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1.
The interaction of factor VIIa with tissue factor (TF) results in an increase in the catalytic efficiency for the hydrolysis of several synthetic peptidyl p-nitroanilide substrates by factor VIIa. The binding of human recombinant factor VIIa to recombinant human TF incorporated into vesicles containing phosphatidylcholine (TF/PC) or phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine (TF/PCPS) was studied using the increased rate of H-D-phenylalanyl L-pipecoyl L-arginine p-nitroanilide (S2238) hydrolysis as a signal for the interaction. The saturable dependence of rate on increasing concentrations of factor VIIa or TF/PCPS yielded no obvious evidence for cooperativity and could be analyzed according to the interaction of factor VIIa with independent noninteracting sites (Kd = 259 +/- 60 pM, n = 1.05 +/- 0.12 mol of factor VIIa/mol of TF at saturation). Identical titration curves and equilibrium parameters were derived from titrations using TF/PC or TF in the absence of phospholipids, indicating that possible protein-membrane interactions do not further stabilize the extrinsic Xase complex. The dissociation constant for the interaction of factor VIIa with TF/PCPS inferred from measurements of factor X activation (Kd = 197 +/- 38 pM) was comparable with the values obtained from measurements of S2238 hydrolysis. In contrast to the membrane-independent nature of the enzyme-cofactor interaction, the rate of factor X activation was reduced by approximately 50-fold when the enzyme complex was assembled using solution-phase TF. Collectively, the result indicate that the membrane dependence of extrinsic Xase function primarily results from an influence of the membrane surface on factor X utilization.  相似文献   

2.
The activation of human coagulation factor IX by human tissue factor.factor VIIa.PCPS.Ca2+ (TF.VIIa.PCPS.Ca2+) and factor Xa.PCPS.Ca2+ enzyme complexes was investigated. Reactions were performed in a highly purified system consisting of isolated human plasma proteins and recombinant human tissue factor with synthetic phospholipid vesicles (PCPS: 75% phosphatidylcholine (PC), 25% phosphatidylserine (PS)). Factor IX activation was evaluated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, [3H]factor IX activation peptide assay, colorimetric substrate thiobenzyl benzyloxycarbonyl-L-lysinate (Z-Lys-SBzl) hydrolysis, and specific incorporation of a fluorescent peptidyl chloromethyl ketone. Factor IX activation by the TF.VIIa.PCPS.Ca2+ enzyme complex was observed to proceed through the obligate non-enzymatic intermediate species factor IX alpha. The simultaneous activation of human coagulation factors IX and X by the TF.VIIa.PCPS.Ca2+ enzyme complex were investigated. When factors IX and X were presented to the TF.VIIa complex, at equal concentrations, it was observed that the rate of factor IX activation remained unchanged while the rate of factor X activation slowed by 45%. When the proteolytic cleavage products of this reaction were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, it was observed that the intermediate species factor IX alpha was generated more rapidly when factor X was present in the reaction mixture. When factor IX was treated with factor Xa.PCPS in the presence of Ca2+, it was observed that factor IX was rapidly converted to factor IX alpha. The activation of factor IX alpha by the TF.VIIa.PCPS.Ca2+ complex was evaluated, and it was observed that factor IX alpha was activated more rapidly by the TF.VIIa.PCPS.Ca2+ complex than was factor IX itself. These data suggest that factors IX and X, when presented to the TF.VIIa.PCPS.Ca2+ enzyme complex, are both rapidly activated and that factor Xa, which is generated in the initial stages of the extrinsic pathway, participates in the first proteolytic step in the activation of factor IX, the generation of factor IX alpha.  相似文献   

