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1.
The presence of two unfolding domains in antithrombin III during its denaturation in guanidinium chloride has previously been reported (Villanueva, G. B., and Allen, N. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 11010-11013). In the present work, we report the results of refolding studies on antithrombin III. Circular dichroism and intrinsic fluorescence studies have demonstrated that the first unfolding domain of low stability (midpoint at 0.7 M guanidinium chloride) is irreversible upon renaturation, whereas the second unfolding domain (midpoint at 2.3 M guanidinium chloride) is reversible. The intermediate form of antithrombin III, termed AT-IIIR, which has lost the structural features of the first domain was investigated. Clotting assays and electrophoretic analyses showed that AT-IIIR had lost 60% of heparin cofactor activity but was still capable of forming sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable complexes with thrombin. Although certain regions of this molecule do not refold to the conformation of native antithrombin III, the tryptophan residues refold to a conformation identical with the native state. This was demonstrated by fluorescence quenching, solvent perturbation, and chemical modification studies. However, the tryptophan-ascribed fluorescence enhancement and absorption difference spectrum which occur when heparin binds to antithrombin III are reduced by 70%. On the basis of these data, the binding of heparin to antithrombin III is interpreted in terms of a two-step mechanism. The primary binding occurs in the region without tryptophan and is followed by a secondary conformational rearrangement which affects the tryptophan environment. The mechanism of the binding of heparin and antithrombin III has been previously studied by kinetic methods, and the data also support a two-step mechanism. The agreement of these two studies employing entirely different approaches to the same problem lends support to the validity of this postulated mechanism.  相似文献   

2.
Binding of a synthetic, high-affinity heparin pentasaccharide and of intact heparin to both native and elastase-modified human antithrombin III have been examined by 1H-n.m.r. spectroscopy. The pentasaccharide perturbs many protein resonances in the same way as does intact heparin. There are, however, differences that seem to arise both from fewer contacts in the heparin binding-site when the pentasaccharide binds and from dissimilar conformational changes in the protein. The resonance of the H-2 atom of the histidine, considered to be the N-terminal residue and to be located in the heparin binding-site, is strongly perturbed by heparin binding both to native and modified antithrombin. The pentasaccharide has little effect on this histidine in either protein. Resonances from two of the remaining four histidine units are sensitive to longer-range conformational changes, and show differences between binding of the two heparin species both in native and modified ATIII. It is concluded that the pentasaccharide only partly fills the heparin binding-site and does not produce a conformational change identical to that caused by intact heparin. This is particularly significant as regards the mechanism of action of heparin, because the synthetic pentasaccharide activates ATIII towards Factor Xa, but not towards thrombin.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Heparin cofactor II (Mr = 65,600) was purified 1800-fold from human plasma to further characterize the structural and functional properties of the protein as they compare to antithrombin III (Mr = 56,600). Heparin cofactor II and antithrombin III are functionally similar in that both proteins have been shown to inhibit thrombin at accelerated rates in the presence of heparin. There was little evidence for structural homology between heparin cofactor II and antithrombin III when high performance liquid chromatography-tryptic peptide maps and NH2-terminal sequences were compared. A partially degraded form of heparin cofactor II was also obtained in which a significant portion (Mr = 8,000) of the NH2 terminus was missing. The rates of thrombin inhibition (+/- heparin) by native and partially degraded-heparin cofactor II were not significantly different, suggesting that the NH2-terminal region of the protein is not essential either for heparin binding or for thrombin inhibition. A significant degree of similarity was found in the COOH-terminal regions of the proteins when the primary structures of the reactive site peptides, i.e. the peptides which are COOH-terminal to the reactive site peptide bonds cleaved by thrombin, were compared. Of the 36 residues identified, 19 residues in the reactive site peptide sequence of heparin cofactor II could be aligned with residues in the reactive site peptide from antithrombin III. While the similarities in primary structure suggest that heparin cofactor II may be an additional member of the superfamily of proteins consisting of antithrombin III, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin and ovalbumin, the differences in structure could account for differences in protease specificity and reactivity toward thrombin. In particular, a disulfide bond which links the COOH-terminal (reactive site) region of antithrombin III to the remainder of the molecule and is important for the heparin-induced conformational change in the protein and high affinity binding of heparin does not appear to exist in heparin cofactor II. This observation provides an initial indication that while the reported kinetic mechanisms of action of heparin in accelerating the heparin cofactor II/thrombin and antithrombin III/thrombin reactions are similar, the mechanisms and effects of heparin binding to the two inhibitors may be different.  相似文献   

