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1.
Thrombin is an allosteric protease controlled through exosites flanking the catalytic groove. Binding of a peptide derived from hirudin (Hir(52-65)) and/or of heparin to these opposing exosites alters catalysis. We have investigated the contribution of subsites S(2)' and S(3)' to this allosteric transition by comparing the hydrolysis of two sets of fluorescence-quenched substrates having all natural amino acids at positions P(2)' and P(3)'. Regardless of the amino acids, Hir(52-65) decreased, and heparin increased the k(cat)/K(m) value of hydrolysis by thrombin. Several lines of evidence have suggested that Glu(192) participates in this modulation. We have examined the role of Glu(192) by comparing the catalytic activity of thrombin and its E192Q mutant. Mutation substantially diminishes the selectivity of thrombin. The substrate with the "best" P(2)' residue was cleaved with a k(cat)/K(m) value only 49 times higher than the one having the "least favorable" P(2)' residue (versus 636-fold with thrombin). Mutant E192Q also lost the strong preference of thrombin for positively charged P(3)' residues and its strong aversion for negatively charged P(3)' residues. Furthermore, both Hir(52-65) and heparin increased the k(cat)/K(m) value of substrate hydrolysis. We conclude that Glu(192) is critical for the P(2)' and P(3)' specificities of thrombin and for the allostery mediated through exosite 1.  相似文献   

2.
The molecular basis of the substrate and inhibitor specificity of factor Xa, the serine proteinase of the prothrombinase complex, was investigated by constructing two mutants of human antithrombin (HAT) in which the reactive site loop of the serpin from the P4-P4' site was replaced with the corresponding residues of the two factor Xa cleavage sites in prothrombin (HAT/Proth-1 and HAT/Proth-2). These mutants together with prethrombin-2, the smallest zymogen form of thrombin containing only the second factor Xa cleavage site, were expressed in mammalian cells, purified to homogeneity and characterized in kinetic reactions with factor Xa in both the absence and presence of cofactors; factor Va, high affinity heparin and pentasaccharide fragment of heparin. HAT/Proth-1 inactivated factor Xa approximately 3-4-fold better than HAT/Proth-2 in either the absence or presence of heparin cofactors. In the absence of a cofactor, factor Xa reacted with the HAT/Proth-2 and prethrombin-2 with similar second-order rate constants (approximately 2-3x10(2) M(-1)s(-1)). Pentasaccharide catalyzed the inactivation rate of factor Xa by the HAT mutants 300-500-fold. A similar 10(4)-10(5)-fold enhancement in the reactivity of factor Xa with prethrombin-2 and the HAT mutants was observed in the presence of the cofactors Va and heparin, respectively. Factor Va did not influence the reactivity of factor Xa with either one of the HAT mutants. These results suggest that (1) in the absence of a cofactor, the P4-P4' residues of HAT and prethrombin-2 primarily determine the specificity reactions with factor Xa, (2) factor Va binding to factor Xa is not associated with allosteric changes in the catalytic pocket of enzyme that would involve interactions with the P4-P4' binding sites, and (3) similar to allosteric activation of HAT by heparin, a role for factor Va in the prothrombinase complex may involve rearrangement of the residues surrounding the scissile bond of the substrate to facilitate its optimal docking into the catalytic pocket of factor Xa.  相似文献   

3.
The functional importance of the N-terminal epidermal growth factor-like domain (EGF-N) of factor X/Xa (FX/Xa) was investigated by constructing an FX mutant in which the exon coding for EGF-N was deleted from FX cDNA. Following expression and purification to homogeneity, the mutant was characterized with respect to its ability to function as a zymogen for either the factor VIIa-tissue factor complex or the factor IXa-factor VIIIa complex and then to function as an enzyme in the prothrombinase complex to catalyze the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin. It was discovered that EGF-N is essential for the recognition and efficient activation of FX by both activators in the presence of the cofactors. On the other hand, the FXa mutant interacted with factor Va with a normal apparent dissociation constant and activated prothrombin with approximately 3-fold lower catalytic efficiency in the prothrombinase complex. Surprisingly, the mutant activated prothrombin with approximately 12-fold better catalytic efficiency than wild-type FXa in the absence of factor Va. The mutant was inactive in both prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time assays; however, it exhibited a similar specific activity in a one-stage FXa clotting assay. These results suggest that EGF-N of FX is required for the cofactor-dependent zymogen activation by both physiological activators, but it plays no apparent role in FXa recognition of the cofactor in the prothrombinase complex.  相似文献   