3.
The initiation of coagulation results from the activation of factor X by an enzyme complex (Xase) composed of the trypsin-like serine proteinase, factor VIIa, bound to tissue factor (TF) on phospholipid membranes. We have investigated the basis for the protein substrate specificity of Xase using TF reconstituted into vesicles of phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, or pure phosphatidylcholine. We show that occupation of the active site of VIIa within Xase by a reversible inhibitor or an alternate peptidyl substrate is sufficient to exclude substrate interactions at the active site but does not alter the affinity of Xase for factor X. This is evident as classical competitive inhibition of peptidyl substrate cleavage but as classical noncompetitive inhibition of factor X activation by active site-directed ligands. This implies that the productive recognition of factor X by Xase arises from a multistep reaction requiring an initial interaction at sites on the enzyme complex distinct from the active site (exosites), followed by active site interactions and bond cleavage. Exosite interactions determine protein substrate affinity, whereas the second binding step influences the maximum catalytic rate for the reaction. We also show that competitive inhibition can be achieved by interfering with exosite binding using factor X derivatives that are expected to have limited or abrogated interactions with the active site of VIIa within Xase. Thus, substrate interactions at exosites, sites removed from the active site of VIIa within the enzyme complex, determine affinity and binding specificity in the productive recognition of factor X by the VIIa-TF complex. This may represent a prevalent strategy through which distinctive protein substrate specificities are achieved by the homologous enzymes of coagulation.  相似文献   

4.
Equilibrium binding studies of prothrombinase complex formation were undertaken using phospholipid vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (PCPS), factor Va, and factor Xa modified with dansyl glutamylglycinylarginyl chloromethyl ketone (DEGR.Xa). The interaction between the Va.PCPS and DEGR.Xa.PCPS binary complexes was experimentally isolated using saturating concentrations of PCPS. Fluorescence titrations indicated that the membrane-bound proteins interact tightly (Kd approximately 10(-9) M) with a stoichiometry of 1 mol of Va bound/mol of DEGR.Xa at saturation. Complex formation was also investigated by kinetic studies of prothrombin activation using unmodified factor Xa. The kinetic studies yielded a Kd approximately 10(-9) M, which was independent of the concentration of prothrombin in the range of 0.5-5.0 microM. Fluorescence studies of complex assembly at limiting PCPS concentrations provided evidence for an altered DEGR.Xa-PCPS interaction when the enzyme was assembled into the complex. The data suggest that although both proteins are associated with PCPS when complexed with each other, the presence of factor Va on the membrane surface increases the affinity for the Xa-PCPS interaction by an estimated 100-fold. Prothrombinase complex assembly therefore proceeds independently of the availability of substrate and is stabilized by protein-protein and protein-phospholipid interactions. Linkage between the two protein-membrane combination events leads to the further stabilization of the complex on the vesicle surface.  相似文献   

5.
The activation of factor X by factor IXa (fIXa) in the presence of phosphatidylcholine-phosphatidylserine (PCPS) vesicles is markedly accelerated by thrombin-activated factor VIII (fVIIIa). The interaction between highly purified fVIIIa and fIXa in this complex was studied fluorometrically at 25 degrees C by using a derivative of D-phenylalanyl-prolyl-arginyl-fIXa which was modified at the active site with fluorescein-5-maleimide (Fl-M-FPR-fIXa). Titration of Fl-M-FPR-fIXa with fVIIIa at fixed PCPS resulted in a large, saturable increase in anisotropy (delta r = 0.09). The titration data were fit to a model assuming a reversible equilibrium between fVIIIa and fIXa, resulting in an apparent dissociation constant of 2 nM and a stoichiometry of 1 mol of fVIIIa/mol of Fl-M-FPR-fIXa. The initial velocity of factor X activation was measured under identical conditions except that active fIXa and factor X were included, which yielded binding parameters similar to those determined fluorometrically. Thus, the fluorescence method accurately reflects complex formation between fVIIIa and fIXa on the phospholipid surface, and the fVIIIa-fIXa interaction is not influenced by the presence of the substrate, factor X. Addition of fVIII to Fl-M-FPR-fIXa and PCPS produced a small, saturable increase in anisotropy (delta r = 0.03), followed by a larger increase (delta r = 0.07) upon addition of thrombin to activate fVIII. Thus, fVIII binds fIXa, but proteolytic modification of fVIII must occur before the complete fVIIIa-dependent structural change in the active site of fIXa, as reflected in the anisotropy change, occurs  相似文献   