5.
P Gettins  E W Wooten 《Biochemistry》1987,26(14):4403-4408
The denaturation of human and bovine antithrombin III by guanidine hydrochloride has been followed by 1H NMR spectroscopy. The same unfolding transition seen previously from circular dichroism studies [Villanueva, G. B., & Allen, N. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 14048-14053] at low denaturant concentration was detected here by discontinuous changes in the chemical shifts of the C(2) protons of two of the five histidines in human antithrombin III and of three of the six histidines in bovine antithrombin III. These two histidines in human antithrombin III are assigned to residue 1 and, more tentatively, to residue 65. Two of the three histidines similarly affected in the bovine protein appear to be homologous to residues in the human protein. This supports the proposal of similar structures for the two proteins. In the presence of heparin, the discontinuous titration behavior of these histidine resonances is shifted to higher denaturant concentration, reflecting the stabilization of the easily unfolded first domain of the protein by bound heparin. From the tentative assignment of one of these resonances to histidine-1, it is proposed that the heparin binding site of antithrombin III is located in the N-terminal region and that this region forms a separate domain from the rest of the protein. The pattern of disulfide linkages is such that this domain may well extend from residue 1 to at least residue 128. Thermal denaturation also leads to major perturbation of these two histidine resonances in human antithrombin III, though stable intermediates in the unfolding were not detected.  相似文献   

6.
Heparin cofactor II and antithrombin III are plasma proteins functionally similar in their ability to inhibit thrombin at accelerated rates in the presence of heparin. To further characterize the structural and functional properties of human heparin cofactor II as compared to antithrombin III, we studied the possible significance of arginyl and tryptophanyl residues and the changes in protein structure and activity during guanidinium chloride (GdmCl) denaturation. Both antithrombin and heparin cofactor activities of heparin cofactor II are inactivated by the arginine-specific reagent, 2,3-butanedione. Saturation kinetics are observed during modification and suggest formation of a reversible protease inhibitor-butanedione complex. Quantitation of arginyl residues following butanedione modification shows a loss of about four residues for total inactivation, one of which is essential for antithrombin activity. Arginine-modified heparin cofactor II did not bind to heparin-agarose and implies a role for the other modified arginyl residues during heparin cofactor activity. N-Bromosuccinimide oxidation (20 mol of reagent/mol of protein) of heparin cofactor II results in modification of approximately two tryptophanyl residues with no concomitant loss of heparin cofactor activity. Moreover, there is no enhancement of intrinsic protein fluorescence during heparin binding to the native inhibitor. Circular dichroism measurements show that the structural transition of heparin cofactor II during denaturation is distinctly biphasic, yielding midpoints at 0.6 and 2.6 M GdmCl. Functional protease inhibitory activities are affected to the same extent following denaturation-renaturation at various GdmCl concentrations. The results indicate that arginyl residues are critical for both antithrombin and heparin binding activities. In contrast, tryptophanyl residues are apparently not essential for heparin-dependent interactions. The results also suggest that heparin cofactor II contains two structural domains which unfold at different GdmCl concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
The molecular interactions between components of the heparin-catalyzed antithrombin III/thrombin reaction were investigated by light scattering. When heparin was added to antithrombin III, the molecular weight increased to a maximum and then decreased to that of a 1:1 (antithrombin III X heparin) complex. The initial molecular weights at low heparin to antithrombin III ratios were consistent with the formation of a 2:1 (antithrombin III X heparin) complex in which only one antithrombin III molecule had undergone the conformational change measured by protein fluorescence enhancement. The peak molecular weight never reached that of a complete 2:1 complex. This behavior was observed for bovine and human antithrombin III in the presence of both unfractionated heparin and high molecular weight-high affinity heparin. Pentosane polysulfate also caused some multiple associations. Bovine antithrombin III and thrombin formed a 1:1 complex that underwent further aggregation within minutes, while the human proteins did not aggregate on this time scale after forming the 1:1 complex. In the presence of stoichiometric amounts of heparin, the bovine proteins formed an initial complex of Mr = 230,000 (corresponding to a dimer of heparin-antithrombin III-thrombin) which underwent further aggregation. The human proteins, however, formed a 1:1 (antithrombin III X thrombin) initial complex in the presence of heparin, followed by aggregation. These interactions of thrombin and antithrombin with heparin suggest complex interactions that could relate to heparin function.  相似文献   

