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1.
The kinetics of alpha-factor Xa inhibition by antithrombin III (AT) were studied in the absence and presence of heparin (H) with high affinity for antithrombin by stopped-flow fluorometry at I 0.3, pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C, using the fluorescence probe p-aminobenzamidine (P) and intrinsic protein fluorescence to monitor the reactions. Active site binding of p-aminobenzamidine to factor Xa was characterized by a 200-fold enhancement and 4-nm blue shift of the probe fluorescence emission spectrum (lambda max 372 nm), 29-nm red shift of the excitation spectrum (lambda max 322 nm), and dissociation constant (KD) of about 80 microM. Under pseudo-first order conditions [( AT]0, [H]0, [P]0 much greater than [Xa]0), the observed factor Xa inactivation rate constant (kobs) measured by p-aminobenzamidine displacement or residual enzymatic activity increased linearly with the "effective" antithrombin concentration (i.e. corrected for probe competition) up to 300 microM in the absence of heparin, indicating a simple bimolecular process with a rate constant of 2.1 x 10(3) M-1 s-1. In the presence of heparin, a similar linear dependence of kobs on effective AT.H complex concentration was found up to 25 microM whether the reaction was followed by probe displacement or the quenching of AT.H complex protein fluorescence due to heparin dissociation, consistent with a bimolecular reaction between AT.H complex and free factor Xa with a 300-fold enhanced rate constant of 7 x 10(5) M-1 s-1. Above 25 microM AT.H complex, an increasing dead time displacement of p-aminobenzamidine and a downward deviation of kobs from the initial linear dependence on AT.H complex concentration were found, reflecting the saturation of an intermediate Xa.AT.H complex with a KD of 200 microM and a limiting rate of Xa-AT product complex formation of 140 s-1. Kinetic studies at catalytic heparin concentrations yielded a kcat/Km for factor Xa at saturating antithrombin of 7 x 10(5) M-1 s-1 in agreement with the bimolecular rate constant obtained in single heparin turnover experiments. These results demonstrate that 1) the accelerating effect of heparin on the AT/Xa reaction is at least partly due to heparin promoting the ordered assembly of antithrombin and factor Xa in an intermediate ternary complex and that 2) heparin catalytic turnover is limited by the rate of conversion of the ternary complex intermediate to the product Xa-AT complex with heparin dissociation occurring either concomitant with this step or in a subsequent faster step.  相似文献   

2.
Heparin has been shown to accelerate the inactivation of alpha-thrombin by antithrombin III (AT) by promoting the initial encounter of proteinase and inhibitor in a ternary thrombin-AT-heparin complex. The aim of the present work was to evaluate the relative contributions of an AT conformational change induced by heparin and of a thrombin-heparin interaction to the promotion by heparin of the thrombin-AT interaction in this ternary complex. This was achieved by comparing the ionic and nonionic contributions to the binary and ternary complex interactions involved in ternary complex assembly at pH 7.4, 25 degrees C, and 0.1-0.35 M NaCl. Equilibrium binding and kinetic studies of the binary complex interactions as a function of salt concentration indicated a similar large ionic component for thrombin-heparin and AT-heparin interactions, but a predominantly nonionic contribution to the thrombin-AT interaction. Stopped-flow kinetic studies of ternary complex formation under conditions where heparin was always saturated with AT demonstrated that the ternary complex was assembled primarily from free thrombin and AT-heparin binary complex at all salt concentrations. Moreover, the ternary complex interaction of thrombin with AT bound to heparin exhibited a substantial ionic component similar to that of the thrombin-heparin binary complex interaction. Comparison of the ionic and nonionic components of thrombin binary and ternary complex interactions indicated that: 1) additive contributions of ionic thrombin-heparin and nonionic thrombin-AT binary complex interactions completely accounted for the binding energy of the thrombin ternary complex interaction, and 2) the heparin-induced AT conformational change made a relatively insignificant contribution to this binding energy. The results thus suggest that heparin promotes the encounter of thrombin and AT primarily by approximating the proteinase and inhibitor on the polysaccharide surface. Evidence was further obtained for alternative modes of thrombin binding to the AT-heparin complex, either with or without the active site of the enzyme complexed with AT. This finding is consistent with the ternary complex encounter of thrombin and AT being mediated by thrombin binding to nonspecific heparin sites, followed by diffusion along the heparin surface to a unique site adjacent to the bound inhibitor.  相似文献   

3.
