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1.
Factor IX is a vitamin K-dependent zymogen of a serine protease. The NH2-terminal half of the molecule consists of a Ca(2+)-binding gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla)-containing module and two modules homologous to the epidermal growth factor (EGF) precursor. To elucidate the role of these non-catalytic modules of factor IXa beta in factor X activation, we have isolated and characterized fragments of bovine factor IX, containing one or both of the EGF-like modules as well as these modules linked to the Gla module. The fragments were used as inhibitors of factor IXa beta-mediated factor X activation in a plasma clotting system and in systems with purified components of the Xase complex. Fragments consisting of either the two EGF-like modules of factor IX linked together or the NH2-terminal EGF-like module alone were found to inhibit factor Xa generation both in the presence and absence of the cofactor, factor VIIIa. Moreover, a fragment consisting of the corresponding modules of factor X had a similar effect. We therefore propose that factor IXa beta and factor X interact directly through their EGF-like modules on or in the vicinity of a phospholipid surface. We have also found that the isolated Gla module of factor IX inhibits the formation of factor Xa both in the presence and absence of phospholipid but not in the absence of factor VIIIa. Our results are compatible with a model of the Xase complex, in which both the serine protease part and the Gla module of factor IXa beta interact with factor VIIIa.  相似文献   

2.
The Ca(2+) binding 70-80 loop of factor X (fX) contains one basic (Arg(71)) and three acidic (Glu(74), Glu(76), and Glu(77)) residues whose contributions to the zymogenic and enzymatic properties of the protein have not been evaluated. We prepared four Ala substitution mutants of fX (R71A, E74A, E76A, and E77A) and characterized their activation kinetics by the factor VIIa and factor IXa in both the absence and presence of cofactors. Factor VIIa exhibited normal activity toward E74A and E76A and less than a twofold impaired activity toward R71A and E77A in both the absence and presence of tissue factor. Similarly, factor IXa in the absence of factor VIIIa exhibited normal activity toward both E74A and E76A; however, its activity toward R71A and E77A was impaired approximately two- to threefold. In the presence of factor VIIIa, factor IX activated all mutants with approximately two- to fivefold impaired catalytic efficiency. In contrast to changes in their zymogenic properties, all mutant enzymes exhibited normal affinities for factor Va, and catalyzed the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin with normal catalytic efficiencies. However, further studies revealed that the affinity of mutant enzymes for interaction with metal ions Na(+) and Ca(2+) was impaired. These results suggest that although charged residues of the 70-80 loop play an insignificant role in fX recognition by the factor VIIa-tissue factor complex, they are critical for the substrate recognition by factor IXa in the intrinsic Xase complex. The results further suggest that mutant residues do not play a specific role in the catalytic function of fXa in the prothrombinase complex.  相似文献   

3.
A murine monoclonal antibody (IgG1k, Kd approximately 10(-8) M) specific for an epitope located on the heavy chain of human factor IXa was used to study structure-function relationships of factor IX. The antibody inhibited factor IX clotting activity but did not impair activation of factor IX either by factor XIa/calcium or by factor VIIa/tissue factor/calcium. The antibody also did not impair the binding of factor IXa to antithrombin III. Moreover, the antibody did not prevent calcium and phospholipid (PL) from inhibiting the binding of factor IXa to antithrombin III. The antibody also failed to impair activation of factor VII by factor IXa/calcium/PL. Furthermore, the antibody did not interfere with the very slow activation of factor X by factor IXa/calcium/PL. In contrast, the antibody did interfere with factor X activation when reaction mixtures also contained factor VIII:Ca/von Willebrand factor. The marked acceleration of factor X activation observed in control mixtures was not observed in mixtures containing the antibody. Similar results were obtained in reaction mixtures containing the Fab portion of the antibody and factor VIII:Ca free of von Willebrand factor. In additional experiments, factor VIII:Ca/von Willebrand factor was found to inhibit the binding of the antibody to 125I-factor IXa as determined using an immunosorbent assay. Moreover, the antibody displaced factor VIII:Ca from the factor X activator complex (IXa/calcium/PL/VIII:Ca) as evidenced by an altered elution pattern on gel filtration chromatography. From these observations, we conclude that the antibody impairs the clotting activity of factor IXa through interference with its binding of factor VIII:Ca. This suggests a significant role for the heavy chain (residues of 181-415) of factor IXa in binding factor VIII:Ca.  相似文献   