4.
Incorporation of prothrombin into the prothrombinase complex is essential for rapid thrombin generation at sites of vascular injury. Prothrombin binds directly to anionic phospholipid membrane surfaces where it interacts with the enzyme, factor Xa, and its cofactor, factor Va. We demonstrate that HD1, a thrombin-directed aptamer, binds prothrombin and thrombin with similar affinities (K(d) values of 86 and 34 nm, respectively) and attenuates prothrombin activation by prothrombinase by over 90% without altering the activation pathway. HD1-mediated inhibition of prothrombin activation by prothrombinase is factor Va-dependent because (a) the inhibitory activity of HD1 is lost if factor Va is omitted from the prothrombinase complex and (b) prothrombin binding to immobilized HD1 is reduced by factor Va. These data suggest that HD1 competes with factor Va for prothrombin binding. Kinetic analyses reveal that HD1 produces a 2-fold reduction in the k(cat) for prothrombin activation by prothrombinase and a 6-fold increase in the K(m), highlighting the contribution of the factor Va-prothrombin interaction to prothrombin activation. As a high affinity, prothrombin exosite 1-directed ligand, HD1 inhibits prothrombin activation more efficiently than Hir(54-65)(SO(3)(-)). These findings suggest that exosite 1 on prothrombin exists as a proexosite only for ligands whose primary target is thrombin rather than prothrombin.  相似文献   

5.
Proteomic identification of protease cleavage site specificity (PICS) is a recent proteomic approach for the easy mapping of protease subsite preferences that determines both the prime- and non-prime side specificity concurrently. Here we greatly facilitate user access by providing an automated and simple web-based data-analysis resource termed WebPics (http://clipserve.clip.ubc.ca/pics/). We demonstrate the utility of WebPics analysis of PICS data by determining the substrate specificity of factor Xa from P6-P6', an important blood coagulation protease that proteolytically generates thrombin from prothrombin. PICS confirms existing data on non-prime site specificity and refines our knowledge of factor Xa prime-site selectivity.  相似文献   

6.
Understanding the active site preferences of an enzyme is critical to the design of effective inhibitors and to gaining insights into its mechanisms of action on substrates. While the subsite specificity of thrombin is understood, it is not clear whether the enzyme prefers individual amino acids at each subsite in isolation or prefers to cleave combinations of amino acids as a motif. To investigate whether preferred peptide motifs for cleavage could be identified for thrombin, we exposed a phage-displayed peptide library to thrombin. The resulting preferentially cleaved substrates were analyzed using the technique of association rule discovery. The results revealed that thrombin selected for amino acid motifs in cleavage sites. The contribution of these hypothetical motifs to substrate cleavage efficiency was further investigated using the B1 IgG-binding domain of streptococcal protein G as a model substrate. Introduction of a P(2)-P(1)' LRS thrombin cleavage sequence within a major loop of the protein led to cleavage of the protein by thrombin, with the cleavage efficiency increasing with the length of the loop. Introduction of further P(3)-P(1) and P(1)-P(1)'-P(3)' amino acid motifs into the loop region yielded greater cleavage efficiencies, suggesting that the susceptibility of a protein substrate to cleavage by thrombin is influenced by these motifs, perhaps because of cooperative effects between subsites closest to the scissile peptide bond.  相似文献   

7.
Prothrombin is activated to thrombin by two sequential factor Xa-catalyzed cleavages, at Arg271 followed by cleavage at Arg320. Factor Va, along with phospholipid and Ca2+, enhances the rate of the process by 300,000-fold, reverses the order of cleavages, and directs the process through the meizothrombin pathway, characterized by initial cleavage at Arg320. Previous work indicated reduced rates of prothrombin activation with recombinant mutant factor Va defective in factor Xa binding (E323F/Y324F and E330M/V331I, designated factor VaFF/MI). The present studies were undertaken to determine whether loss of activity can be attributed to selective loss of efficiency at one or both of the two prothrombin-activating cleavage sites. Kinetic constants for the overall activation of prothrombin by prothrombinase assembled with saturating concentrations of recombinant mutant factor Va were calculated, prothrombin activation was assessed by SDS-PAGE, and rate constants for both cleavages were analyzed from the time course of the concentration of meizothrombin. Prothrombinase assembled with factor VaFF/MI had decreased k(cat) for prothrombin activation with Km remaining unaffected. Prothrombinase assembled with saturating concentrations of factor VaFF/MI showed significantly lower rate for cleavage of plasma-derived prothrombin at Arg320 than prothrombinase assembled with saturating concentrations of wild type factor Va. These results were corroborated by analysis of cleavage of recombinant prothrombin mutants rMz-II (R155A/R284A/R271A) and rP2-II (R155A/R284A/R320A), which can be cleaved only at Arg320 or Arg271, respectively. Time courses of these mutants indicated that mutations in the factor Xa binding site of factor Va reduce rates for both bonds. These data indicate that the interaction of factor Xa with the heavy chain of factor Va strongly influences the catalytic activity of the enzyme resulting in increased rates for both prothrombin-activating cleavages.  相似文献   