The binding of human alpha-thrombin (IIa) to fibrin polymer (FnIIp) was studied in the presence and absence of a high affinity 20,300 Mr heparin (H) at pH 7.4, I 0.15, and 23 degrees C. In the absence of heparin, thrombin interacts with a high affinity class of binding sites on fibrin polymer with a dissociation constant of 301 +/- 36 nM in a manner which is independent of the enzyme active site. Studies of thrombin binding as a function of heparin and fibrin polymer concentrations imply that a ternary thrombin-fibrin polymer-heparin complex (IIa.FnIIp.H) is formed. Assembly of the ternary complex occurs randomly through the interactions of all three possible intermediate binary complexes; IIa.H, IIa.FnIIp, and FnIIp.H. Using an independently determined value of 280 +/- 35 nM for the FnIIp.H dissociation constant, global fits of the binding data yield a dissociation constant of 15 +/- 6 nM for the IIa.H interaction and 47 +/- 9 nM for the IIa.H intermediate binary complex interaction with FnIIp. These studies indicate that heparin enhances the binding of thrombin to fibrin polymer 6.4-fold with an overall dissociation constant for ternary complex formation of 705 nM2. The effect of heparin molecular weight on ternary complex formation has also been investigated. Heparins of molecular weights 11,200-20,300 behave similarly with respect to their influence on ternary complex formation, whereas heparins of lower molecular weight are less effective in promoting thrombin binding to fibrin polymer. This effect of heparin is also independent of whether it has high or low affinity for antithrombin III. The demonstration of the formation of a ternary IIa.FnIIp.H complex complements kinetic evidence indicating the formation of an analogous ternary complex with fibrin II monomer (Hogg, P. J., and Jackson, C. M. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 86, 3619-3623). The possible implications of these findings for the in vivo distribution and actions of thrombin and the clinical efficacy of heparin are also discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Thrombin (T) inactivation by the serpin, heparin cofactor II (HCII), is accelerated by the glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) dermatan sulfate (DS) and heparin (H). Equilibrium binding and thrombin inactivation kinetics at pH 7.8 and ionic strength (I) 0.125 m demonstrated that DS and heparin bound much tighter to thrombin (K(T(DS)) 1-5.8 microm; K(T(H)) 0.02-0.2 microm) than to HCII (K(HCII(DS)) 236-291 microm; K(HCII(H)) 25-35 microm), favoring formation of T.GAG over HCII.GAG complexes as intermediates for T.GAG.HCII complex assembly. At [GAG] < K(HCII(GAG)) the GAG and HCII concentration dependences of the first-order inactivation rate constants (k(app)) were hyperbolic, reflecting saturation of T.GAG complex and formation of the T.GAG.HCII complex from T.GAG and free HCII, respectively. At [GAG] > K(HCII(GAG)), HCII.GAG complex formation caused a decrease in k(app). The bell-shaped logarithmic GAG dependences fit an obligatory template mechanism in which free HCII binds GAG in the T.GAG complex. DS and heparin bound fluorescently labeled meizothrombin(des-fragment 1) (MzT(-F1)) with K(MzT(-F1)(GAG)) 10 and 20 microm, respectively, demonstrating a binding site outside of exosite II. Exosite II ligands did not attenuate the DS-accelerated thrombin inactivation markedly, but DS displaced thrombin from heparin-Sepharose, suggesting that DS and heparin share a restricted binding site in or nearby exosite II, in addition to binding outside exosite II. Both T.DS and MzT(-F1).DS interactions were saturable at DS concentrations substantially below K(HCII(DS)), consistent with DS bridging T.DS and free HCII. The results suggest that GAG template action facilitates ternary complex formation and accommodates HCII binding to GAG and thrombin exosite I in the ternary complex.  相似文献   

5.