4.
Binding of coagulation factors IX and X to the endothelial cell surface   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Bovine coagulation factors IX and X bind to independent sites on bovine aortic endothelial cells. Binding studies with cells maintained serum-free showed that there are at least two classes of binding sites for factor IX and factor X with a dissociation constant of 4.9 x 10(-9) M and 2.1 x 10(-8) M for the respective high affinity sites. Ca+2 was required for specific binding and was reversed by addition of EDTA or EGTA. Competition experiments showed that factor IX and factor IXa bind to the same sites, which are different from the factor X binding sites. Neither binding of factor IX or factor X is inhibited by addition of prothrombin or protein C. Indirect immunofluorescence of factor IX indicated that binding was diffuse on the cell surface.  相似文献   

5.
When blood coagulation factor IX is converted to activated factor IX (factor IXa), it develops enzymatic activity and exposes the binding sites for both activated factor VIII and the endocytic receptor low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP). In the present study we investigated the interaction between factor IXa and LRP in more detail, using an affinity-purified soluble form of LRP (sLRP). Purified sLRP and full-length LRP displayed similar binding to factor IXa. An anti-factor IX monoclonal antibody CLB-FIX 13 inhibited factor IXa.sLRP complex formation. Both the antibody and a soluble recombinant fragment of LRP (i.e. cluster IV) interfered with factor IXa amidolytic activity, suggesting that the antibody and LRP share similar binding regions near the active site of factor IXa. Next, a panel of recombinant factor IXa variants with amino acid replacements in the surface loops bordering the active site was tested for binding to antibody CLB-FIX 13 and sLRP in a solid phase binding assay. Factor IXa variants with mutations in the region Phe(342)-Asn(346), located between the active site of factor IXa and factor VIII binding helix, showed reduced binding to both antibody CLB-FIX 13 and sLRP. Surface plasmon resonance analysis revealed that the variant with Asn(346) replaced by Asp displayed slower association to sLRP, whereas the variant with residues Phe(342)-Tyr(345) replaced by the corresponding residues of thrombin showed faster dissociation. Recombinant soluble LRP fragment cluster IV inhibited factor IXa-mediated activation of factor X with IC(50) values of 5 and 40 nm in the presence and absence of factor VIII, respectively. This inhibition thus seems to occur via two mechanisms: by interference with factor IXa.factor VIIIa complex assembly and by direct inhibition of factor IXa enzymatic activity. Accordingly, we propose that LRP may function as a regulator of blood coagulation.  相似文献   

6.
Nitrophorin 2 (NP2) is a salivary lipocalin from Rhodnius prolixus that binds with coagulation factors IX (fIX) and IXa (fIXa). Binding of NP2 with fIXa results in potent inhibition of the intrinsic factor Xase complex. A panel of site-directed surface mutants of NP2 was generated to locate determinants of high affinity fIX(a) binding. The locations of the mutations were based on comparisons with the related, but less potent, inhibitor nitrophorin 3 (NP3). Three point mutants (K21A, K92A, and V94A) were found that clearly reduced the inhibitory potency as measured by the activity of a reconstituted factor Xase system. Binding of NP2 with fIXa and fIX as measured by surface plasmon resonance and isothermal titration calorimetry was reduced in a similar manner. Of the three mutants, two (K92A and V94A) were located on the loop connecting beta-strands E and F of the lipocalin beta-barrel. The largest changes were seen with the K92A mutation, which lies at the apex of the loop, with a smaller effect being seen with mutation of Val(94). Combination of four E-F loop mutations (K92A, A93K, V94A, E97A) in a single mutant reduced the inhibitory potency and binding to levels similar to those seen with NP3 without affecting heme or histamine binding.  相似文献   

