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1.
The complex of factor VIIa (FVIIa) with tissue factor (TF) triggers coagulation by recognizing its macromolecular substrate factors IX (FIX) and X (FX) predominantly through extended exosite interactions. In addition, TF mediates unique cell-signaling properties in cancer, angiogenesis, and inflammation that involve proteolytic cleavage of protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2). PAR2 is cleaved by FVIIa in the binary TF·FVIIa complex and by FXa in the ternary TF·FVIIa·FXa complex, but physiological roles of these signaling complexes are incompletely understood. In a screen of FVIIa protease domain mutants, three variants (Q40A, Q143N, and T151S) activated macromolecular coagulation substrates and supported signaling of the ternary TF·FVIIa-Xa complex normally but were severely impaired in binary TF·FVIIa·PAR2 signaling. The residues identified were located in the model-predicted S2′ pocket of FVIIa, and complementary PAR2 P2′ Leu-38 replacements demonstrated that the P2′ side chain was indeed crucial for PAR2 cleavage by TF·FVIIa. In addition, PAR2 was activated more efficiently by FVIIa T99Y, consistent with further contributions from the S2 subsite. The P2 residue preference of FVIIa and FXa predicted additional PAR2 mutants that were efficiently activated by TF·FVIIa but resistant to cleavage by the alternative PAR2 activator FXa. Thus, contrary to the paradigm of exosite-assisted cleavage of PAR1 by thrombin, the cofactor-associated protease FVIIa recognizes PAR2 predominantly by catalytic cleft interactions. Furthermore, the delineated molecular details of this substrate interaction enabled protein engineering of protease-selective PAR2 receptors that will aid further studies to dissect the roles of TF signaling complexes in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
The upstream coagulation enzymes are homologous trypsin-like serine proteases that typically function in enzyme-cofactor complexes, exemplified by coagulation factor VIIa (VIIa), which is allosterically activated upon binding to its cell surface receptor tissue factor (TF). TF cooperates with VIIa to create a bimolecular recognition surface that serves as an exosite for factor X binding. This study analyzes to what extent scissile bond docking to the catalytic cleft contributes to macromolecular substrate affinity. Mutation of the P1 Arg residue in factor X to Gln prevented activation by the TF.VIIa complex but did not reduce macromolecular substrate affinity for TF.VIIa. Similarly, mutations of the S and S' subsites in the catalytic cleft of the enzyme VIIa failed to reduce affinity for factor X, although the affinity for small chromogenic substrates and the efficiency of factor X scissile bond cleavage were reduced. Thus, docking of the activation peptide bond to the catalytic cleft of this enzyme-cofactor complex does not significantly contribute to affinity for macromolecular substrate. Rather, it appears that the creation of an extended macromolecular substrate recognition surface involving enzyme and cofactor is utilized to generate substrate specificity between the highly homologous, regulatory proteases of the coagulation cascade.  相似文献   

3.
Tissue factor (TF) binds the serine protease factor VIIa (FVIIa) to form a proteolytically active complex that can trigger coagulation or activate cell signaling. Here we addressed the involvement of tyrosine kinase receptors (RTKs) in TF/FVIIa signaling by antibody array analysis and subsequently found that EphB2 and EphA2 of the Eph RTK family were cleaved in their ectodomains by TF/FVIIa. We used N-terminal Edman sequencing and LC-MS/MS analysis to characterize the cleaved Eph isoforms and identified a key arginine residue at the cleavage site, in agreement with the tryptic serine protease activity of FVIIa. Protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2) signaling and downstream coagulation activity was non-essential in this context, in further support of a direct cleavage by TF/FVIIa. EphB2 was cleaved by FVIIa concentrations in the subnanomolar range in a number of TF expressing cell types, indicating that the active cellular pool of TF was involved. FVIIa caused potentiation of cell repulsion by the EphB2 ligand ephrin-B1, demonstrating a novel proteolytical event to control Eph-mediated cell segregation. These results define Eph RTKs as novel proteolytical targets of TF/FVIIa and provide new insights into how TF/FVIIa regulates cellular functions independently of PAR2.  相似文献   