8.
Zymogens of the chymotrypsin-like serine protease family are converted to the protease state following insertion of a newly formed, highly conserved N terminus. This transition is accompanied by active site formation and ordering of several surface loops in the catalytic domain. Here we show that disruption of this transition in factor X through mutagenesis (FXa(I16L) and FXa(V17A)) not only alters active site function, but also significantly impairs Na(+) and factor Va binding. Active site binding was improved in the presence of high NaCl or with saturating amounts of factor Va membranes, suggesting that allosteric linkage exists between these sites. In line with this, irreversible stabilization of FXa(I16L) with Glu-Gly-Arg-chloromethyl ketone fully rescued FVa binding. Furthermore, the K(m) for prothrombin conversion with the factor Xa variants assembled into prothrombinase was unaltered, whereas the k(cat) was modestly reduced (3- to 4-fold). These findings show that intramolecular activation of factor X following the zymogen to protease transition not only drives catalytic site activation but also contributes to the formation of the Na(+) and factor Va binding sites. This structural plasticity of the catalytic domain plays a key role in the regulation of exosite expression and prothrombinase assembly.  相似文献   

9.
Serine 525 of human prothrombin was mutated to cysteine and covalently labeled with fluorescein to make II(S525C)-fluorescein. Kinetics of cleavage of this derivative by prothrombinase are identical to those of wild-type prothrombin. Cleavage is coincident with a 50% increase in fluorescence intensity and the product is catalytically inactive. Thus, it allows convenient monitoring of prothrombin activation without generating active thrombin. The kinetics of inhibition of factor Xa (FXa) by antithrombin (AT) and AT-heparin were measured by monitoring activation of II(S525C)-fluorescein and the hydrolysis of the chromogenic substrate S2222 in the presence of AT. With S2222 as the substrate the rate constant for inhibition of FXa, Ca(2+), and unilamellar vesicles of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (75:25) (PCPS) vesicles by AT was 3.51 x 10(3) m(-1) s(-1); when factor Va (FVa) was included the rate constant was 1.55 x 10(3) m(-1) s(-1). In the absence of FVa, II(S525C)-fluorescein had no effect on inhibition. When II(S525C)-fluorescein was the substrate, however, FVa at saturating concentrations profoundly protected FXa from inhibition by AT, increasing the half-life from 3 min with FXa, Ca(2+), PCPS, and II(S525C)-fluorescein, to greater than 69 min when FVa was included. Thus, both FVa and prothrombin are necessary for this level of protection. In the absence of prothrombin, FVa decreased the second order rate constant for inhibition by the AT-heparin complex from 1.58 x 10(7) m(-1) s(-1), for FXa, Ca(2+), and PCPS, to 7.72 x 10(6) m(-1) s(-1). II(S525C)-fluorescein and factor Va together reduced the rate constant to less than 1% of that for FXa, Ca(2+), and PCPS. At a heparin concentration of 0.2 unit/ml, this corresponds to a half-life increase from 1 s to 136 s.  相似文献   