7.
The interactions of bovine factor IX, its activation intermediate, Factor IX alpha, and its activation products, Factor IXa alpha and Factor IXa beta, with phospholipid vesicles, of mean radius of approx. 30 nm, containing various amounts of phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylcholine (PC), have been examined. For Factor IX, Factor IX alpha, Factor IXa alpha and Factor IXa beta, the dissociation constants, at saturating levels of Ca2+, are independent of the PS concentration in the vesicle after levels of 20-30% (w/w) have been reached, and attain minimum values of approx. 1.7, 1.7, 0.7 and 1.0 microM, respectively, with vesicles containing 50% PS. The amount of protein bound per vesicle particle is independent of the PS content, above 20% PS, for Factor IX and Factor IXa beta, with values of approx. 995-1197 and 1128-1566 molecules/vesicle, respectively. With Factor IX alpha, a dependence on the amount of protein bound with the content of PS is seen, which ranges from 338 to 619 molecules/vesicle with membranes containing 30-50% PS. For Factor IXa alpha, no regularity is noted and a range of 583-1083 molecules of protein/vesicle is observed with the systems employed. Examination of the radii of the proteins on the vesicle demonstrates that Factors IX alpha and IXa alpha occupy considerably more of the surface than do Factors IX and IXa beta, suggesting that a reason for the decreased number of binding sites for the former two proteins on the vesicle may be related to their greater surface spatial requirements.  相似文献   

8.
Comparative interactions of factor IX and factor IXa with human platelets   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Both factor IX and factor IXa were bound to gel filtered platelets in the presence of CaCl2 (2-20 mM) and human alpha-thrombin (0.06-0.2 units/ml) with maximal binding occurring in 10-20 min at 37 degrees C, and rapid reversibility was observed when unlabeled ligands were added in 100-fold molar excess. Competition studies with various coagulation proteins revealed that neither factor XI nor high molecular weight kininogen, at 300-fold molar excess, could compete with 125I-labeled factor IXa for binding sites on thrombin-activated platelets, whereas prothrombin and factor X, in 450-fold molar excess, could displace approximately 15 and 35%, respectively, of bound factor IXa in the absence of added factor VIII. Analysis of saturation binding data in the presence of CaCl2 and thrombin without factors VIII and X indicated the presence of 306 (+/- 57) binding sites per platelet for factor IX (Kd(app) = 2.68 +/- 0.25 nM) and 515 (+/- 39) sites per platelet for factor IXa (Kd = 2.57 +/- 0.14 nM). In the presence of thrombin-activated factor VIII (1-5 units/ml) and factor X (0.15-1.5 microM), the number of sites for factor IX was 316 (+/- 50) with Kd = 2.44 (+/- 0.30) nM and for factor IXa 551 (+/- 48) sites per platelet (Kd = 0.56 +/- 0.05 nM). Studies of competition for bound factor IXa by excess unlabeled factor IX or factor IXa, and direct 125I-labeled factor IXa binding studies in the presence of large molar excesses of factor IX, confirmed the conclusion from these studies that factor IX and factor IXa share approximately 300 low-affinity binding sites per thrombin-activated platelet in the presence of Ca2+ and in the absence of factor VIII and factor X, with an additional 200-250 sites for factor IXa with Kd(app) similar to that for factor IX. The presence of factor VIII and factor X increases by 5-fold the affinity of receptors on thrombin-activated platelets for factor IXa that participate in factor X activation.  相似文献   

9.
Coagulation factor IX contains a gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) module, two epidermal growth factor-like (EGF) modules, and a serine protease region. We have characterized a mouse monoclonal antibody that binds the N-terminal EGF-like module of human factor IX with high affinity. Studies of recombinant factor IX mutants indicated that the epitope is located in the C-terminal end of the EGF-like module, which is consistent with the binding being non-Ca(2+)-dependent. The antibody bound factor IXa (K(D) = 7.6 x 10(-10) M) with about 10-fold higher affinity than factor IX (K(D) = 6.2 x 10(-9) M). Binding of the antibody to factor IXa did not affect the amidolytic activity of the protein, nor was binding affected by active site inhibition of factor IXa. These results are consistent with long-range interactions between the serine protease region and the N-terminal EGF-like module in factor IX.  相似文献   