4.
The light chain of botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNT/A‐LC) is a Zn‐dependent protease that specifically cleaves SNAP25 of the SNARE complex, thereby impairing vesicle fusion and neurotransmitter release at neuromuscular junctions. The C‐terminus of SNAP25 (residues 141–206) retains full activity for BoNT/A‐LC‐catalyzed cleavage at P1‐P1' (Gln197‐Arg198). Using the structure of a complex between the C‐terminus of SNAP25 and BoNT/A‐LC as a model to design SNAP25‐derived pseudosubstrate inhibitors (SNAPIs) that prevent presentation of the scissile bond to the active site, we introduced multiple His residues to replace Ala‐Asn‐Gln‐Arg (residues 195–198) at the substrate cleavage site, with the intent to identify possible side‐chain interactions with the active site Zn. We also introduced multiple Gly residues between the P1‐P1' residues to explore the spatial tolerance within the active‐site cleft. Using a FRET substrate YsCsY, we compared a series of SNAPIs for inhibition of BoNT/A‐LC. Among the SNAPIs tested, several known cleavage‐resistant, single‐point mutants of SNAP25 were poor inhibitors, with most of the mutants losing binding affinity. Replacement with His at the active site did not improve inhibition over wildtype substrate. In contrast, Gly‐insertion mutants were not only resistant to cleavage, but also surprisingly showed enhanced affinity for BoNT/A‐LC. Two of the Gly‐insertion mutants exhibited 10‐fold lower IC50 values than the wildtype 66‐mer SNAP25 peptide. Our findings illustrate a scenario, where the induced fit between enzyme and bound pseudosubstrate fails to produce the strain and distortion required for catalysis to proceed.  相似文献   

5.
Factor VIIa (FVIIa) is a crucial haemostatic protease consisting of four distinct domains termed the Gla, epidermal growth factor-1 (EGF-1), EGF-2, and protease domains (from N- to C-terminus). The crystal structure of human FVIIa inhibited at the active site with 1, 5-dansyl-Glu-Gly-Arg-chloromethyl ketone and lacking the Gla domain has been solved to a resolution of 2.28 A. The EGF-2 and protease domains were well resolved, whereas no electron density for the EGF-1 domain was observed, suggesting a flexible arrangement or disorder within the crystal. Superposition of the protease domain of the present structure with that previously resolved in the tissue factor (TF)/FVIIai complex revealed that although overall the domain structures are similar, the EGF-2 domain is rotated by 7.5 degrees relative to the protease domain on binding TF. A single cleavage in the protease domain was found, between Arg315 and Lys316 (chymotrypsin numbering 170C-170D) in a FVII-specific insertion loop: this cleavage appeared to be essential for crystallisation. Insertion of the heavy chain N-terminal Ile153 is essentially identical in the two structures, as is the geometry of the active site residues and the inhibitor C-terminal arginine residue. Some differences are seen in the cleaved loop, but changes in TF-contact residues are generally minor. This structure supports the hypothesis that TF binding enables spatial domain arrangements in the flexible FVIIa molecule necessary for procoagulant function and furthermore that active site occupancy induces FVIIa active conformation via N-terminal insertion.  相似文献   

6.
Shobe J  Dickinson CD  Ruf W 《Biochemistry》1999,38(9):2745-2751
Coagulation factor VIIa is an allosterically regulated trypsin-like serine protease that initiates the coagulation pathways upon complex formation with its cellular receptor and cofactor tissue factor (TF). The analysis of a conformation-sensitive monoclonal antibody directed to the macromolecular substrate exosite in the VIIa protease domain demonstrated a conformational link from this exosite to the catalytic cleft that is independent of cofactor-induced allosteric changes. In this study, we identify Glu 154 as a critical surface-exposed exosite residue side chain that undergoes conformational changes upon active site inhibitor binding. The Glu 154 side chain is important for hydrolysis of scissile bond mimicking peptidyl p-nitroanilide substrates, and for inhibition of VIIa's amidolytic function upon antibody binding. This exosite residue is not linked to the catalytic cleft residue Lys 192 which plays an important role in thrombin's allosteric coupling to exosite I. Allosteric linkages between VIIa's active site and the cofactor binding site or between the cofactor binding site and the macromolecular substrate exosite were not influenced by mutation of Glu 154. Glu 154 thus only influences the linkage of the macromolecular substrate binding exosite to the catalytic center. These data provide novel evidence that allosteric regulation of VIIa's catalytic function involves discrete and independent conformational linkages and that allosteric transitions in the VIIa protease domain are not globally coupled.  相似文献   