10.
We recently demonstrated that a template mechanism makes a significant contribution to the heparin-accelerated inactivation of factor Xa (FXa) by antithrombin at physiologic Ca(2+), suggesting that FXa has a potential heparin-binding site. Structural data indicate that 7 of the 11 basic residues of the heparin-binding exosite of thrombin are conserved at similar three-dimensional locations in FXa. These residues, Arg(93), Lys(96), Arg(125), Arg(165), Lys(169), Lys(236), and Arg(240) were substituted with Ala in separate constructs in Gla domainless forms. It was found that all derivatives cleave Spectrozyme FXa with similar catalytic efficiencies. Antithrombin inactivated FXa derivatives with a similar second-order association rate constant (k(2)) in both the absence and presence of pentasaccharide. In the presence of heparin, however, k(2) with certain mutants were impaired up to 25-fold. Moreover, these mutants bound to heparin-Sepharose with lower affinities. Heparin concentration dependence of the inactivation revealed that only the template portion of the cofactor effect of heparin was affected by the mutagenesis. The order of importance of these residues for binding heparin was as follows: Arg(240) > Lys(236) > Lys(169) > Arg(165) > Lys(96) > Arg(93) >/= Arg(125). Interestingly, further study suggested that certain basic residues of this site, particularly Arg(165) and Lys(169), play key roles in factor Va and/or prothrombin recognition by FXa in prothrombinase.  相似文献   

11.
A number of studies suggest that blood-clotting factor X (FX) uses secondary site(s) to interact (as a substrate) with its activators. Numerous pieces of evidence also imply that, within prothrombinase (as an enzyme), activated FX (FXa) uses exosite(s) for cofactor Va and/or prothrombin recognition. Similarly, FXa exosite(s) seem to govern interaction with inhibitors. An obvious difference between FXa and thrombin resides within a region called exosite-1: positively charged in thrombin and clearly of opposite polarity in FXa. To investigate the role of this potential cation-binding exosite, we prepared a series of mutants within loops 34-40 and 70-80 of FX. Overall, the mutations induced relatively subtle, non-synergistic modulation. The potential exosite was dispensable for FX activation and is unlikely to constitute a critical region for factor Va binding, albeit it is clearly important for prothrombin activation. Our data also implicate loop 34-40 of FXa in the interaction with the tissue factor pathway inhibitor, in prevention of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 binding, and in tempering inhibition by heparin-activated antithrombin. Compared with FX, mutants with reduced electrostatic potential potentiated thrombin production in FX-depleted plasma, whereas mutants with inverted electrostatic potential impeded clotting. Despite the definite consequences observed, disruption of the potential cation-binding exosite of FX had rather weak effects, far from what would be expected if this region was as crucial as in thrombin.  相似文献   

12.
The factor Va (FVa) inactivation by activated protein C (APC), mediated by cleavages at Arg306 and Arg506 in FVa, is inhibited by both factor Xa (FXa) and prothrombin. Although FXa is known to specifically inhibit the Arg506 cleavage, the effect of prothrombin has not been confined to one cleavage site. We used recombinant FV variants, FV:R506Q/R679Q and FV:R306Q/R679Q, to investigate the effect of prothrombin on the individual cleavage sites. The APC-mediated FVa inhibition was monitored by a prothrombinase-based FVa assay, and apparent first order rate constants were calculated for each of the cleavage sites both in the presence and absence of prothrombin. Prothrombin impaired cleavages at both Arg306 and Arg506 and the inhibition correlated with a delayed appearance of proteolytic products on Western blots. Almost complete inhibition was obtained at around 3 microm prothrombin, whereas half-maximal inhibition was obtained at 0.7 microm prothrombin. After cleavage of prothrombin by thrombin, the inhibitory activity was lost. The inhibitory effect of prothrombin on APC-mediated inhibition of FVa was seen both in the presence and absence of protein S, but in particular for the Arg306 sites, it was more pronounced in the presence of protein S. Thus, prothrombin inhibition of APC inactivation of FVa appears to be due to both impaired APC function and decreased APC cofactor function of protein S. In conclusion, FVa, being part of the prothrombinase complex, is protected from APC by both FXa and prothrombin. Release of products of prothrombin activation from the prothrombinase complex would alleviate the protection, allowing APC-mediated inactivation of FVa.  相似文献   