10.
M Y Wong  J A Gurr  P N Walsh 《Biochemistry》1999,38(28):8948-8960
Factor IXa binding to the activated platelet surface is required for efficient catalysis of factor X activation. Platelets possess a specific binding site for factor IXa, occupancy of which has been correlated with rates of factor X activation. However, the specific regions of the factor IXa molecule that are critical to this interaction have not yet been fully elucidated. To assess the importance of the second epidermal growth factor (EGF2) domain of factor IXa for platelet binding and catalysis, a chimeric protein (factor IXa(Xegf2)) was created by replacement of the EGF2 domain of factor IX with that of factor X. Competition binding experiments showed 2 different binding sites on activated platelets (approximately 250 each/platelet): (1) a specific factor IXa binding site requiring the intact EGF2 domain; and (2) a shared factor IX/IXa binding site mediated by residues G(4)-Q(11) within the Gla domain. In kinetic studies, the decreased V(max) of factor IXa(Xegf2) activation of factor X on the platelet surface (V(max) 2. 90 +/- 0.37 pM/min) versus normal factor IXa (37.6 +/- 0.15 pM/min) was due to its decreased affinity for the platelet surface (K(d) 64.7 +/- 3.9 nM) versus normal factor IXa (K(d) 1.21 +/- 0.07 nM), resulting in less bound enzyme (functional complex) under experimental conditions. The hypothesis that the binding defects of factor IXa(Xegf2) are the cause of the kinetic perturbations is further supported by the normal k(cat) of bound factor IXa(Xegf2) (1701 min(-)(1)) indicating (1) an intact catalytic site and (2) the normal behavior of bound factor IXa(Xegf2). The EGF2 domain is not a cofactor binding site since the mutant shows a normal rate enhancement upon the addition of cofactor. Thus, the intact EGF2 domain of factor IXa is critical for the formation of the factor X activating complex on the surface of activated platelets.  相似文献   

11.
Strong agonists cause platelets to expose a procoagulant surface supporting the assembly of two important coagulation enzyme complexes. Equilibrium binding has determined the density of high affinity saturable factor IXa binding sites to be 500-600 sites/platelet. We have now used flow cytometry to visualize the binding of factor IX and IXa to thrombin- or SFLLRN-activated platelets. Concentrations of these agonists that are half-maximal or maximal in kinetic studies resulted in only a small subpopulation (4-20%) of platelets binding factor IX or IXa with the density of binding sites for factor IX being about half of that for factor IXa, consistent with previous equilibrium binding studies. A small subpopulation (5 +/- 1.5%) of platelets stimulated with either agonist also exposed annexin V binding sites, and this subpopulation of platelets also bound factor IXa. Annexin V decreased factor IXa binding in the presence or absence of factor VIIIa, and factor IXa could also decrease annexin V binding on some platelets indicating a common binding site in agreement with previous studies. All platelets binding factor IXa were positive for glycoprotein IX, at the same glycoprotein IX surface density as seen in platelets negative for factor IXa binding. These studies refine the results from equilibrium binding studies and suggest that, on average, only a small subpopulation (approximately 10%) of PAR 1-stimulated platelets expose approximately 6000 factor IXa binding sites/platelet.  相似文献   

12.
Factor IX is the zymogen of the serine protease factor IXa involved in blood coagulation. In addition to a catalytic domain homologous to the chymotrypsin family, it has Ca2+, phospholipid, and factor VIIIa binding regions needed for full biologic activity. We isolated a nonfunctional factor IX protein designated factor IXEagle Rock (IXER) from a patient with hemophilia B. The variant protein is indistinguishable from normal factor IX (IXN) in its migration on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis, isoelectric point in urea, carbohydrate content and distribution, number of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid residues, and beta-OH aspartic acid content, and in its binding to an anti-IXN monoclonal antibody which has been shown previously to inhibit the interaction of factor VIIIa with factor IXaN. Further, IXER is cleaved to yield a factor IXa-like molecule by factor XIa/Ca2+ at a rate similar to that observed for IXN. However, in contrast to IXaN, IXaER does not bind to antithrombin-III (specific inhibitor of IXaN) and does not catalyze the activation of factor X (substrate) to factor Xa. To identify the mutation in IXER, all eight exons of IXN and IXER gene were amplified by the polymerase chain reaction technique and cloned. A single point mutation (G----T) which results in the replacement of Val for Gly363 in the catalytic domain of IXER was identified. Gly363 in factor IXa corresponds to the universally conserved Gly193 in the active site sequence of the chymotrypsin serine protease family. X-ray crystallographic data in the literature demonstrate a critical role of this Gly in stabilizing the active conformation of chymotrypsin/trypsin in two major ways: 1) in the formation of the substrate binding site; and 2) in the development of the oxyanion hole. Our computer structural data support a concept that the Gly363----Val change prevents the development of the active site conformation in factor IXa such that the substrate binding site and the oxyanion hole are not formed in the mutated enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Factor IX Amagasaki (AMG) is a naturally occurring mutant of factor IX having essentially no coagulant activity, even though normal levels of antigen are detected in plasma. Factor IX AMG was purified from the patient's plasma by immunoaffinity chromatography with an anti-factor IX monoclonal antibody column. Factor IX AMG was cleaved normally by factor VIIa-tissue factor complex, yielding a two-chain factor IXa. Amino acid composition and sequence analysis of one of the tryptic peptides isolated from factor IX AMG revealed that Gly-311 had been replaced by Glu. We identified a one-base substitution of guanine to adenine in exon VIII by amplifying exon VIII using the polymerase chain reaction method and sequencing the product. This base mutation also supported the replacement of Gly-311 by Glu. In the purified system, factor IXa AMG did not activate factor X in the presence of factor VIII, phospholipids, and Ca2+, and no esterase activity toward Z-Arg-p-nitrobenzyl ester was observed. The model building of the serine protease domain of factor IXa suggests that the Gly-311----Glu exchange would disrupt the specific conformational state in the active site environment, resulting in the substrate binding site not forming properly. This is the first report to show the experimental evidence for importance of a highly conserved Gly-142 (chymotrypsinogen numbering) located in the catalytic site of mammalian serine proteases so far known.  相似文献   