7.
Ser10 and Lys13 found near the active site tyrosine of Escherichia coli DNA topoisomerase I are conserved among the type IA topoisomerases. Site-directed mutagenesis of these two residues to Ala reduced the relaxation and DNA cleavage activity, with a more severe effect from the Lys13 mutation. Changing Ser10 to Thr or Lys13 to Arg also resulted in loss of DNA cleavage and relaxation activity of the enzyme. In simulations of the open form of the topoisomerase–DNA complex, Lys13 interacts directly with Glu9 (proposed to be important in the catalytic mechanism). This interaction is removed in the K13A mutant, suggesting the importance of lysine as either a proton donor or a stabilizing cation during strand cleavage, while the Lys to Arg mutation significantly distorts catalytic residues. Ser10 forms a direct hydrogen bond with a phosphate group near the active site and is involved in direct binding of the DNA substrate; this interaction is disturbed in the S10A and S10T mutants. This combination of a lysine and a serine residue conserved in the active site of type IA topoisomerases may be required for correct positioning of the scissile phosphate and coordination of catalytic residues relative to each other so that DNA cleavage and subsequent strand passage can take place.  相似文献   

8.
Tissue factor (TF)-mediated factor VII (FVII) activation and a subsequent proteolytic TF-FVIIa binary complex formation is the key step initiating the coagulation cascade, with implications in various homeostatic and pathologic scenarios. TF binding allosterically modifies zymogen-like free FVIIa to its highly catalytically active form. As a result of unresolved crystal structure of the full-length TF1-263-FVIIa binary complex and free FVIIa, allosteric alterations in FVIIa following its binding to full-length TF and the consequences of these on function are not entirely clear. The present study aims to map and identify structural alterations in FVIIa and TF resulting from full-length TF binding to FVIIa and the key events responsible for enhanced FVIIa activity in coagulation. We constructed the full-length TF1-263-FVIIa membrane bound complex using computational modeling and subjected it to molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. MD simulations showed that TF alters the structure of each domain of FVIIa and these combined alterations contribute to enhanced TF-FVIIa activity. Detailed, domain-wise investigation revealed several new non-covalent interactions between TF and FVIIa that were not found in the truncated soluble TF-FVIIa crystal structure. The structural modulation of each FVIIa domain imparted by TF indicated that both inter and intra-domain communication is crucial for allosteric modulation of FVIIa. Our results suggest that these newly formed interactions can provide additional stability to the protease domain and regulate its activity profile by governing catalytic triad (CT) orientation and localization. The unexplored newly formed interactions between EGF2 and TF provides a possible explanation for TF-induced allosteric activation of FVIIa.  相似文献   

9.
Catalytic residues of gamma delta resolvase act in cis.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
M R Boocock  X Zhu    N D Grindley 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(20):5129-5140
The resolvase protein of the gamma delta transposon is a site-specific recombinase that acts by a concerted break-and-join mechanism. To analyse the role of individual resolvase subunits in DNA strand cleavage, we have directed the binding of catalytic mutants to specific recombination crossover sites or half-sites. Our results demonstrate that the resolvase subunit bound at the half-site proximal to each scissile phosphodiester bond provides the Ser10 nucleophile and Arg8, Arg68 and Arg71 residues essential for cleavage and covalent attachment to the DNA. Several other residues near the presumptive active site are also shown to act in cis. Double-strand cleavage at one crossover site can proceed independently of cleavage at the other site, although interactions between the resolvase dimers bound at the two crossover sites remain essential. An appropriately oriented heterodimer of active and inactive protomers can in most cases mediate either a 'top' or 'bottom' single-strand cleavage, suggesting that there is no obligatory order of strand cleavages. Top-strand cleavage is associated with the topoisomerase I activity of resolvase, suggesting that a functional asymmetry may be imposed on the crossover site by the structure of the active synapse.  相似文献   