13.
During the course of prothrombin activation, as catalyzed by Factor Xa, Factor Va, Ca2+, and negatively-charged phospholipid vesicles, the three proteins distribute between the fluid phase and the vesicle surface. On the vesicle, efficient Factor Xa-catalyzed proteolysis yields thrombin plus Fragment 1.2. Further thrombin-catalyzed feedback cleavage of the latter then yields Fragment 1 plus Fragment 2. Prior to this cleavage Fragment 1.2 might retain thrombin at the site of catalysis since it binds both phospholipid and thrombin through its respective Fragment 1 and Fragment 2 domains. In order to study the role of the feedback cleavage, light scattering at right angles was used to deduce the nature of the components associated with the vesicle during prothrombin activation by continuous monitoring of the relative molecular weight of the vesicle-protein complex. When prothrombin (1.4 microM) was added to homogeneously sized phospholipid vesicles of phosphatidylcholine-phosphatidylserine (3:1) at a total phospholipid concentration of 20 microM, the scattering intensity doubled. Upon subsequent addition of Factor Xa and Factor Va (5.0 nM each) the scattering intensity smoothly decreased to a value about 1.25-fold greater than that of the vesicles alone. Analysis of the composition of the reaction mixture at intervals during the course of the reaction by gel electrophoresis and laser densitometry, provided a good correlation between the mass of the vesicle-protein complex measured by light scattering and its mass inferred by composition. In addition, the decrease in mass of the vesicle-protein complex measured by light scattering correlated temporally with cleavage of Fragment 1.2. When the reaction was initiated in the presence of the reversible thrombin inhibitor dansylarginine-N-(3-ethyl-1,5-pentanediyl)amide no cleavage of Fragment 1.2 occurred, as indicated by gel electrophoresis, and no change in the mass of the vesicle-protein complex occurred as indicated by light scattering. The absence of change in scattering intensity in the presence of dansylarginine-N-(3-ethyl-1,5-pentanediyl)amide suggests a 1:1 replacement of prothrombin at the catalytic surface by components of equivalent mass (Fragment 1.2 plus thrombin), whereas the decrease in scattering in the absence of dansylarginine-N-(3-ethyl-1,5-pentanediyl)amide suggests replacement of prothrombin by Fragment 1 only. Together these results indicate that the thrombin-catalyzed cleavage of Fragment 1.2 promotes release of thrombin from the catalytic surface.  相似文献   

14.
Rezaie AR 《Biochemistry》2002,41(40):12179-12185
Specific cleavage of factor V at several P1Arg sites is critical for maintenance of hemostasis. While cleavage by procoagulant proteinases fXa and thrombin activates the cofactor, its cleavage by the anticoagulant proteinase activated protein C (APC) inactivates it. Antithrombin (AT), a specific serpin inhibitor of both thrombin and factor Xa, but not APC, was used as a model system to investigate molecular determinants of APC specificity in the inactivation reaction. Two mutants were prepared in which the P2 or the P3-P3' residues of the reactive site loop of the serpin were replaced with the corresponding residues of the APC cleavage site in factor V spanning residues 504-509 (Asp(504)-Arg-Arg-Gly-Ile-Gln(509)). Kinetic analysis showed that the reactivities of mutants were impaired by approximately 2-3 orders of magnitude with both factor Xa and thrombin, but improved by approximately 2 orders of magnitude with APC. The saturable dependence of the observed first-order rate constants on the concentrations of AT in complex with approximately 70-saccharide high-affinity heparin revealed that changes in the reactivity of the 504-509 mutant with proteinases are primarily due to an effect in the second reaction step in which a noncovalent serpin-proteinase encounter complex is converted to a stable, covalent complex. These results suggest that the P3-P3' residues of the APC cleavage site in factor Va, particularly P2Arg, confer specificity for the anticoagulant proteinase by improving the reactivity of the catalytic pocket with the transition state of the substrate in the second step of the reaction.  相似文献   

15.
Procoagulant factor Va (FVa) is inactivated via limited proteolysis at three Arg residues in the A2 domain by the anticoagulant serine protease, activated protein C (APC). Cleavage by APC at Arg306 in FVa causes dissociation of the A2 domain from the heterotrimeric A1:A2:A3 structure and complete loss of procoagulant activity. To help distinguish inactivation mechanisms involving A2 domain dissociation from inactivation mechanisms involving unfavorable changes in factor Xa (FXa) affinity, we used our FVa homology model to engineer recombinant FVa mutants containing an interdomain disulfide bond (Cys609-Cys1691) between the A2 and A3 domains (A2-SS-A3 mutants) in addition to cleavage site mutations, Arg506Gln and Arg679Gln. SDS-PAGE analysis showed that the disulfide bond in A2-SS-A3 mutants prevented dissociation of the A2 domain. In the absence of A2 domain dissociation from the A1:A2:A3 trimer, APC cleavage at Arg306 alone caused a sevenfold decrease in affinity for FXa, whereas APC cleavages at Arg306, Arg506, and Arg679 caused a 70-fold decrease in affinity for FXa and a 10-fold decrease in the k(cat) of the prothrombinase complex for prothrombin without any effect on the apparent K(m) for prothrombin. Therefore, for FVa inactivation by APC, dissociation of the A2 domain may provide only a modest final step, whereas the critical events are the cleavages at Arg506 and Arg306, which effectively inactivate FVa before A2 dissociation can take place. Nonetheless, for FVa Leiden (Gln506-FVa) inactivation by APC, A2 domain dissociation may become mechanistically important, depending on the ambient FXa concentration.  相似文献   