14.
Factor IX Alabama is a factor IX variant in which a glycine has been substituted for Asp47 in the first epidermal growth factor (EGF) domain. The structural defect in factor IX Alabama results in a molecule with 10% of normal coagulant activity. The interactions of immunoaffinity-purified factor IX Alabama with its activator, cofactors, and substrate have been investigated to determine the functional defect in the variant. Factor IX Alabama is activated by factor XIa/calcium at near normal rates. Calcium fluorescence-quenching experiments indicate that high affinity calcium binding in the first EGF domain is not altered in factor IX Alabama. The active site of factor IXa Alabama is fully competent to activate factor X in the absence of calcium when using polylysine as a surface to catalyze the reaction. Factor IXa Alabama has only 64% of normal factor IXa activity in the presence of 300 microM CaCl2 in the polylysine-catalyzed system although apparent high affinity calcium binding constants are similar. Factor IXa Alabama has 52-60% of normal activity in a calcium/phospholipid vesicle system. The addition of factor VIIIa to the phospholipid vesicle system decreases the relative rate of factor IXa Alabama to 18-19% of normal. Three-dimensional computer-aided models of the first EGF domain of normal factor IX and factor IX Alabama indicate no major structural alterations resulting from the glycine substitution for Asp47. The model of the first EGF domain of normal factor IX predicts a calcium-binding site involving Asp47, Asp49, Asp64, and Asp65. Our binding data, however, indicate that Asp47 is not necessary to form the high affinity binding site. We conclude that Asp47 in normal factor IX coordinates to the bound calcium, inducing a conformational change in the molecule essential for proper interaction with factor X and factor VIIIa.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of metal ions to bovine factor IX   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The binding isotherms of Ca2+ and Mn2+ to bovine factor IX have been determined at pH 6.5 and pH 7.4, at 25 degrees C. At pH 7.4, at least 2 strong Ca2+ sites, with an average KDISS of 0.1 +/- 0.02 mM, are found. An additional 10 to 11 weaker Ca2+ binding sites, with an average KDISS of 1.3 +/- 0.2 mM are noted, at high levels of Ca2+. At pH 6.5, again at least 2 strong Ca2+ sites on factor IX are evident, with an average KDISS of 0.11 +/- 0.02 mM; but slightly fewer (7 to 8) weaker sites, with an average KDISS of 1.9 +/- 0.3 mM, are obtained. Qualitatively, the binding of Mn2+ to bovine factor IX appears similar to that of Ca2+. At pH 6.5, approximately 2 strong Mn2+ binding sites, with an average KDISS of 13 +/- 1.5 micrometer, and an additional 5 to 6 weak sites, with an average KDISS of 160 +/- 15 micrometer, are present. Manganese does not completely displace Ca2+; and Ca2+ does not completely displace Mn2+ from their respective binding sites. On the other hand, Tb3+ and Sm3+ readily displace Ca2+, at pH 6.5, from its sites on factor IX. The rate and extent of activation of bovine factor IX, by bovine factor XIa, is dependent on the Ca2+ concentration, up to concentrations of Ca2+ which saturate its effect on the system. Substitution of Sr2+ for Ca2+ leads to approximately 50% of the maximum rate of factor IXa formation, and final yield of factor IXa, in this activation system. Manganese does not substitute for Ca2+ in this activation, but does inhibit the stimulatory effect of Ca2+. Both Tb3+ and Sm3+ are effective inhibitors of Ca2+ in factor IX activation by factor XIa.  相似文献   

16.