10.
Tissue factor (TF) is the physiological activator of the coagulation cascade that plays pathophysiological roles in metastasis, angiogenesis, and inflammation. Downstream in coagulation, thrombin is the central protease that signals through G protein-coupled, protease-activated receptors (PARs). However, the TF-VIIa-Xa complex upstream in coagulation also activates PAR1 and 2. Here, we address the question of whether signaling of the TF initiation complex is a relevant pathway that leads to TF cytoplasmic domain phosphorylation. In heterologous expression systems and primary endothelial cells, we demonstrate that the ternary TF-VIIa-Xa complex induces TF phosphorylation specifically by activating PAR2 but not through PAR1 signaling. In addition, TF cytoplasmic domain phosphorylation is induced only by TF-dependent signaling but not by other coagulation factors in endothelial cells. Phosphorylation of the Pro-directed kinase target site Ser258 is dependent on prior phosphorylation of Ser253 by protein kinase C (PKC) alpha. TF phosphorylation is somewhat delayed and coincides with sustained PKCalpha activation downstream of PAR2 but not PAR1 signaling. Phosphatidylcholine-dependent phospholipase C is the major pathway that leads to prolonged PKCalpha recruitment downstream of PAR2. Thus, PAR2 signaling specifically phosphorylates TF in a receptor cross-talk that distinguishes upstream from downstream coagulation protease signaling.  相似文献   

11.
Membrane-type serine protease 1 (MT-SP1) was recently cloned, and we now report its biochemical characterization. MT-SP1 is predicted to be a type II transmembrane protein with an extracellular protease domain. This localization was experimentally verified using immunofluorescent microscopy and a cell-surface biotinylation technique. The substrate specificity of MT-SP1 was determined using a positional scanning-synthetic combinatorial library and substrate phage techniques. The preferred cleavage sequences were found to be (P4-(Arg/Lys)P3-(X)P2-(Ser)P1-(Arg)P1'-(Ala)) and (P4-(X)P3-(Arg/Lys)P2-(Ser)P1(Arg) P1'(Ala)), where X is a non-basic amino acid. Protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2) and single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator are proteins that are localized to the extracellular surface and contain the preferred MT-SP1 cleavage sequence. The ability of MT-SP1 to activate PARs was assessed by exposing PAR-expressing Xenopus oocytes to the soluble MT-SP1 protease domain. The latter triggered calcium signaling in PAR2-expressing oocytes at 10 nm but failed to trigger calcium signaling in oocytes expressing PAR1, PAR3, or PAR4 at 100 nm. Single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator was activated using catalytic amounts of MT-SP1 (1 nm), but plasminogen was not cleaved under similar conditions. The membrane localization of MT-SP1 and its affinity for these key extracellular substrates suggests a role of the proteolytic activity in regulatory events.  相似文献   

12.
Formation of the factor VIIa (FVIIa)‐tissue factor (TF) complex triggers the blood coagulation cascade. Using a structure‐based rationale, we investigated how the length of the linker region between the two epidermal growth factor (EGF)‐like domains in FVIIa influences TF binding and the allosteric activity enhancement, as well as the interplay between the γ‐carboxyglutamic acid (Gla)‐containing and protease domains. Removal of two residues from the native linker was compatible with normal cofactor binding and accompanying stimulation of the enzymatic activity, as was extension by two (Gly‐Ser) residues. In sharp contrast, truncation by three or four residues abolished the TF‐mediated stabilization of the active conformation of FVIIa and abrogated TF‐induced activity enhancement. In addition, FVIIa variants with short linkers associated 80‐fold slower with soluble TF (sTF) as compared with wild‐type FVIIa, resulting in a corresponding increase in the equilibrium dissociation constant. Molecular modeling suggested that the shortest FVIIa variants would have to be forced into a tense and energetically unfavorable conformation in order to be able to interact productively with TF, explaining our experimental observations. We also found a correlation between linker length and the residual intrinsic enzymatic activity of Ca2+‐free FVIIa; stepwise truncation resulting in gradually higher activity with des(83–86)‐FVIIa reaching the level of Gla‐domainless FVIIa. The linker appears to determine the average distance between the negatively charged Gla domain and a structural element in the protease domain, presumably of opposite charge, and proximity has a negative impact on apo‐FVIIa activity.  相似文献   