16.
fgl2 prothrombinase, by its ability to generate thrombin, has been shown to be pivotal to the pathogenesis of viral-induced hepatitis, cytokine-induced fetal loss syndrome, and xeno- and allograft rejection. In this study, the molecular basis of fgl2 prothrombinase activity was examined in detail. Purified fgl2 protein generated in a baculovirus expression system had no measurable prothrombinase activity, whereas the activity was restored when the purified protein was reconstituted into phosphatidyl-L-serine-containing vesicles. Reconstituted fgl2 catalyzed the cleavage of human prothrombin to thrombin with kinetics consistent with a first order reaction, with an apparent V(max) value of 6 mol/min/mol fgl2 and an apparent K(m) value for prothrombin of 8.3 microM. The catalytic activity was totally dependent on calcium, and factor Va (500 nM) enhanced the catalytic efficiency of fgl2 by increasing the apparent V(max) value to 3670 mol/min/mol fgl2 and decreasing the apparent K(m) value for prothrombin to 7.2 microM. By a combination of site-directed mutagenesis and production of truncated proteins, it was clearly shown that residue Ser(89) was critical for the prothrombinase activity of fgl2. Furthermore, fgl2 prothrombinase activity was not inhibited by antithrombin III, soybean trypsin inhibitor, 4-aminobenzamidine, aprotinin, or phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, whereas diisopropylfluorophosphate completely abrogated the activity. In this work we provide direct evidence that fgl2 cleaves prothrombin to thrombin consistent with serine protease activity and requires calcium, phospholipids, and factor Va for its full activity.  相似文献   

17.
Prothrombinase cleaves prothrombin at Arg(271) and Arg(320) to produce thrombin. The kinetics of cleavage of five recombinant prothrombins were measured: wild-type prothrombin (WT-II), R155A/R284A/R271A prothrombin (rMZ-II), R155A/R284A/R320A prothrombin (rP2-II), S525C prothrombin labeled with fluorescein (WT-II-F*), and R155A/R284A/R271A/S525C prothrombin labeled with fluorescein (rMZ-II-F*). rMZ-II and rP2-II are cleaved only at Arg(320) and Arg(271), respectively, to yield the intermediates meizothrombin and prethrombin-2, respectively. WT-II-F* and rMZ-II-F* were labeled at Cys(525) with fluorescein; cleavage was monitored by enhanced fluorescence. Activation kinetics of WT-II, rMZ-II, and rP2-II indicated that the catalytic efficiency of cleavage at Arg(320) was increased by 30,000-fold by the cofactor factor Va, as was the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin. However, factor Va increased cleavage at Arg(271) only by 34-fold. Although WT-II competitively inhibited cleavage of WT-II-F*, rMZ-II or rP2-II did not inhibit completely even at saturating concentrations. However, rMZ-II and rP2-II together inhibited WT-II-F* cleavage competitively. Both WT-II and rMZ-II competitively inhibited rMZ-II-F* cleavage, whereas rP2-II did not. A model of prothrombin activation that includes two equilibrating forms of prothrombinase, each recognizing one of the cleavage sites, is quantitatively consistent with all of the experimental observations. Therefore, we conclude that the kinetics of prothrombin activation can be described by a "ping-pong"-like mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
To investigate the relationship between the individual thrombin cleavages in factor V (FV) and the generation of activated factor X (FXa) cofactor activity, recombinant FV mutants having the cleavage sites eliminated separately or in combination were used. After thrombin incubation, the ability of the FV variants to bind FXa and support prothrombin activation was tested. The interaction between FVa and FXa on the surface of phospholipid was investigated with a direct binding assay as well as in a functional prothrombin activation assay. FV mutated at all cleavage sites functioned poorly as FXa cofactor in prothrombin activation, the apparent K(d) for FXa being approximately 10 nm. Fully activated wild type FVa, yielded an apparent K(d) of around 0.2 nm. The Arg(709) and Arg(1018) cleavages occurred at low thrombin concentrations and decreased the K(d) for FXa binding 5- and 3-fold, respectively. The Arg(1545) cleavage, being less sensitive to thrombin, decreased the K(d) for FXa binding approximately 20-fold. The K(m) for prothrombin was the same for all FV variants, demonstrating B-domain dissociation to result in exposure of binding site for FXa but not for prothrombin. In conclusion, we demonstrate FV activation to be associated with the stepwise release of the B-domain, which results in a gradual exposure of the FXa-binding site.  相似文献   