Binding of heparin to human high molecular weight kininogen   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The binding of heparin to high molecular weight kininogen (H-kininogen) was analyzed by the effect of kininogen in decreasing the heparin-induced enhancement of the rate of inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin. The conditions were arranged so that the heparin-catalyzed antithrombin-thrombin reaction, monitored in the presence of the reversible thrombin inhibitor p-aminobenzamidine, followed pseudo-first-order kinetics and the observed rate constant (kappa obsd) varied linearly with the heparin concentration. In the absence of metal ions, H-kininogen minimally affected kappa obsd, measured at a constant concentration of heparin with high affinity for antithrombin (30 nM), at I = 0.15, pH 7.4 and 25 degrees C. However, at a saturating concentration of Zn2+ (10 microM), kappa obsd was reduced to 50% at approximately 20 nM H-kininogen and to that of the uncatalyzed reaction at greater than or equal to approximately 0.2 microM H-kininogen. Conversely, at a saturating concentration of H-kininogen (0.5 microM), kappa obsd was decreased to 50% at approximately 0.6 microM Zn2+ and to the kappa obsd of the uncatalyzed reaction at greater than or equal to 10 microM Zn2+. Other metal ions were effective in the order Zn2+ approximately Ni2+ greater than Cu2+ approximately Co2+ approximately Cd2+. The single-chain and two-chain forms of H-kininogen and the H-kininogen light chain reduced the heparin enhancement in the presence of Zn2+ to the same extent, whereas low molecular weight kininogen had no influence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Covalent antithrombin-heparin (ATH) complexes, formed spontaneously between antithrombin (AT) and unfractionated standard heparin (H), have a potent ability to catalyze the inhibition of factor Xa (or thrombin) by added AT. Although approximately 30% of ATH molecules contain two AT-binding sites on their heparin chains, the secondary site does not solely account for the increased activity of ATH. We studied the possibility that all pentasaccharide AT-binding sequences in ATH may catalyze factor Xa inhibition. Chromatography of ATH on Sepharose-AT resulted in >80% binding of the load. Similar chromatographies of non-covalent AT + H mixtures lead to a lack of binding for AT and fractionation of H into unbound (separate from AT) or bound material. Gradient elution of ATH from Sepharose-AT gave 2 peaks, a peak containing higher affinity material that had greater anti-factor Xa catalytic activity (708 units/mg heparin) compared with the peak containing lower affinity material (112 units/mg). Sepharose-AT chromatography of the ATH component with short heparin chains (相似文献   

7.
Equilibrium binding of human alpha-thrombin to heparin was investigated at pH 7.4 as a function of thrombin and heparin concentrations, NaCl concentration, temperature, and heparin chain length with the extrinsic fluorescence probe, p-aminobenzamidine, or by quantitative affinity chromatography, in order to distinguish between sequence-specific and nonspecific electrostatic modes of binding. Analysis of binding data by a nonspecific binding model developed for protein-nucleic acid interactions, or by the discrete binding site model previously used to analyze the thrombin-heparin interaction, indicated that both models described the binding interaction equally well over the range of thrombin binding densities accessible to measurement. However, the strong dependence of the thrombin-heparin binding interaction on NaCl concentration, its minimal dependence on temperature, and the increase in apparent binding affinity with increasing heparin oligosaccharide chain length were best accounted for by a nonspecific electrostatic association of thrombin with 5 to 6 anionic residues contained in a 3-disaccharide binding site of heparin. This interaction was characterized by an intrinsic dissociation constant (KD,obs) of 6-10 microM at physiological ionic strength. Although the nonspecific binding model satisfactorily described the binding of thrombin to heparin chains ranging in size from 3 to approximately 13 disaccharides in terms of a single intrinsic KD,obs, deviations from this model were apparent with longer heparin chains (approximately 22 to approximately 35 disaccharides) from a progressive decrease in the intrinsic KD,obs of up to 4-fold. Sedimentation equilibrium analyses of thrombin-heparin complexes suggested a second weaker binding site on thrombin for heparin, which accounted for these deviations as well as the observed insolubility of thrombin-heparin complexes at high thrombin binding densities.  相似文献   

8.