8.
Tryptase from human mast cells has been shown (in vitro) to catalyze the destruction of fibrinogen and high-molecular-weight kininogen as well as the activation of C3a and collagenase. Although large amounts of tryptase are released in tissues by degranulating mast cells and levels as high as 1000 ng/ml have been measured in the circulation following systemic anaphylaxis, no specific physiologic inhibitor has yet been found for the protease. The current work tests several more inhibitors for their effects on tryptase and examines any effect of tryptase on these inhibitors. First, antileukoprotease and low-molecular-weight elastase inhibitor from human lung and hirudin and antithrombin III had no effect on tryptase activity in vitro. Second, the possibility that tryptase, being insensitive to the effects of inhibitors, might instead destroy them was also considered. Tryptase failed to cleave and inactivate antileukoprotease, low-molecular-weight elastase inhibitor, alpha 1 protease inhibitor, alpha 2 macroglobulin, and antithrombin III. Third, based on the knowledge that tryptase stability is regulated by its interaction with heparin, antithrombin III was used as a model heparin-binding protein to demonstrate that a protein competitor for heparin-binding sites, presumably by displacement of tryptase, destabilizes this enzyme. Conversely, tryptase, in excess, blocked the binding of antithrombin III to heparin, thereby attenuating the heparin-mediated inhibition of thrombin by antithrombin III.  相似文献   

9.
Heparin, other glycosaminoglycans, and synthetic sulfated polymers have antithrombotic and anticoagulant activities, which may be mediated through a range of interactions with different proteins. A simple, quantitative method has been developed for assessing the affinity of interaction between sulfated polymers and proteins in the liquid phase. This has been used to compare the binding of a range of glycosaminoglycans and other sulfated polymers to antithrombin III and thrombin, a major inhibitor of and a central protease in the coagulation system, respectively. The results are consistent with the binding of naturally occurring glycosaminoglycans to antithrombin III solely through the well-defined antithrombin III-binding pentasaccharide found in heparin, the apparent affinity of a preparation depending upon its content of this pentasaccharide. Highly sulfated synthetic polymers will, however, bind antithrombin III by a second mechanism. The affinity of heparin for thrombin decreased with decreasing molecular weight. However, results obtained with heparan sulfate preparations did not indicate any clear relationship between either molecular weight or sulfate content and thrombin binding, but suggested that there may be an oligosaccharide sequence containing N-sulfate residues which confers high affinity for thrombin. In addition, some of the synthetic sulfated polymers bound thrombin with very high affinity.  相似文献   

10.
Significant differences between saturation kinetic properties of heparin-stimulated reactions between thrombin and antithrombin III from human and bovine species were observed. In both systems, the apparent Km for antithrombin III was higher than the KD for antithrombin III-heparin interaction, monitored by intrinsic protein fluorescence change. The Km for thrombin and kcat were much higher for proteins of the human species than the bovine species. The apparent Km for one human protein was dependent on the concentration of the other human protein, indicating interaction of the binding events. The reaction product formed from the bovine proteins was a potent inhibitor of the reaction but the product from the human proteins was a poor inhibitor. The major differences between the two species appeared to be related to interaction of thrombin or thrombin derivatives with heparin or heparin-antithrombin III complexes.  相似文献   