6.
Falls LA  Furie B  Furie BC 《Biochemistry》2000,39(43):13216-13222
Phospholipid membranes play a significant role during the proteolytic activation of blood coagulation proteins. This investigation identifies a role for phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) during the activation of factor X by the tenase complex, an enzymatic complex composed of the serine protease, factor IXa, a protein cofactor, factor VIIIa, a phospholipid membrane, and Ca(2+). Phospholipid vesicles composed of PE, phosphatidylserine (PS), and phosphatidylcholine support factor Xa generation. The K(m) and k(cat) for factor X activation by the tenase complex are independent of PE in the presence of 20% PS. At lower PS concentrations, the presence of 20 or 35% PE lowers the K(m) and increases the k(cat) as compared to those in vesicles without PE. The effect of PE on the k(cat) of the tenase complex is mediated through factor VIIIa. PE also enhances factor Xa generation by facilitating tenase complex formation; PE lowers the K(d(app)) of factor IXa for both phospholipid/Ca(2+) and phospholipid/Ca(2+)/factor VIIIa complexes in the presence of suboptimal PS. In addition, the K(d)s of factor IXa and factor X were lower for phospholipid vesicles containing PE. N-Methyl-PE increased the k(cat) and decreased the K(d(app)), whereas N,N-dimethyl-PE had no effect on either parameter, indicating the importance of headgroup size. Lyso-PE had no effect on kinetic parameters, indicating the sn-2 acyl chain dependence of the PE effect. Together, these results demonstrate a role for PE in the assembly and activity of the tenase complex and further extend the understanding of the importance of PE-containing membranes in hemostasis.  相似文献   

7.
Kinetic analyses were done to determine what effect factor Xa and protein S had on the activated protein C (APC)-catalyzed inactivation of factor Va bound to phospholipid vesicles or human platelets. In the presence of optimal concentrations of phospholipid vesicles and Ca2+, a Km of 19.7 +/- 0.6 nM factor Va and a kcat of 23.7 +/- 10 mol of factor Va inactivated/mol of APC/min were obtained. Added purified plasma protein S increased the maximal rate of factor Va inactivation only 2-fold without effect on the Km. Protein S effect was unaltered when the phospholipid concentration was varied by 2 orders of magnitude. The reaction on unactivated human platelets yielded a Km = 12.5 +/- 2.6 nM and kcat = 6.2 +/- 0.6 mol of factor Va inactivated/mol of APC/min. Added purified plasma protein S or release of platelet protein S by platelet activation doubled the kcat value without affecting the Km. Addition of a neutralizing anti-protein S antibody abrogated the effect of plasma protein S or platelet-released protein S, but was without effect in the absence of plasma protein S or platelet activation. Studies with factor Xa indicated that factor Xa protects factor Va from APC-catalyzed inactivation by lowering the effective concentration of factor Va available to interact with APC. From these data a dissociation constant of less than 0.5 nM was calculated for the interaction of factor Xa with membrane-bound factor Va. Protein S abrogated the ability of factor Xa to protect factor Va from inactivation by APC without affecting the interaction of factor Xa with factor Va. These combined data suggest that one physiological function of protein S is to allow the APC-catalyzed inactivation of factor Va in the presence of factor Xa.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of membrane composition on the hemostatic balance   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Smirnov MD  Ford DA  Esmon CT  Esmon NL 《Biochemistry》1999,38(12):3591-3598
The phospholipid composition requirements for optimal prothrombin activation and factor Va inactivation by activated protein C (APC) anticoagulant were examined. Vesicles composed of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) supported factor Va inactivation relatively well. However, optimal factor Va inactivation still required relatively high concentrations of phosphatidylserine (PS). In addition, at a fixed concentration of phospholipid, PS, and APC, vesicles devoid of PE never attained a rate of factor Va inactivation achievable with vesicles containing PE. Polyunsaturation of any vesicle component also contributed significantly to APC inactivation of factor Va. Thus, PE makes an important contribution to factor Va inactivation that cannot be mimicked by PS. In the absence of polyunsaturation in the other membrane constituents, this contribution was dependent upon the presence of both the PE headgroup per se and unsaturation of the 1,2 fatty acids. Although PE did not affect prothrombin activation rates at optimal PS concentrations, PE reduced the requirement for PS approximately 10-fold. The Km(app) for prothrombin and the Kd(app) for factor Xa-factor Va decreased as a function of increasing PS concentration, reaching optimal values at 10-15% PS in the absence of PE but only 1% PS in the presence of PE. Fatty acid polyunsaturation had minimal effects. A lupus anticoagulant immunoglobulin was more inhibitory to both prothrombinase and factor Va inactivation in the presence of PE. The degree of inhibition of APC was significantly greater and much more dependent on the phospholipid composition than that of prothrombinase. Thus, subtle changes in the phospholipid composition of cells may control procoagulant and anticoagulant reactions differentially under both normal and pathological conditions.  相似文献   