Introduction

Hemophilia B is an inherited X chromosome–linked disorder characterized by impaired blood clotting owing to the absence of functional coagulation factor IX. Due to the relatively short half-life of factor IX, patients with hemophilia B require frequent factor IX infusions to maintain prophylaxis. We have developed a recombinant factor IX (rFIX) fused to the Fc region of IgG (rFIXFc) with an extended half-life in animals and humans.

Materials and Methods

Procoagulant properties of rFIXFc and rFIX (BENEFIX®) were compared to determine the effect of the Fc region on rFIXFc hemostatic function. Specifically, we assessed rFIXFc activation, intermolecular interactions within the Xase complex, inactivation by antithrombin III (AT) and thrombin generation potential compared with rFIX. We also assessed the acute and prophylactic efficacy profiles of rFIXFc and rFIX in vivo in hemophilia B mouse bleeding models.

Results and Conclusions

The activation by factor XIa or factor VIIa/tissue factor, inhibition by AT, interaction profiles with phospholipids, affinities for factor VIIIa within the context of the Xase complex, and thrombin generation profiles were similar for rFIXFc and rFIX. Xase complexes formed with either molecule exhibited similar kinetic profiles for factor Xa generation. In acute efficacy models, mice infused with rFIXFc or rFIX were equally protected from bleeding. However, in prophylactic efficacy models, protection from bleeding was maintained approximately three times longer in rFIXFc-dosed mice than in those given rFIX; this prolonged efficacy correlates with the previously observed half-life extension. We conclude that rFIXFc retains critical FIX procoagulant attributes and that the extension in rFIXFc half-life translates into prolonged efficacy in hemophilia B mice.  相似文献   

17.
The abilities of normal and three abnormal factor IXa molecules to activate factor X and to bind to phospholipid membranes have been compared to define the contributions of protein-lipid interactions and factor IXa light chain-heavy chain interactions to the functioning of this protein. The abnormal proteins studied had altered amino acid residues in their light chains. The heavy-chain regions, containing the active site serine and histidine residues, were normal in the abnormal proteins on the basis of titration by antithrombin III. The binding constants (Kd) for normal (N), variant [Chapel Hill (CH) and Alabama (AL)], and gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) modified (MOD) factors IX and IXa to phosphatidylserine (PS)/phosphatidylcholine (PC) small, unilamellar vesicles (SUV) were measured by 90 degrees light scattering. The Kd values for factor IXN binding were quite sensitive to the PS content of the membrane but less sensitive to Ca2+ concentrations between 0.5 and 10 mM. The zymogen and activated forms of both normal and abnormal factor IX bound with similar affinities to PS/PC (30/70) SUV. In the cases of factor IXaN and factor IXaAL, but not factor IXaCH or factor IXaMOD, irreversible changes in scattering intensity suggested protein-induced vesicle fusion. Since the activation peptide is not released from factor IXaCH, the normal interaction of factor IXa with a membrane must require the release of the activation peptide and the presence of intact Gla residues. The rate of factor X activation by normal and abnormal factor IXa was obtained by using a chromogenic substrate for factor Xa in the presence of PS/PC (30/70) SUV and 5 mM Ca2+.  相似文献   

