl-1,5-penta nediyl)amide. In addition, the ability of prothrombin and Factor Xa to protect Factor Va from inactivation by human plasmin was examined. The data presented indicate that the cofactor Factor Va is inactivated rapidly upon its interaction with human plasmin. The rate of inactivation is significantly enhanced in the presence of phospholipid vesicles, suggesting that the inactivation process is a membrane-bound phenomenon. The isolated D component (heavy chain of factor Va) was found to be slowly degraded by human plasmin, giving rise to cleavage products different from those obtained with activated protein C and Factor Xa. However, the 48- and 30-kDa fragments obtained from human plasmin degradation of component E (light chain of Factor Va) appear to be similar to those obtained following the proteolysis of the same subunit by activated protein C and Factor Xa.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of factor Va to phospholipid vesicles   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The analysis of free sulfhydryl groups in factor Va using dithiobis-(nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) indicated the presence of one accessible thiol in each of the two subunits of the cofactor. Intact factor Va contained one readily accessible sulfhydryl group under native conditions and approximately two such groups after denaturation. A comparison of the rate of modification of the accessible thiol in factor Va under native conditions to those observed with the isolated subunits indicated that the thiol present in component D of the cofactor was readily accessible to reaction with DTNB. Factor Va was reacted with the sulfhydryl-directed fluorophore N-(1-pyrene)maleimide, resulting in the concomitant loss of the accessible thiol with no detectable alteration in the activity of the cofactor. This fluorescent derivative of factor Va (Pyr-Va) was used to examine the binding of factor Va to phospholipid vesicles by fluorescence polarization. Fluorescence polarization of the pyrene moiety increased saturably when Pyr-Va was titrated with increasing concentrations of vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (PS). Systematic analysis of the binding of Pyr-Va to PCPS (75% phosphatidylcholine, 25% PS) indicated that the binding interaction was characterized by a dissociation constant of 2.7 x 10(-9) M with 42 mol of PCPS bound per mol of Va at saturation. The data obtained by varying the PS content of the vesicles are consistent with the interpretation that the Va-combining site on the vesicle surface is composed of a discrete number of PS molecules. The binding of Pyr-Va to PCPS was independent of added calcium ion and could be reversed by the addition of unlabeled Va or isolated component E but not by component D. Analysis of the displacement curves indicated that native factor Va or isolated component E and Pyr-Va mutually excluded each other on the vesicle surface with identical affinities. Competition experiments conducted using component E digested by factor Xa or the isolated derivative peptides indicated that the cleavage of component E by factor Xa had no effect on the PCPS binding properties of this subunit. Further, the data obtained with the isolated peptides suggest that the lipid-binding domain of component E is present in the amino-terminal region of this subunit.  相似文献   

16.
J Rosing  G Tans  H Speijer  R F Zwaal 《Biochemistry》1988,27(25):9048-9055
The activation of prothrombin by factor Xa is strongly accelerated by negatively charged phospholipids plus calcium ions. In this paper we report that positively charged membranes can also stimulate prothrombin activation provided that the activation reaction is carried out in the absence of calcium ions. Membranes composed of a mixture of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and positively charged lipids like stearylamine, sphingosine, or hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide caused a more than 1000-fold increase of the rate of prothrombin activation. Prothrombin activation by the factor Xa-factor Va complex was also considerably stimulated by such membranes. Stimulation of prothrombin activation by positively charged membranes was suppressed at high ionic strength. This suggests that electrostatic attraction of negatively charged proteins by positively charged membranes is the major driving force in the association of prothrombin and factor Xa with the lipid surface. Calcium ions strongly inhibited prothrombin activation on vesicles composed of PC and stearylamine (80/20 M/M), which indicates that the regions of prothrombin and/or factor Xa containing gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (gla) are important for the interaction of these proteins with positively charged membranes. The importance of the gla domain was confirmed by the observation that PC/stearylamine vesicles had much less effect on the reactions between proteins that lack gla residues [gla-domainless (des-1-45) prothrombin, prethrombin 1, prethrombin 2, or gla-domainless (des-1-44) factor Xa]. The efficiency of prothrombin and prothrombin derivatives to act as substrate decreased in the order prothrombin greater than des-1-45-prothrombin = prethrombin 1 greater than prethrombin 2, while prothrombin activation by gla-domainless (des-1-44) factor Xa was hardly stimulated by positively charged membranes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Equilibrium binding studies of prothrombinase complex formation were undertaken using phospholipid vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (PCPS), factor Va, and factor Xa modified with dansyl glutamylglycinylarginyl chloromethyl ketone (DEGR.Xa). The interaction between the Va.PCPS and DEGR.Xa.PCPS binary complexes was experimentally isolated using saturating concentrations of PCPS. Fluorescence titrations indicated that the membrane-bound proteins interact tightly (Kd approximately 10(-9) M) with a stoichiometry of 1 mol of Va bound/mol of DEGR.Xa at saturation. Complex formation was also investigated by kinetic studies of prothrombin activation using unmodified factor Xa. The kinetic studies yielded a Kd approximately 10(-9) M, which was independent of the concentration of prothrombin in the range of 0.5-5.0 microM. Fluorescence studies of complex assembly at limiting PCPS concentrations provided evidence for an altered DEGR.Xa-PCPS interaction when the enzyme was assembled into the complex. The data suggest that although both proteins are associated with PCPS when complexed with each other, the presence of factor Va on the membrane surface increases the affinity for the Xa-PCPS interaction by an estimated 100-fold. Prothrombinase complex assembly therefore proceeds independently of the availability of substrate and is stabilized by protein-protein and protein-phospholipid interactions. Linkage between the two protein-membrane combination events leads to the further stabilization of the complex on the vesicle surface.  相似文献   