11.
The rate of the reaction between thrombin and antithrombin III is greatly increased in the presence of heparin. Several mechanisms for this effect are possible. To study the problems commercial heparin was fractionated into one fraction of high anticogulant activity and one of low anticoagulant activity by affinity chromatography on matrix-bound antithrombin III. The strength of the binding of the two heparin fractions to antithrombin III and thrombin, respectively, was determined by a crossed immunoelectrophoresis technique. As was to be expected, the high activity fraction was strongly bound to antithrombin III while the low activity fraction was weakly bound. In contrast, thrombin showed equal binding affinity for both heparin fractions. The ability of the two heparin fractions to catalyse the inhibition of thrombin by antithrombin III was determined and was found to be much greater for the high activity heparin fraction. A mechanism for the reaction between thrombin and antithrombin III in the presence of small amounts of heparin is suggested, whereby antithrombin III first binds heparin and this complex then inhibits thrombin by interaction with both the bound heparin and the antithrombin III.  相似文献   

12.
Studies were conducted to determine the effect of modifying specific functional groups of heparin on its antithrombin III-enhancing activity. The derivatives employed were heparin methyl ester, heparinylglycine and N-desulfated heparin. The carboxyl-modified derivatives increase the rate of inhibition of thrombin by antithrombin III, although not to the same extent as heparin. N-Desulfated heparin is devoid of any activity. Heparin methyl ester is more potent than heparinylglycine in activating antithrombin III, as exhibited by its immediate effect on the thrombin-fibrinogen reaction. However, heparinylglycine is the more effective of the two, in increasing the rate of thrombin deactivation by antithrombin III. The results indicate that although free carboxyl groups of heparin are not crucial for its binding to antithrombin III, they are important for the combination of the latter with thromobin. In contrast, N-sulfates are critical for the interaction of heparin with antithrombin III.  相似文献   

13.
P Gettins 《Biochemistry》1987,26(5):1391-1398
1H NMR has been used to characterize and compare the structures of antithrombin III from human, bovine, and porcine plasma as well as to investigate the interactions of each of these proteins with heparin fragments of defined length. The amino acid compositions of the three proteins are very similar, which is reflected in the gross features of their 1H NMR spectra. In addition, aromatic and methyl proton resonances in upfield-shifted positions appear to be common to all three proteins and suggest similar tertiary structures. Human antithrombin III has five histidine residues, bovine has six, and porcine has five. The C(2) proton from each of these residues gives a narrow resonance and titrates with pH; the pKa's are in the range 5.15-7.25. It is concluded that all histidines in each protein are surface residues with considerable independent mobility. The carbohydrate chains in each protein also give sharp resonances consistent with a surface location and motional flexibility. The 1H spectra are sensitive to heparin binding. Although heparin resonances obscure protein resonances in the region 3.2-6.0 ppm, difference spectra between antithrombin III with and without heparin show clear perturbation of a small number of aromatic and aliphatic protein protons. These resonances include those of histidine C(2) and C(4) protons, of 10-20 other aromatic protons, of a methyl group, and also of protons with chemical shifts similar to those of lysine and/or arginine side chains. For human antithrombin III, it was shown that heparin fragments 8, 10, and 16 sugar residues in length result in almost identical perturbations to the protein. In contrast, tetrasaccharide results in fewer perturbations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Heparin was fractionated by affinity chromatography on immobilized antithrombin III followed by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100. Eighteen fractions were obtained ranging in molecular weight from 9,700 to 34,300 as determined by sedimentation equilibrium. The binding stoichiometries of antithrombin III and thrombin interactions with the heparin of these fractions were measured, using changes in intrinsic and extrinsic fluorescence. Catalytic activity also was measured for each of the heparin fractions. As the molecular weight of heparin varied from about 10,000 to 30,000, the average number of antithrombin and thrombin sites/heparin molecule varied from 1.0 to 2.1 and 2.4 to 6.8. In addition, the molar specific activity increased 5.7-fold, an increase which correlated directly with the product of the number of antithrombin III and thrombin molecules bound. Thus as the number of bound molecules increased with increased molecular weight, the rate of reaction/bound antithrombin III increased in proportion to the number of bound thrombin molecules and vice versa. This can be explained by assuming that heparin functions as a template for both proteins, that all bound thrombin and antithrombin III molecules are accessible to each other, and that the rate at which a bound molecule reacts is proportional to the number of molecules of its interacting counterpart bound. These observations and conclusions are similar to those of Hoylaerts et al. (Hoylaerts, M., Owen, W. G., and Collen, D. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 5670-5677), who demonstrated that the rate at which single molecules of antithrombin III, covalently attached to heparin, react increases as the thrombin binding capacity (chain length) of heparin increases.  相似文献   