The current working model for fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) dimerization and activation requires the assembly of a ternary complex of fibroblast growth factor (FGF), FGFR, and heparin or heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) on the plasma membrane. The recent FGF2-FGFR1-heparin crystal structure provides a detailed but static view of the FGF-FGFR-heparin complex. However, the kinetics of ternary complex assembly has yet to be investigated. Here, we characterize FGF2, FGFR1, and heparin interactions using surface plasmon resonance (SPR). Binding constants for binary FGF2/FGFR1 (KD = 62 nM), FGF2/heparin (KD = 39 nM), and FGFR1/heparin (KD = 3.2 microM) interactions correlate to the magnitude of binding interface observed in the FGF2-FGFR1-heparin crystal structure. Interestingly, comparison of sensorgrams of sequential injections of FGF2 and FGFR1 and equimolar FGF2-FGFR1 injections onto a heparin neoproteoglycan surface demonstrates that FGF2 dramatically enhances the association of FGFR1 with heparin and leads us to propose a model for the stepwise assembly of a ternary FGF-FGFR-HSPG complex. The weak binding affinity of the FGFR1-heparin interaction suggests that in this model, FGFR and HSPG are unbound in the absence of FGF ligand. The availability of FGF results in formation of initial FGF-HSPG complexes, which promotes the rapid binding of FGFR and creates a ternary complex capable of undergoing dimerization and subsequent FGFR activation. In contrast, alternative models for the kinetic assembly of a ternary complex in which binary FGF-FGFR or FGFR-HSPG complexes are intermediates do not conform well with the experimental data.  相似文献   

9.
Numerous studies have shown that fibrin-bound thrombin (IIa) is protected from inhibition by antithrombin (AT) + heparin (H) due to the formation of a ternary fibrin.IIa.H complex. We investigated factors affecting the inhibition of fibrin.IIa by a covalent complex of AT and H (ATH). The rate of IIa reaction with ATH was decreased 2-3-fold by fibrin monomer as compared to 57-fold for AT + heparin with high AT affinity. Furthermore, although the reaction of AT + H with a IIa mutant with decreased H binding (RA-IIa) was inhibited 2-3-fold in the presence of fibrin, reaction rates of ATH + RA-IIa were not reduced by fibrin. The relative difference in the effect of fibrin on the ATH reaction with RA-IIa compared to that for reactions of AT + H with RA-IIa is consistent with the fact that, in the absence of fibrin, the rate of the ATH reaction with RA-IIa relative to IIa was much less reduced (8-fold) compared to the corresponding reactions of AT + H (decreased 306 fold). Similarly, the addition of excess H in the absence of fibrin gave only a small decrease in rate of ATH + IIa reaction. However, in the presence of fibrin, the addition of 40-fold excess H decreased the rate of ATH inhibition of IIa by 1 order of magnitude. Experiments with ATH containing low molecular weight heparin chains with low AT affinity showed that IIa inhibition requires ATH with long chains that activate the AT moiety. Finally, electrophoresis of fibrin +/- ((125)I-)IIa +/- ((125)I-)ATH on native and denaturing gels showed that ATH forms ATH-IIa complexes that remain bound to fibrin through the ATH component. Thus, ATH is a potent inhibitor of fibrin-bound IIa, likely due to the formation of fibrin.ATH-IIa as opposed to fibrin.IIa.H ternary complexes.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated the enzymatic properties of alpha 2-macroglobulin-bound porcine trypsin using a substrate: Z-Gly-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide and two inhibitors: p-aminobenzamidine and basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. The ternary alpha 2-macroglobulin-(trypsin)2 complex behaves like a mixture of two enzymes which bind basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor with widely different affinities (Ki = 0.11 microM and 23 microM). About one-half of the trypsin molecules of the ternary complex are covalently bound to alpha 2-macroglobulin. Preparation of the complex in the presence of hydroxylamine prevents covalent bond formation, but the two trypsins of this artificial complex still exhibit large differences in affinity for basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. The trypsin molecules of the ternary complex also exhibit small differences in their affinity for Z-Gly-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide and p-aminobenzamidine.  相似文献   

11.