9.
Activation of coagulation factor X via the intrinsic pathway requires the assembly of factors IXa and VIII on lipid membranes. It is known that the platelet expresses membrane sites for assembly of factors IXa/VIII and promotes efficient factor X activation. We now show that human blood monocytes, but not lymphocytes or polymorphonuclear leukocytes, also express appropriate sites for factors IXa/VIII assembly. The maximal rate of factor X activation by factors IXa (0.75 nM) and VIII (1 unit/ml) assembled on monocytes is similar to the maximal rate on platelets. This rate, adjusted per micromole of lipid phosphorus, is 1636 +/- 358 nM factor Xa/min on monocyte, and 1569 +/- 54 nM factor Xa/min on platelets. At physiologic concentrations of factors X and VIII, the activation rate increases with factor IXa concentration asymptotically approaching a maximum. Half-maximal rate is achieved with 1.0 +/- 0.16 nM factor IXa. Monocytes and macrophages, but not platelets, can express membrane tissue factor and thus promote simultaneous assembly of two distinct factor X-activating protease complexes. In these studies, blood monocytes and alveolar macrophages are used as membrane sources in kinetic experiments comparing factor X activation by intrinsic (factor IXa/VIII) versus extrinsic (factor VII/tissue factor) protease complexes. At plasma concentration of factors VIII and VII, apparent Km on the monocyte is 14.6 +/- 1.4 nM for intrinsic and 117.0 +/- 10.1 nM for extrinsic activation. The apparent Km on alveolar macrophages is 12.1 +/- 1.9 and 90.6 +/- 10.2 nM for intrinsic and extrinsic activation, respectively. Maximal rates on monocytes at saturating concentration of factors IXa, VIII, and VII are 48.0 +/- 11.2 nM factor Xa/min, for intrinsic activation, and 16.5 +/- 5.5 nM factor Xa/min, for extrinsic activation. These data show that the monocyte/macrophage is the only blood-derived cell type with membrane sites for both intrinsic and extrinsic pathway assembly. We have exploited this characteristic of the monocyte/macrophage membrane to demonstrate that factor X activation by the intrinsic pathway protease is more efficient than activation via the extrinsic pathway protease complex.  相似文献   

10.
Although the thrombin/thrombomodulin complex is considered the physiological activator of protein C, factor Xa (f.Xa) can also activate protein C in a reaction that is potentiated by glycosaminoglycans. To explore this phenomenon, we first examined the effect of glycosaminoglycans of varying degrees of sulfation on the kinetics of protein C activation by f.Xa in the presence of Ca2+ and phosphatidylcholine-phosphatidylserine vesicles (PCPS). Heparin increased the rate of protein C activation by f.Xa by 4-fold. In contrast, N-desulfated heparin had no effect on activation, whereas dextran sulfate, which is more sulfated than heparin, increased catalytic efficiency 21-fold. These data suggest that the capacity of glycosaminoglycans to catalyze protein C activation by f.Xa depends on their degree of sulfation. The affinities of individual glycosaminoglycans for protein C and f.Xa were measured in the absence or presence of PCPS by monitoring changes in extrinsic fluorescence when fluorescein-labeled f.Xa or protein C was titrated with the various glycosaminoglycans. Heparin binds protein C with low affinity in the absence or presence of PCPS. In contrast, the affinity of heparin for f.Xa is 86-fold higher in the presence of PCPS compared to that in the absence of PCPS. Similar results were obtained using surface plasmon resonance. These findings suggest that a high affinity glycosaminoglycan binding site is exposed when f.Xa binds to PCPS. The observation that heparin promotes f.Xa-mediated activation of prethrombin 1 only in the presence of phospholipid suggests that glycosaminoglycan binding modulates the active site of f.Xa. This study reveals that when f.Xa interacts with anionic phospholipids, glycosaminoglycans bind f.Xa more tightly, allosterically modulate its active site, and enhance its capacity to activate protein C.  相似文献   