13.
Protease-activated receptor (PAR) signaling is closely linked to the cellular activation of the pro- and anticoagulant pathways. The endothelial protein C receptor (EPCR) is crucial for signaling by activated protein C through PAR1, but EPCR may have additional roles by interacting with the 4-carboxyglutamic acid domains of procoagulant coagulation factors VII (FVII) and X (FX). Here we show that soluble EPCR regulates the interaction of FX with human or mouse tissue factor (TF)-FVIIa complexes. Mutagenesis of the FVIIa 4-carboxyglutamic acid domain and dose titrations with FX showed that EPCR interacted primarily with FX to attenuate FX activation in lipid-free assay systems. In human cell models of TF signaling, antibody inhibition of EPCR selectively blocked PAR activation by the ternary TF-FVIIa-FXa complex but not by the non-coagulant TF-FVIIa binary complex. Heterologous expression of EPCR promoted PAR1 and PAR2 cleavage by FXa in the ternary complex but did not alter PAR2 cleavage by TF-FVIIa. In murine smooth muscle cells that constitutively express EPCR and TF, thrombin and FVIIa/FX but not FVIIa alone induced PAR1-dependent signaling. Although thrombin signaling was unchanged, cells with genetically reduced levels of EPCR no longer showed a signaling response to the ternary complex. These results demonstrate that EPCR interacts with the ternary TF coagulation initiation complex to enable PAR signaling and suggest that EPCR may play a role in regulating the biology of TF-expressing extravascular and vessel wall cells that are exposed to limited concentrations of FVIIa and FX provided by ectopic synthesis or vascular leakage.  相似文献   

14.
《Biophysical journal》2019,116(10):1823-1835
A critical step in injury-induced initiation of blood coagulation is the formation of the complex between the trypsin-like protease coagulation factor VIIa (FVIIa) and its cofactor tissue factor (TF), which converts FVIIa from an intrinsically poor enzyme to an active protease capable of activating zymogens of downstream coagulation proteases. Unlike its constitutively active ancestor trypsin, FVIIa is allosterically activated (by TF). Here, ensemble refinement of crystallographic structures, which uses multiple copies of the entire structure as a means of representing structural flexibility, is applied to explore the impacts of inhibitor binding to trypsin and FVIIa, as well as cofactor binding to FVIIa. To assess the conformational flexibility and its role in allosteric pathways in these proteases, main-chain hydrogen bond networks are analyzed by calculating the hydrogen-bond propensity. Mapping pairwise propensity differences between relevant structures shows that binding of the inhibitor benzamidine to trypsin has a minor influence on the protease flexibility. For FVIIa, in contrast, the protease domain is “locked” into the catalytically competent trypsin-like configuration upon benzamidine binding as indicated by the stabilization of key structural features: the nonprime binding cleft and the oxyanion hole are stabilized, and the effect propagates from the active site region to the calcium-binding site and to the vicinity of the disulphide bridge connecting with the light chain. TF binding to FVIIa furthermore results in stabilization of the 170 loop, which in turn propagates an allosteric signal from the TF-binding region to the active site. Analyses of disulphide bridge energy and flexibility reflect the striking stability difference between the unregulated enzyme and the allosterically activated form after inhibitor or cofactor binding. The ensemble refinement analyses show directly, for the first time to our knowledge, whole-domain structural footprints of TF-induced allosteric networks present in x-ray crystallographic structures of FVIIa, which previously only have been hypothesized or indirectly inferred.  相似文献   