J Ellis  C R Bagshaw  W V Shaw 《Biochemistry》1991,30(44):10806-10813
Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) catalyzes the acetyl-CoA-dependent acetylation of chloramphenicol by a ternary complex mechanism with a rapid equilibrium and essentially random order of addition of substrates. Such a kinetic mechanism for a two-substrate reaction provides an opportunity to compare the affinity of enzyme for each substrate in the binary complexes (1/Kd) with corresponding values (1/Km) for affinities in the ternary complex where any effect of the other substrate should be manifest. The pursuit of such information for CAT involved the use of four independent methods to determine the dissociation constant (Kd) for chloramphenicol in the binary complex, techniques which included stopped-flow measurements of on and off rates, and a novel fluorometric titration method. The binary complex dissociation constant (Kd) for acetyl-CoA was measured by fluorescence enhancement and steady-state kinetic analysis. The ternary complex dissociation constant (Km) for each substrate (in the presence of the other) was determined by kinetic and fluorometric methods, using CoA or ethyl-CoA to form nonproductive ternary complexes. The results demonstrate an unequivocal decrease in affinity of CAT for each of its substrates on progression from the binary to the ternary complex, a phenomenon most economically described as negative cooperativity. The binary complex dissociation constants (Kd) for chloramphenicol and acetyl-CoA are 4 microM and 30 microM whereas the corresponding dissociation constants in the ternary complex (Km) are 12 microM and 90 microM, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Binding and endocytosis of heparin by human endothelial cells in culture   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Binding of heparin and low molecular weight heparin fragments (CY 222, Mr range 1500-8000) to human vascular endothelial cells was studied. Primary culture of human umbilical vein endothelial cells and either 125I or 3H-labeled heparin or [125I]CY 222 were used. Slow, saturable and specific binding was found. No other tested glycosaminoglycan, excepting a highly sulfated heparan fraction, was able to compete for heparin binding. Two groups of binding sites for [3H]heparin could be distinguished: one with high affinity (Kd = 0.12 microM) and another with lower affinity (Kd = 1.37 microM) and a relative large capacity of binding (1.16 X 10(7) molecules/cell) was calculated. The Kd for unlabeled heparin, as calculated from competition experiments, was 0.23 microM. Much lower affinity was calculated for unlabeled low molecular weight heparin fragments CY 222 (Kd = 4.3 microM) from competition experiments with [125I]CY 222. The binding reversibility was only partial for unfractionated heparin. Even by chasing with unlabeled compound, a fraction of 25-30% was not dissociable from endothelial cells. This fraction was much lower if incubation was carried out at 4 degrees C. The addition of basic proteins (histones) to the incubation medium greatly enhanced the undissociable binding at 37 degrees C, but not at 4 degrees C. The undissociable fraction of heparin was not available to degradation by purified microbial heparinase. These results suggest that a fraction of bound heparin is internalized by the vascular endothelium.  相似文献   

13.