11.
The binding of factor Va to phospholipid vesicles   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The analysis of free sulfhydryl groups in factor Va using dithiobis-(nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) indicated the presence of one accessible thiol in each of the two subunits of the cofactor. Intact factor Va contained one readily accessible sulfhydryl group under native conditions and approximately two such groups after denaturation. A comparison of the rate of modification of the accessible thiol in factor Va under native conditions to those observed with the isolated subunits indicated that the thiol present in component D of the cofactor was readily accessible to reaction with DTNB. Factor Va was reacted with the sulfhydryl-directed fluorophore N-(1-pyrene)maleimide, resulting in the concomitant loss of the accessible thiol with no detectable alteration in the activity of the cofactor. This fluorescent derivative of factor Va (Pyr-Va) was used to examine the binding of factor Va to phospholipid vesicles by fluorescence polarization. Fluorescence polarization of the pyrene moiety increased saturably when Pyr-Va was titrated with increasing concentrations of vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylserine (PS). Systematic analysis of the binding of Pyr-Va to PCPS (75% phosphatidylcholine, 25% PS) indicated that the binding interaction was characterized by a dissociation constant of 2.7 x 10(-9) M with 42 mol of PCPS bound per mol of Va at saturation. The data obtained by varying the PS content of the vesicles are consistent with the interpretation that the Va-combining site on the vesicle surface is composed of a discrete number of PS molecules. The binding of Pyr-Va to PCPS was independent of added calcium ion and could be reversed by the addition of unlabeled Va or isolated component E but not by component D. Analysis of the displacement curves indicated that native factor Va or isolated component E and Pyr-Va mutually excluded each other on the vesicle surface with identical affinities. Competition experiments conducted using component E digested by factor Xa or the isolated derivative peptides indicated that the cleavage of component E by factor Xa had no effect on the PCPS binding properties of this subunit. Further, the data obtained with the isolated peptides suggest that the lipid-binding domain of component E is present in the amino-terminal region of this subunit.  相似文献   

12.
Kinetics of coagulation factor X activation by platelet-bound factor IXa   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Thrombin-activated human platelets, in the presence of factors VIIIa and X, have specific, high-affinity (Kd approximately 0.5 nM), saturable binding sites for factor IXa that are involved in factor X activation [Ahmad, S.S., Rawala-Sheikh, R., & Walsh, P.N. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 3244-3251]. To determine the functional consequences of factor IXa binding to platelets, a detailed kinetic analysis of the effects of platelets, phospholipids, and factor VIII on factor IXa catalyzed factor X activation was done. In the absence of platelets, phospholipids, or factor VIII, the Michaelis constant (Km = 81 microM) was greater than 500-fold higher than the factor X concentration in human plasma. Unactivated platelets and thrombin-activated factor VIII, alone or in combination, had no effect on the kinetic parameters, whereas thrombin-activated platelets caused a major decrease in Km (0.39 microM) with no significant effect on kcat (0.052 min-1) and allowed factor VIIIa to decrease the Km further to a concentration (0.16 microM) near that of factor X in plasma and to increase the kcat 24,000-fold to 1240 min-1. Sonicated mixed phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine vesicles (25/75, mol/mol) had kinetic effects similar to those of activated platelets. When factor IXa binding to thrombin-activated platelets and rates of factor X activation were measured simultaneously at saturating concentrations of factor X and factor VIIIa, the kcat was independent of factor IXa concentration, and the mean kcat value was 2391 min-1. The increase in catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) in the presence of thrombin-activated platelets and factor VIIIa was (17.4 x 10(6))-fold.  相似文献   