18.
The association of coagulation factor Xa and factor Va   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The binding of factor Xa to factor Va in the presence of Ca2+ ions and phospholipid is fundamental for the activation of prothrombin to thrombin. Nevertheless, the biochemistry of the intrinsic association between factors Xa and Va is poorly understood. In the present study we have measured the formation of the protein-protein complex in the absence of phospholipid by using analytical ultracentrifugation. Factor Xa or factor Va were respectively modified with a chromophore-peptidyl-chloromethyl ketone or a thiol-specific chromophore, which permitted selective evaluation of the sedimentation of either component by virtue of its unique absorbance properties. Regardless of which protein was labeled, a factor Xa-Va complex (s20,w = 9.8) was formed. The interaction is specific and reversible. In 2 mM Ca2+ and at 20 degrees C, the dissociation constant for the binding of factor Xa to factor Va is 0.8 microM with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The association has multiphasic Ca2+ dependence. At concentrations of Ca2+ below 1 mM or above 2 mM, a weaker protein-protein equilibrium is maintained.  相似文献   

19.
We have determined the rate constants of inactivation of factor Xa and thrombin by antithrombin III/heparin during the process of prothrombin activation. The second-order rate constant of inhibition of factor Xa alone by antithrombin III as determined by using the synthetic peptide substrate S-2337 was found to be 1.1 X 10(6) M-1 min-1. Factor Xa in prothrombin activation mixtures that contained prothrombin, and either saturating amounts of factor Va or phospholipid (20 mol % dioleoylphosphatidylserine/80 mol % dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, 10 microM), was inhibited by antithrombin III with a second-order rate constant that was essentially the same: 1.2 X 10(6) M-1 min-1. When both factor Va and phospholipid were present during prothrombin activation, factor Xa inhibition by antithrombin III was reduced about 10-fold, with a second-order rate constant of 1.3 X 10(5) M-1 min-1. Factor Xa in the prothrombin activation mixture that contained both factor Va and phospholipid was even more protected from inhibition by the antithrombin III-heparin complex. The first-order rate constants of these reactions at 200 nM antithrombin III and normalized to heparin at 1 microgram/mL were 0.33 and 9.5 min-1 in the presence and absence of factor Va and phospholipid, respectively. When the prothrombin concentration was varied widely around the Km for prothrombin, this had no effect on the first-order rate constants of inhibition. It is our conclusion that factor Xa when acting in prothrombinase on prothrombin is profoundly protected from inhibition by antithrombin III in the absence as well as in the presence of heparin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Vesicles composed of phospholipids with different fatty acyl side chains have been utilized to examine the importance of the nonpolar membrane region for the prothrombin-converting activity of procoagulant phospholipid vesicles. Membranes composed of phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) with unsaturated fatty acyl side chains were more active in prothrombin activation than membranes composed of phospholipids with saturated fatty acyl chains. This phenomenon was observed above the phase transition temperature, i.e., on membranes in the liquid-crystalline state. The prothrombin-converting activity of saturated phospholipids approached the activity of unsaturated phospholipids at high factor Va concentrations, which is indicative for a less favorable equilibrium constant for prothrombinase assembly on membrane surfaces composed of saturated phospholipids. The difference between saturated and unsaturated phospholipids was annulled on membranes with high mole percentages of PS. This may result from a compensating contribution of electrostatic forces to the binding equilibria involved in prothrombinase assembly. Additional effects on the prothrombin-converting activity were observed when membranes containing saturated phospholipids were studied below their phase transition temperature. In agreement with Higgins et al. [(1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 3604-3612], we found that the time required for the assembly of prothrombinase from membrane-bound factors Xa and Va is considerably prolonged on solid membranes. However, we also observed an effect of membrane fluidity on the steady-state rate of prothrombin activation. Kinetic experiments at saturating factor Va concentrations showed that the transition from the liquid-crystalline to the gel state caused a more than 9-fold decrease of the kcat of prothrombin activation without affecting the Km for prothrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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