Specific binding of the anticoagulants heparin and antithrombin III to the blood clotting cascade factor human thrombin was recorded as a function of time with a Love-wave biosensor array consisting of five sensor elements. Two of the sensor elements were used as references. Three sensor elements were coated with RNA or DNA aptamers for specific binding of human thrombin. The affinity between the aptamers and thrombin, measured using the biosensor, was within the same range as the value of K(D) measured by filter binding experiments. Consecutive binding of the thrombin inhibitors heparin, antithrombin III or the heparin-antithrombin III complex to the immobilized thrombin molecules, and binding of a ternary complex of heparin, anithrombin III, and thrombin to aptamers was evaluated. The experiments showed attenuation of binding to thrombin due to heparin-antithrombin III complex formation. Binding of heparin activated the formation of the inhibitory complex of antithrombin III with thrombin about 2.7-fold. Binding of the DNA aptamer to exosite II appeared to inhibit heparin binding to exosite I.  相似文献   

14.
The consequences of the combined effects of fibrin II monomer (FnIIm) and heparin (H) on the hydrolysis of peptidyl p-nitroanilide substrates by thrombin (IIa), the cleavage of prothrombin by thrombin and the thrombin-catalyzed release of fibrinopeptides from fibrinogen have been studied at pH 7.4 and I 0.15. The effects of fibrin II monomer and heparin on chromogenic substrate hydrolysis can be described by a hyperbolic mixed inhibition model in which substrate can interact with four possible enzyme species (IIa, IIa.H, IIa.FnIIm, and IIa.FnIIm.H) that arise as a result of random formation of a ternary complex among thrombin, fibrin II monomer, and heparin (Hogg, P. J. and Jackson, C. M. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 241-247). The formation of the ternary IIa.FnIIm.H complex results in an increase in the Km values of 7.03 +/- 1.17-fold (1.37-9.65 microM) and 1.94 +/- 0.60-fold (38.1-73.9 microM) for H-D-Ile-Pro-Arg-pNA and Cbz-Gly-Pro-Arg-pNA hydrolysis, respectively, and a decrease in the kc values of 0.45 +/- 0.08-fold (49.5-22.3 s-1) and 0.52 +/- 0.05-fold (93.1-48.4 s-1). Fibrin II monomer and heparin in combination also decrease the efficiency (kc/Km) with which thrombin cleaves prothrombin to produce Fragment 1 and Prethrombin 1 by 2.3-fold from 607 +/- 30 to 264 +/- 13 M-1 s-1. In contrast to the effects of fibrin II monomer and heparin on thrombin hydrolysis of chromogenic substrates, its proteolysis of prothrombin and its inactivation by antithrombin III (Hogg, P. J., and Jackson, C. M. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 86, 3619-3623), these components have no discernible influence on the ability of thrombin to cleave fibrinogen. These observations indicate that the substrate specificity of thrombin is altered when it is bound in a complex with fibrin II monomer and heparin and suggest that the catalytic efficiency of thrombin for its physiological substrates will be affected differentially by these interactions. Such ternary complex formation involving thrombin, fibrin II monomer, and heparin may provide a mechanism for selectively regulating thrombin action.  相似文献   

15.