13.
The specific molecular target for direct heparin inhibition of factor X activation by intrinsic tenase (factor IXa-factor VIIIa) was investigated. Comparison of size-fractionated oligosaccharides demonstrated that an octasaccharide was sufficient to inhibit intrinsic tenase. Substitution of soluble dihexanoic phosphatidylserine (C6PS) for phospholipid (PL) vesicles demonstrated that inhibition by low-molecular weight heparin (LMWH) was independent of factor IXa-factor VIIIa membrane assembly. LMWH also inhibited factor X activation by the factor IXa-PL complex via a distinct mechanism that required longer oligosaccharides and was independent of substrate concentrations. The apparent affinity of LMWH for the factor IXa-PL complex was higher in the absence of factor VIIIa, suggesting that the cofactor adversely affected the interaction of heparin with factor IXa-phospholipid. LMWH did not interact directly with the active site, as it failed to inhibit chromogenic substrate cleavage by the factor IXa-PL complex. LMWH induced a modest decrease in factor IXa-factor VIIIa affinity [K(D(app))] on PL vesicles that did not account for the inhibition. In contrast, LMWH caused a substantial reduction in factor IXa-factor VIIIa affinity in the presence of C6PS that fully accounted for the inhibition. Factor IXa bound LMWH with significantly higher affinity than factor X by competition solution affinity analysis, and the K(D(app)) for the factor IXa-LMWH complex agreed with the K(I) for inhibition of the factor IXa-PL complex by LMWH. Thus, LMWH binds to an exosite on factor IXa that antagonizes cofactor activity without disrupting factor IXa-factor VIIIa assembly on the PL surface. This exosite may contribute to the clinical efficacy of heparin and represents a novel target for antithrombotic therapy.  相似文献   

14.
In the extrinsic pathway of blood coagulation, Factor X is activated by a complex of tissue factor, factor VII(a) and Ca2+ ions. Using purified human coagulation factors and a sensitive spectrophotometric assay for Factor Xa, we could demonstrate activation of Factor X by Factor VIIa in the absence of tissue-factor apoprotein, phospholipids and Ca2+. This finding allowed a kinetic analysis of the contribution of each of the cofactors. Ca2+ stimulated the reaction rate 10-fold at an optimum of 6 mM (Vmax. of 1.1 x 10(-3) min-1) mainly by decreasing the Km of Factor X (to 11.4 microM). In the presence of Ca2+, 25 microM-phospholipid caused a 150-fold decrease of the apparent Km and a 2-fold increase of the apparent Vmax. of the reaction; however, both kinetic parameters increased with increasing phospholipid concentration. Tissue-factor apoprotein contributed to the reaction rate mainly by an increase of the Vmax., in both the presence (40,500-fold) and absence (4900-fold) of phospholipid. The formation of a ternary complex of Factor VIIa with tissue-factor apoprotein and phospholipid was responsible for a 15 million-fold increase in the catalytic efficiency of Factor X activation. The presence of Ca2+ was absolutely required for the stimulatory effects of phospholipid and apoprotein. The data fit a general model in which the Ca2(+)-dependent conformation allows Factor VIIa to bind tissue-factor apoprotein and/or a negatively charged phospholipid surface resulting into a decreased intrinsic Km and an increased Vmax. for the activation of fluid-phase Factor X.  相似文献   