15.
Persson E  Nielsen LS  Olsen OH 《Biochemistry》2001,40(11):3251-3256
The enzyme factor VIIa (FVIIa) triggers the blood coagulation cascade upon association with tissue factor (TF). The TF-induced allosteric enhancement of FVIIa's activity contributes to the procoagulant activity of the complex, and Met-306 in the serine protease domain of FVIIa participates in this event. We have characterized FVIIa variants mutated in position 306 with respect to their ability to be stimulated by TF. The amidolytic activity of FVIIa mutants with Ser, Thr, and Asn in position 306 was stimulated 9-, 12-, and 7-fold, respectively, by soluble TF as compared to 22-fold for wild-type FVIIa. In contrast, the activity of Met306Asp-FVIIa only increased about 2-fold and that of Met306Asp/Asp309Ser-FVIIa increased about 1.5-fold. Modeling suggests that Asp in position 306 prevents the TF-induced stimulation of FVIIa by disrupting essential intermolecular hydrogen bonds. The ability of the FVIIa variants to catalyze factor X activation and the amidolytic activity were enhanced to a similar extent by soluble TF. This indicates that factor X does not promote its own activation through interactions with exosites on FVIIa made accessible upon FVIIa-TF assembly. Met306Asp-FVIIa binds soluble TF with a dissociation constant of 13 nM (about 3-fold higher than that of FVIIa), and, in sharp contrast to FVIIa, its binding kinetics are unaltered after inactivation with D-Phe-Phe-Arg chloromethyl ketone. We conclude that a single specific amino acid replacement, substitution of Asp for Met-306, virtually prevents the TF-induced allosteric changes which normally result in dramatically increased FVIIa activity and eliminates the effect of the active site inhibitor on TF affinity.  相似文献   

16.
Factor B is a zymogen that carries the catalytic site of the complement alternative pathway C3 convertase. During convertase assembly, factor B associates with C3b and Mg(2+) forming a pro-convertase C3bB(Mg(2+)) that is cleaved at a single factor B site by factor D. In free factor B, a pair of salt bridges binds the Arg(234) side chain to Glu(446) and to Glu(207), forming a double latch structure that sequesters the scissile bond (between Arg(234) and Lys(235)) and minimizes its unproductive cleavage. It is unknown how the double latch is released in the pro-convertase. Here, we introduce single amino acid substitutions into factor B that preclude one or both of the Arg(234) salt bridges, and we examine their impact on several different pro-convertase complexes. Our results indicate that loss of the Arg(234)-Glu(446) salt bridge partially stabilizes C3bB(Mg(2+)). Loss of the Arg(234)-Glu(207) salt bridge has lesser effects. We propose that when factor B first associates with C3b, it bears two intact Arg(234) salt bridges. The complex rapidly dissociates unless the Arg(234)-Glu(446) salt bridge is released whereupon conformational changes occur that activate the metal ion-dependent adhesion site and partially stabilize the complex. The remaining salt bridge is then released, exposing the scissile bond and permitting factor D cleavage.  相似文献   

17.
The complex of coagulation factor VIIa (FVIIa), a trypsin-like serine protease, and membrane-bound tissue factor (TF) initiates blood coagulation upon vascular injury. Binding of TF to FVIIa promotes allosteric conformational changes in the FVIIa protease domain and improves its catalytic properties. Extensive studies have revealed two putative pathways for this allosteric communication. Here we provide further details of this allosteric communication by investigating FVIIa loop swap variants containing the 170 loop of trypsin that display TF-independent enhanced activity. Using x-ray crystallography, we show that the introduced 170 loop from trypsin directly interacts with the FVIIa active site, stabilizing segment 215–217 and activation loop 3, leading to enhanced activity. Molecular dynamics simulations and novel fluorescence quenching studies support that segment 215–217 conformation is pivotal to the enhanced activity of the FVIIa variants. We speculate that the allosteric regulation of FVIIa activity by TF binding follows a similar path in conjunction with protease domain N terminus insertion, suggesting a more complete molecular basis of TF-mediated allosteric enhancement of FVIIa activity.  相似文献   