15.
The present study has shown that calcium inhibits the heparin-catalyzed antithrombin III/thrombin reaction. The initial rate of thrombin (4.0 nM) inhibition by antithrombin III (200 nM) in the presence of heparin (2.5 ng/ml) decreased from 3.6 nM/min (in the absence of calcium) to 0.12 nM/min in the presence of 10 mM calcium. In the absence of heparin, the initial rate of thrombin inhibition by antithrombin III was not affected by calcium. The heparin-catalyzed antithrombin III/thrombin reaction is described by the general rate equation for a random-order, bireactant, enzyme-catalyzed reaction (M. J. Griffith (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 13899-13902). As such, the reaction is saturable with respect to both thrombin and antithrombin III. The apparent kinetic parameters for the heparin-catalyzed antithrombin III/thrombin reaction were determined in the presence and absence of calcium. The apparent heparin/antithrombin III dissociation constant values were not measurably different in the presence of 0, 1.0, and 3.0 mM calcium. The apparent heparin/thrombin dissociation constant value increased from 7.0 nM, in the absence of calcium, to 10 and 30 nM in the presence of 1.0 and 3.0 mM calcium, respectively. The maximum reaction velocity, at saturation with respect to both proteins, was not affected by calcium. It is concluded that calcium binds to functional groups within the heparin molecule which are required for thrombin binding.  相似文献   

16.
Kinetic characteristics of several heparin preparations and substitute heparins were determined to help understand the bases for activity differences. Several materials were highly active in factor Xa inhibition and the reaction rate at constant factor Xa concentration appeared to be predicted by the extent of intrinsic antithrombin III fluorescence change induced by the polysaccharide. Heparin fractions of different molecular weight and affinity for antithrombin III showed similar kinetic parameters in catalysis of the thrombin-antithrombin III reaction when these parameters were expressed on the basis of antithrombin III-binding heparin. The latter was determined by stoichiometric titration of the antithrombin III fluorescence change by the heparin preparation. However, the various heparin fractions showed very different specific activities per mg of total polysaccharide. This indicated that functional heparin molecules had similar kinetic properties regardless of size or antithrombin III-binding affinity and is possible because the Km for antithrombin III is determined by diffusion rather than by binding affinity. Substitute heparins and depolymerized heparin were poor catalysts for thrombin inhibition, due at least partially to their affinity for thrombin. This latter binary interaction inhibits thrombin reaction in the heparin-catalyzed reaction.  相似文献   

17.
We have compared surface charge and the surface charge density on the polyanions heparin and potassium polyvinyl sulfate (KPVS), as well as on hydrolyzed heparin and KPVS, with their accelerating effect on the inhibitory action of antithrombin III on thrombin. Polyelectrolyte titration of thrombin with KPVS or heparin at pH 7.4 clearly indicates an electrostatic interaction. In contrast, at the same pH no electrostatic interaction is observed between polyanions and antithrombin III. KPVS accelerates the inhibitory action of antithrombin III to the same extent as heparin on the basis of charge equivalence. Heparin and KPVS with a mean distance between two charged centers of less than 0.75 and 0.95 nm, respectively, accelerate strongly whereas hydrolysates with lower charge densities are far less active. The following observations are indicated. Intramolecular neutralization of oppositely charged residues occurs within thrombin, antithrombin III, and partially hydrolyzed heparin. Heparin acts on the antithrombin III-thrombin reaction through cooperative electrostatic binding to thrombin and nonelectrostatic interaction with antithrombin III. This indicates a quasi-catalytic action of the polyelectrolyte. Hydrolysis of only a few N-sulfate residues within the heparin molecule decreases the linear surface charge density to such an extent that the accelerating action is drastically reduced. The loss of accelerating capacity agrees with the sudden loss of counterion condensation due to the decrease of the linear surface charge density beyond limits postulated by Manning in a theory of polyelectrolytes.  相似文献   