15.
Manithody C  Yang L  Rezaie AR 《Biochemistry》2007,46(11):3193-3199
Tissue factor (TF) facilitates the recognition and rapid activation of factor X (fX) by factor VIIa (fVIIa) in the extrinsic Xase pathway. TF makes extensive interactions with both light and heavy chains of fVIIa; however, with the exception of a basic recognition site for the Gla domain of fX, no other interactive site on TF for the substrate has been identified. Structural and modeling data have predicted that a basic region of TF comprised of residues Asn-199, Arg-200, and Lys-201 is located at a proper height on the membrane surface to interact with either the C-terminus of the Gla domain or the EGF-1 domain of fX. To investigate this possibility, we prepared the Ala substitution mutants of these residues and evaluated their ability to function as cofactors for fVIIa in the activation of wild-type fX and its two mutants which lack either the Gla domain (GD-fX) or both the Gla and EGF-1 domains (E2-fX). All three TF mutants exhibited normal cofactor activity in the amidolytic activity assays, but the cofactor activity of Arg-200 and Lys-201 mutants in fVIIa activation of both fX and GD-fX, but not E2-fX, was impaired approximately 3-fold. Further kinetic analysis revealed that kcat values with both TF mutants are impaired with no change in Km. These results suggest that both Arg-200 and Lys-201 of TF interact with EGF-1 of fX to facilitate the optimal docking of the substrate into the catalytic groove of the protease in the activation complex.  相似文献   

16.
A membrane-permeable photolabel 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine (125I-TID) has been used to label lipophilin in normal human myelin and after incorporation of purified lipophilin into phosphatidylcholine (PC) vesicles. The labelled protein was isolated and the specific activities for lipophilin from myelin and from PC vesicles was found to be 1.2 X 10(11) and 1.5 X 10(11) cpm/mol, respectively. The chromatographic profiles of tryptic peptides were similar in both cases and the specific activities of the C-terminal intramembranous fragments (residues 205-268) the same. We concluded that the organization of lipophilin in PC vesicles was similar to its organization in myelin and that the PC-vesicle system represents a good system in which to study the orientation and interaction of lipophilin with lipids.  相似文献   

17.
R P Link  F J Castellino 《Biochemistry》1983,22(17):4033-4041
The Vmax/Km (microM -1 min -1.) for bovine factor X activation by bovine factor IXa alpha, in the presence of sufficient [Ca2+] to saturate the initial reaction rate, was 0.007. When factor IXa beta was substituted for factor IXa alpha in this reaction, the Vmax/Km decreased to 0.001, suggesting that factor IXa alpha was a more potent catalyst under these conditions. When phospholipid (PL) vesicles (egg phosphatidylcholine/bovine brain phosphatidylserine, 4:1 w/w) were added to these same systems, at levels sufficient to saturate their effects, little change in the Vmax/Km occurred when factor IXa alpha was the enzyme. However, when factor IXa beta was employed, the Vmax/Km dramatically increased to 0.023, demonstrating that factor IXa beta responded to PL addition to a much greater extent than did factor IXa alpha. Upon addition of thrombin-activated factor VIII (factor VIIIa,t), at a suboptimal level, to the above systems, the Vmax/Km for factor X activation by factor IXa alpha/Ca2+/PL/factor VIIIa,t was increased to 1.0, whereas this parameter for factor X activation by factor IXa beta/Ca2+/PL/factor VIIIa,t under the same conditions was found to be 27.3. During these studies, it was discovered that the factor X which became activated to factor Xa during the course of reaction participated in several feedback reactions: activation of factor X, activation of factor VIII, and conversion of factor IXa alpha to factor IXa beta. All feedback reactions, which are capable of complicating the kinetic interpretation, were inhibited by performing the studies in a system which contained a rapid factor Xa inhibitor, Glu-Gly-Arg-CH2Cl, thus allowing kinetic constants to be accurately determined. The results show that while factor IXa alpha is a more efficient enzyme than factor IXa beta toward factor X activation in the absence of cofactors, the response of factor IXa beta to the reaction cofactors, PL and factor VIIIa,t, is much greater than that of factor IXa alpha.  相似文献   