18.
Pedicord DL  Seiffert D  Blat Y 《Biochemistry》2004,43(37):11883-11888
Factor XIa is a serine protease which participates in both the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways of blood coagulation. In this work we used active site directed inhibitors to study the mechanism of factor IX activation by factor XIa. To this end, we developed a new sensitive method for the detection of factor IXa based on its affinity to antithrombin III. Using this assay, we found that the peptidic inhibitors, leupeptin and aprotinin, exhibited similar potencies in inhibiting factor IX activation and the cleavage of a tripeptidic chromogenic substrate by factor XIa. As expected, leupeptin and aprotinin were competitive with respect to the tripeptidic chromogenic substrate. However, the inhibition of factor IX activation was best described by mixed-type inhibition with the affinity of leupeptin and aprotinin to the factor XIa-factor IX complex only approximately 10-fold lower than their affinity toward factor XIa. These results, consistent with previous factor XI domain analyses, suggest that the active site of factor XIa does not contribute significantly to the affinity of factor XIa toward factor IX. The competitive component of the inhibition of factor IX activation suggests that binding of factor IX to factor XIa heavy chain affects the interactions of leupeptin and aprotinin with the active site.  相似文献   

19.
Endothelium provides a specific binding site for Factor IX/IXa which can propagate activation of coagulation by promoting Factor IXa-VIII-mediated activation of Factor X. In this report the endothelial cell Factor IX/IXa binding site has been identified and the coagulant function of the receptor blocked. Studies using [3H]Factor IX derivatized with the photoaffinity labeling agent N-succinimidyl-6-(4'-azido-2'-nitrophenylamino)hexanoate (SANPAH) and cultured bovine endothelial cells demonstrated cross-linking to a trypsin-sensitive cell surface protein of Mr approximately equal to 140,000. Immunoprecipitation of metabolically labeled endothelium with Factor IX derivatized with the cleavable cross-linking agent N-succinimidyl(4-azidophenyl)-1,3'-dithiopropionate and antibody to Factor IX demonstrated the endothelial cell origin of the Mr 140,000 cell surface protein. Blockade of the Factor IX/IXa binding protein by covalently linking SANPAH-5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl-Glu-Gly-Arg-Factor IXa or SANPAH-Factor IX prevented both specific Factor IXa binding and effective Factor IXa-VIII-mediated activation of Factor X on endothelium. Following extraction of endothelium with detergents, Factor IX/IXa binding activity was solubilized and could be assayed using a polyvinyl chloride plate binding assay. Western blots of cell extracts demonstrated binding of 125I-Factor IX at Mr approximately equal to 140,000 which was blocked by excess Factor IX, but not antisera to Factor VIII, von Willebrand factor, alpha 2-macroglobulin, or epidermal growth factor receptor. These data indicate that endothelium provides a distinct binding site for Factor IX/IXa consisting, at least in part, of a membrane protein which can modulate the coagulant activity of Factor IXa on the cell surface.  相似文献   

20.
Misenheimer TM  Sheehan JP 《Biochemistry》2010,49(46):9997-10005
Supersulfated low molecular weight heparin (ssLMWH) inhibits the intrinsic tenase (factor IXa-factor VIIIa) complex in an antithrombin-independent manner. Recombinant factor IXa with alanine substitutions in the protease domain (K126A, N129A, K132A, R165A, R170A, N178A, R233A) was assessed with regard to heparin affinity in solution and ability to regulate protease activity within the factor IXa-phospholipid (PL) and intrinsic tenase complexes. In a soluble binding assay, factor IXa K126A, K132A, and R233A dramatically (10-20-fold) reduced ssLMWH affinity, while factor IXa N129A and R165A moderately (5-fold) reduced affinity relative to wild type. In the factor IXa-PL complex, binding affinity for ssLMWH was increased 4-fold, and factor X activation was inhibited with a potency 7-fold higher than predicted for wild-type protease-ssLMWH affinity in solution. In the intrinsic tenase complex, ssLMWH inhibited factor X activation with a 4-fold decrease in potency relative to wild-type factor IXa-PL. The mutations increased resistance to inhibition by ssLMWH in a similar fashion for both enzyme complexes (R233A > K126A > K132A/R165A > N129A/N178A/wild type) except for factor IXa R170A. This protease had ssLMWH affinity and potency for the factor IXa-PL complex similar to wild-type protease but was moderately resistant (6-fold) to inhibition in the intrinsic tenase complex based on increased cofactor affinity. These results are consistent with conformational regulation of the heparin-binding exosite and macromolecular substrate catalysis by factor IXa. An extensive overlap exists between the heparin and factor VIIIa binding sites on the protease domain, with residues K126 and R233 dominating the heparin interaction and R165 dominating the cofactor interaction.  相似文献   

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