The dissociation constant for the complex of rhodanese and Cibacron Blue, determined by analytical affinity chromatography using rhodanese immobilized on controlled-pore glass (CPG) beads (200 nm pore diameter) and aminohexyl-Cibacron Blue, was 44 microM which agreed well with the kinetic inhibition constant, suggesting that the dye binds at or near the active site of this enzyme. Formation of a binary complex of the dye and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) was also characterized by direct chromatography of LDH on CPG/immobilized Cibacron Blue (KD = 0.29 microM). The binary complex formed between LDH and NADH was characterized by analytical affinity chromatography using both CPG/immobilized LDH and immobilized Cibacron Blue. Since the dye competes with NADH in binding to the active site of LDH, competitive elution chromatography using the immobilized dye allows determination of the dissociation constant of the soluble LDH.NADH complex. Agreement between the dissociation constants determined by direct chromatography of NADH on immobilized LDH (KD = 1.4 microM) and that determined for the soluble complex (KD = 2.4 microM) indicates that immobilization of LDH did not affect the interaction. Formation of various binary, ternary and quaternary complexes of bovine liver glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) with glutamate, NADPH, NADH, and ADP was also investigated using immobilized GDH. This approach allows characterization of the enzyme/ligand interactions without the complicating effect of enzyme self-association. The affinity for NADPH is considerably greater in the ternary complex (including glutamate) as compared to the binary complex (0.38 microM vs 22 microM); however, occupancy of the regulatory site by ADP greatly reduces the affinity in both complexes (6.4 microM and 43 microM, respectively).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
We have examined the binding of [3H]bradykinin to bovine myometrial membranes and assessed its sensitivity to guanine nucleotides. Total binding displayed a typical B2 kinin receptor specificity. However, saturation binding isotherms were resolved into at least two components with KD values of 8 pM (45%) and 378 pM (55%). Low affinity binding exhibited relatively rapid rates of association (kobs = 1.40 x 10(-2) s-1) and dissociation (k-1 = 3.82 x 10(-3) s-1), while high affinity binding exhibited considerably slower rates (kobs = 9.52 x 10(-4) s-1 and k-1 = 4.43 x 10(-5) s-1). Pre-equilibrium dissociation kinetics revealed that formation of high affinity binding was characterized as a time-dependent accumulation of the slow dissociation rate at the expense of at least one other more rapid dissociation rate. In the presence of 10 microM guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate (Gpp(NH)p), at least two binding components were resolved with KD values of 37 pM (12%) and 444 pM (88%). Gpp(NH)p apparently specifically perturbed high affinity binding by completely preventing the accumulation of the slow dissociation phase. Instead, two more rapid dissociation rates (k-1 = 8.53 x 10(-3) s-1 and 4.43 x 10(-4) s-1) were observed. These results suggest that [3H]bradykinin interacts with at least two B2 kinin receptor-like binding sites in bovine myometrial membranes. A three-state model for the guanine nucleotide-sensitive agonist interaction with the high affinity binding sites is proposed.  相似文献   

17.
Heparin and low-molecular-weight heparins (LMWHs) are anticoagulant drugs that mainly inhibit the coagulation cascade by indirectly interacting with factor Xa and factor IIa (thrombin). Inhibition of factor Xa by antithrombin (AT) requires the activation of AT by specific pentasaccharide sequences containing 3-O-sulfated glucosamine. Activated AT also inhibits thrombin by forming a stable ternary complex of AT, thrombin, and a polysaccharide (requires at least an 18-mer/octadeca-mer polysaccharide). The full structure of any naturally occurring octadecasaccharide sequence has yet to be determined. In the context of the development of LMWH biosimilars, structural data on such important biological mediators could be helpful for better understanding and regulatory handling of these drugs. Here we present the isolation and identification of an octadecasaccharide with very high anti-factor Xa activity (∼3 times higher than USP [U.S. Pharmacopeia] heparin). The octadecasaccharide was purified using five sequential chromatographic methods with orthogonal specificity, including gel permeation, AT affinity, strong anion exchange, and ion-pair chromatography. The structure of the octadecasaccharide was determined by controlled enzymatic sequencing and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The isolated octadecasaccharide contained three consecutive AT-binding sites and was tested in coagulation assays to determine its biological activity. The isolation of this octadecasaccharide provides new insights into the modulation of thrombin activity.  相似文献   

18.