18.
The role of antithrombin conformation in heparin-catalyzed inhibition of thrombin was investigated using antithrombins modified with the tryptophan reagent dimethyl (2-hydroxy-5-nitrobenzyl) sulfonium bromide (HNB). Affinity fractionation of HNB-labeled antithrombin (0.6-0.7 mol of HNB/mol of protein) on heparin-Sepharose using a linear salt gradient allowed separation of three singly labeled protein species and a fourth HNB-antithrombin species which co-eluted with unlabeled protein. Conformational alterations induced by heparin binding to each of the labeled antithrombins were assessed by spectroscopic techniques, including protein fluorescence, difference spectroscopy in the ultraviolet-visible range, and circular dichroism. Comparison of spectra of the labeled proteins in the presence and absence of added heparin indicated changes to occur in protein conformation at the sites of the bound HNB moieties and at aromatic amino acid residues within the protein matrix. These spectroscopic alterations mimicked changes induced by heparin in the native protein, but were reduced in magnitude. Rates of thrombin inactivation by the labeled antithrombins were measured over a wide range in both heparin concentration and inhibitor concentration to determine maximal rates of protease inactivation. The kinetic analysis indicated that each of these HNB-antithrombin derivatives, which undergo the heparin-induced changes to varying extents, can react with thrombin at the same maximal rate. Thus, this series of chemically modified antithrombin species demonstrated that the conformational change which is induced in antithrombin by heparin does not render the protein intrinsically more reactive toward thrombin.  相似文献   

19.
Biochemical and physiochemical properties of recombinant human antithrombin III were examined. This protein, produced in Chinese hamster ovary cells, showed a conformation apparently identical with the natural product isolated from human plasma when examined by circular dichroism, UV absorbance, and fluorescence spectroscopy. Comparison of the NH2-terminal sequences of recombinant and human plasma-derived antithrombin III showed that on synthesis and secretion of the recombinant protein from Chinese hamster ovary cells the signal peptide is correctly cleaved by the corresponding endoplasmic signal peptidase. The recombinant antithrombin III has identical properties in heparin binding and biological activities as determined in vitro by two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis, progressive inhibitor, and heparin cofactor assays. Analysis of the carbohydrate portion of recombinant antithrombin III synthesized in Chinese hamster ovary cells revealed glycosylation of the complex type. Characterization of the oligosaccharide chains present in the recombinant protein reveals three major fractions, A (20%), B (60%), and C (20%). Fraction A contains tri- and tetraantennary complex-type oligosaccharides, fraction B contains biantennary oligosaccharides, and fraction C partially truncated biantennary structures. Pharmacokinetic studies with recombinant and plasma-derived antithrombin III in rabbits showed that the clearance behavior of both proteins is very similar and can be described by a double exponential decrease with almost identical kinetic parameters.  相似文献   

20.
Oligosaccharides (10-20 monosaccharide units) with high affinity for antithrombin, as well as larger high-affinity heparin fractions (having relative molecular masses between 6,000 and 21,500), all markedly accelerated the inhibition of Factor Xa by antithrombin. Moreover, all high-affinity oligosaccharides and heparins enhanced, to a similar extent, the amount of free proteolytically modified antithrombin cleaved at the reactive bond by Factor Xa. In contrast, a minimum high-affinity heparin size of approximately 18 monosaccharide units was required to significantly accelerate the inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin and to enhance the production of modified antithrombin by this enzyme. All high-affinity fractions studied had similar affinities for antithrombin, as determined by fluorescence titrations. In competition experiments, binary complexes of antithrombin with octadecasaccharide or larger high-affinity heparins, but not with smaller oligosaccharides, displaced inactivated 125I-thrombin from matrix-linked low-affinity heparin. Moreover, similar binary complexes with 3H-labeled octadecasaccharide or larger chains, but not with smaller oligosaccharides, were capable of binding to matrix-linked inactivated thrombin. These results indicate that simultaneous binding of antithrombin and thrombin to high-affinity heparin is a prerequisite to the acceleration of the antithrombin-thrombin reaction and that the minimum heparin sequence capable of binding both proteins comprises approximately 18 monosaccharide units. Similar complex formation apparently is not required for the acceleration of the antithrombin-Factor Xa reaction.  相似文献   

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