18.
The protease domain of coagulation factor VIIa (FVIIa) is homologous to trypsin with a similar active site architecture. The catalytic function of FVIIa is regulated by allosteric modulations induced by binding of divalent metal ions and the cofactor tissue factor (TF). To further elucidate the mechanisms behind these transformations, the effects of Zn2+ binding to FVIIa in the free form and in complex with TF were investigated. Equilibrium dialysis suggested that two Zn2+ bind with high affinity to FVIIa outside the N-terminal gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) domain. Binding of Zn2+ to FVIIa, which was influenced by the presence of Ca2+, resulted in decreased amidolytic activity and slightly reduced affinity for TF. After binding to TF, FVIIa was less susceptible to zinc inhibition. Alanine substitutions for either of two histidine residues unique for FVIIa, His216, and His257, produced FVIIa variants with decreased sensitivity to Zn2+ inhibition. A search for putative Zn2+ binding sites in the crystal structure of the FVIIa protease domain was performed by Grid calculations. We identified a pair of Zn2+ binding sites in the Glu210-Glu220 Ca2+ binding loop adjacent to the so-called activation domain canonical to serine proteases. Based on our results, we propose a model that describes the conformational changes underlying the Zn2+-mediated allosteric down-regulation of FVIIa's activity.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

Two distinct populations, active and cryptic forms of tissue factor (TF), reside on the cell surface. Apart from phospholipid contribution, various models have been introduced to explain decryption/encryption of TF. The proposed model, the switching of Cys186–Cys209 bond of TF, has become the matter of controversy. However, it is well accepted that this disulfide has an immense influence upon ligand factor VIIa (FVIIa) for its binding. However, molecular level understanding for this remains unveiled due to lack of detailed structural information. In this regard, we have performed the molecular dynamic study of membrane-bound TF/TF–FVIIa in both the forms (±Cys186–Cys209 allosteric disulfide bond), individually. Dynamic study depicts that disulfide bond provides structural rigidity of TF in both free and ligand-bound forms. This disulfide bond also governs the conformation of FVIIa structure as well as the binding affinity of FVIIa toward TF. Significant differences in lipid–protein interaction profiles of both the forms of TF in the complex were observed. Two forms of TF, oxidized and reduced, have different structural conformation and behave differentially toward its ligand FVIIa. This disulfide bond not only alters the conformation of GLA domain of FVIIa in the vicinity but allosterically regulates the conformation of the distantly located FVIIa protease domain. We suggest that the redox status of the disulfide bond also governs the lipid-mediated interactions with both TF and FVIIa.

Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma  相似文献   

20.
Proteolytic processing of zymogen Factor VII to Factor VIIa (FVIIa) is necessary but not sufficient for maximal proteolytic activity, which requires an additional allosteric influence induced upon binding to its cofactor tissue factor (TF). A key conformational change affecting the zymogenicity of FVIIa involves a unique three-residue shift in the position of beta-strand B2 in their zymogen and protease forms. By selectively introducing new disulfide bonds, we locked the conformation of these strands into an active TF*FVIIa-like state. FVIIa mutants designated 136:160, 137:159, 138:160, and 139:157, reflecting the position of the new disulfide bond (chymotypsinogen numbering), were expressed and purified by TF affinity chromatography. Mass spectrometric analysis of tryptic peptides from the FVIIa mutants confirmed the new disulfide bond formation. Kinetic analysis of amidolytic activity revealed that all FVIIa variants alone had increased specific activity compared to wild type, the largest being for variants 136:160 and 138:160 with substrate S-2765, having 670- and 330-fold increases, respectively. Notably, FVIIa disulfide-locked variants no longer required TF as a cofactor for maximal activity in amidolytic assays. In the presence of soluble TF, activity was enhanced 20- and 12-fold for variants 136:160 and 138:160, respectively, compared to wild type. With relipidated TF, mutants 136:160 and 137:159 also had an approximate threefold increase in their V(max)/K(m) values for FX activation but no significant improvement in TF-dependent clotting assays. Thus, while large rate enhancements were obtained for amidolytic substrates binding at the active site, macro-molecular substrates that bind to FVIIa exosites entail more complex catalytic requirements.  相似文献   

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