The association of heparin with thrombin was investigated by fluorometric titration. A maximum of 25% of the fluorescence of fluorescein-labeled heparin (FTC-heparin) was quenched at thrombin saturation in the absence of NaCl. FTC-heparin (H) associated tightly with thrombin (T) and the association constant of the ternary complex, H2T, formed in the absence of NaCl, was calculated to be 1.7 × 108M?1. However, the association was strongly influenced by the NaCl concentration, and the association constant of the equimolar complex, HT, formed in 0.15M NaCl was found to be 1 × 106M?1. The first-order rate constant, kapp, for inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin III (AT III) and low-affinity heparin (LA-heparin) was comparable with that of high-affinity heparin (HA-heparin) in the absence of NaCl, but decreased with an increase in the concentration of NaCl. The decreased enhancement of the thrombin-AT III reaction by LA-heparin at high NaCl concentration appeared to result from a decreased association of thrombin with LA-heparin, thus reducing the formation of the ternary complex, thrombin-LA-heparin-AT III.  相似文献   

19.
In extensively washed rat cortical membranes [3H](+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5 H-dibenzo [a,d]cyclohepten-5,10-imine ([3H]MK-801) labeled a homogeneous set of sites (Bmax = 1.86 pmol/mg protein) with relatively low affinity (KD = 45 nM). L-Glutamate, glycine, and spermidine produced concentration-dependent increases in specific [3H]MK-801 binding due to a reduction in the KD of the radioligand. In the presence of high concentrations of L-glutamate, glycine, or spermidine, the KD values for [3H]MK-801 were reduced to 11 nM, 18 nM, and 15 nM, respectively. Maximally effective concentrations of combinations of the three compounds further increased [3H]MK-801 binding affinity as follows: L-glutamate + glycine, KD = 6.2 nM; L-glutamate + spermidine, KD = 2.2 nM; glycine + spermidine, KD = 8.3 nM. High concentrations of spermidine did not inhibit either [3H]glycine orf [3H]3-(2-carboxypiperazin-4-yl)propyl-1-phosphonic acid binding to the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor complex. The concentration of L-glutamate required to produce half-maximal enhancement (EC50) of [3H]MK-801 binding was reduced from 218 nM to 52 nM in the presence of 30 microM glycine and to 41 nM in the presence of 50 microM spermidine. The EC50 value for glycine enhancement of [3H]MK-801 binding was 184 nM. This was lowered to 47 nM in the presence of L-glutamate and to 59 nM in the presence of spermidine. Spermidine enhanced [3H]MK-801 binding with an EC50 value of 19.4 microM which was significantly reduced by high concentrations of L-glutamate (EC50 = 3.9 microM) or glycine (EC50 = 6.2 microM).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Although fibrin-bound thrombin is resistant to inactivation by heparin.antithrombin and heparin.heparin cofactor II complexes, indirect studies in plasma systems suggest that the dermatan sulfate.heparin cofactor II complex can inhibit fibrin-bound thrombin. Herein we demonstrate that fibrin monomer produces a 240-fold decrease in the heparin-catalyzed rate of thrombin inhibition by heparin cofactor II but reduces the dermatan sulfate-catalyzed rate only 3-fold. The protection of fibrin-bound thrombin from inhibition by heparin.heparin cofactor II reflects heparin-mediated bridging of thrombin to fibrin that results in the formation of a ternary heparin.thrombin.fibrin complex. This complex, formed as a result of three binary interactions (thrombin.fibrin, thrombin.heparin, and heparin.fibrin), limits accessibility of heparin-catalyzed inhibitors to thrombin and induces conformational changes at the active site of the enzyme. In contrast, dermatan sulfate binds to thrombin but does not bind to fibrin. Although a ternary dermatan sulfate. thrombin.fibrin complex forms, without dermatan sulfate-mediated bridging of thrombin to fibrin, only two binary interactions exist (thrombin.fibrin and thrombin. dermatan sulfate). Consequently, thrombin remains susceptible to inactivation by heparin cofactor II. This study explains why fibrin-bound thrombin is susceptible to inactivation by heparin cofactor II in the presence of dermatan sulfate but not heparin.  相似文献   

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