19.
Prothrombinase activates prothrombin through initial cleavage at Arg(320) followed by cleavage at Arg(271). This pathway is characterized by the generation of an enzymatically active, transient intermediate, meizothrombin, that has increased chromogenic substrate activity but poor clotting activity. The heavy chain of factor Va contains an acidic region at the COOH terminus (residues 680-709). We have shown that a pentapeptide from this region (DYDYQ) inhibits prothrombin activation by prothrombinase by inhibiting meizothrombin generation. To ascertain the function of these regions, we have created a mutant recombinant factor V molecule that is missing the last 30 amino acids from the heavy chain (factor V(Delta680-709)) and a mutant molecule with the (695)DYDY (698) --> AAAA substitutions (factor V(4A)). The clotting activities of both recombinant mutant factor Va molecules were impaired compared to the clotting activity of wild-type factor Va (factor Va (Wt)). Using an assay employing purified reagents, we found that prothrombinase assembled with factor Va(Delta680-709) displayed an approximately 39% increase in k cat, while prothrombinase assembled with factor Va(4A) exhibited an approximately 20% increase in k cat for the activation of prothrombin as compared to prothrombinase assembled with factor Va(Wt). Gel electrophoresis analyzing prothrombin activation by prothrombinase assembled with the mutant molecules revealed a delay in prothrombin activation with persistence of meizothrombin. Our data demonstrate that the COOH-terminal region of factor Va heavy chain is indeed crucial for coordinated prothrombin activation by prothrombinase because it regulates meizothrombin cleavage at Arg(271) and suggest that this portion of factor Va is partially responsible for the enhanced procoagulant function of prothrombinase.  相似文献   

20.
Rezaie AR  He X 《Biochemistry》2000,39(7):1817-1825
The nature of residue 225 on a consensus loop in serine proteases determines whether a protease can bind Na(+). Serine proteases with a Pro at this position are unable to bind Na(+), but those with a Tyr or Phe can bind Na(+). Factor Xa (FXa), the serine protease of the prothrombinase complex, contains a Tyr at this position. Na(+) is also known to stimulate the amidolytic activity of FXa toward cleavage of small synthetic substrates, but the role of Na(+) in the prothrombinase complex has not been investigated. In this study, we engineered a Gla-domainless form of FX (GDFX) in which residue Tyr(225) was replaced with a Pro. We found that Na(+) stimulated the cleavage rate of chromogenic substrates by FXa or GDFXa approximately 8-24-fold with apparent dissociation constants [K(d(app))] of 37 and 182 mM in the presence and absence of Ca(2+), respectively. In contrast, Na(+) minimally affected the cleavage rate of these substrates by the mutant, and no K(d(app)) for Na(+) binding to the mutant could be estimated. Unlike the wild-type enzyme, the reactivity of the mutant with antithrombin was independent of Na(+) and impaired approximately 32-fold. Ca(2+) improved the reactivity of the mutant with antithrombin approximately 5-fold. Affinity of the mutant for binding to factor Va was weakened and its ability to activate prothrombin was severely impaired. Further studies with the wild-type prothrombinase complex revealed that FXa binds to factor Va with a similar K(d(app)) of 1. 1-1.8 nM in the presence of Na(+), K(+), Li(+), Ch(+), and Tris(+) and that the catalytic efficiency of prothrombinase is enhanced less than 1.5-fold by the specific effect of Na(+) in the reaction buffer. These results suggest that (1) the loop including residue 225 (225-loop) is a Na(+) binding site in FXa, (2) the Na(+)- and Ca(2+)-binding loops of FXa are allosterically linked, and (3) the Tyr conformer of the 225-loop is critical for factor Xa function; however, both Na(+)-bound and Na(+)-free forms of factor Xa in the prothrombinase complex can efficiently activate prothrombin.  相似文献   

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