18.
The kinetics of the Ca2+-dependent, alkaline pH optimum, membrane-bound phospholipase A2 from the P388D1 macrophage-like cell line were studied using various phosphatidylcholine (PC) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) substrates. This enzyme exhibits "surface dilution kinetics" toward PC in Triton X-100 mixed micelles, and the "dual phospholipid model" was found to adequately describe its kinetic behavior. With substrate in the form of sonicated vesicles, the dual phospholipid model should give rise to Michaelis-Menten type kinetics. However, the hydrolysis of dipalmitoyl-PC, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-PC, and 1-stearoyl-2-arachidonoyl-PC vesicles exhibited two distinct activities. Below 10 microM, the data appeared to follow Michaelis-Menten behavior, while at higher concentrations, the data could best be fit to a Hill equation with a Hill coefficient of 2. These PCs had Vmax values for the low substrate concentration range of 0.2-0.6 nmol min-1 mg-1 and Km values of 1-2 microM. At the high substrate concentration range, the Vmax values were between 5 and 7 nmol min-1 mg-1. PC containing unsaturated fatty acids had an apparent Km, determined from the Hill equation, of about 15 microM, while the apparent Km of dipalmitoyl-PC was 0.6 microM. When 70% glycerol was included in the assays, a single Michaelis-Menten curve was obtained for both dipalmitoyl-PC and 1-stearoyl,2-arachidonoyl-PC. Possible explanations for these kinetic results include reconstitution of the membrane-bound phospholipase A2 in the phospholipid vesicle or the enzyme has tow distinct phospholipid binding function. The kinetics for both dipalmitoyl-PC and dipalmitoyl-PE hydrolysis in vesicles was very similar, indicating that the enzyme does not greatly prefer one of these head groups over the other. The enzyme also showed no preference for arachidonoyl containing phospholipid. Enzymatic activity toward PC containing saturated fatty acids was linear to about 15% hydrolysis while the hydrolysis of PC containing unsaturated fatty acids was linear to only about 5%. This loss of linearity was due to inhibition by released unsaturated fatty acids. Arachidonic acid was found to be a competitive inhibitor of dipalmitoyl PC hydrolysis with a K1 of 5 microM. This tight binding suggests a possible in vivo regulatory role for arachidonic acid. Three compounds of the arachidonic acid cascade, prostaglandin F2 alpha, 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha, and thromboxane B2, showed no inhibition of enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

19.
Reconstitution of rabbit thrombomodulin into phospholipid vesicles   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
The influence of phospholipid on thrombin-thrombomodulin-catalyzed activation of protein C has been studied by incorporating thrombomodulin into vesicles by dialysis from octyl glucoside-phospholipid mixtures. Thrombomodulin was incorporated into vesicles ranging from neutral (100% phosphatidylcholine) to highly charged (30% phosphatidylserine and 70% phosphatidylcholine). Thrombomodulin is randomly oriented in vesicles of different phospholipid composition. Incorporation of thrombomodulin into phosphatidylcholine, with or without phosphatidylserine, alters the Ca2+ concentration dependence of protein C activation. Soluble thrombomodulin showed a half-maximal rate of activation at 580 microM Ca2+, whereas half-maximal rates of activation of liposome-reconstituted thrombomodulin were obtained between 500 microM Ca2+ and 2 mM Ca2+, depending on the composition (protein:phospholipid) of the liposomes. The Ca2+ dependence of protein C activation fits a simple hyperbola for the soluble activator, while the Ca2+ dependence of the membrane-associated complex is distinctly sigmoidal with a Hill coefficient greater than 2.4. In contrast, the Ca2+ dependence of gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) domainless protein C activation is unchanged by membrane reconstitution (1/2 max = 53 +/- 10 microM) and fits a simple rectangular hyperbola. Incorporation of thrombomodulin into pure phosphatidylcholine vesicles reduces the Km for protein C from 7.6 +/- 2 to 0.7 +/- 0.2 microM. Increasing phosphatidylserine to 20% decreased the Km for protein C further to 0.1 +/- 0.02 microM. Membrane incorporation has no influence on the activation of protein C from which the Gla residues are removed proteolytically (Km = 6.4 +/- 0.5 microM). The Km for protein C observed on endothelial cells is more similar to the Km observed when thrombomodulin (TM) is incorporated into pure phosphatidylcholine vesicles than into negatively charged vesicles, suggesting that the protein C-binding site on endothelial cells does not involve negatively charged phospholipids. In support of this concept, we observed that prothrombin and fragment 1, which bind to negatively charged phospholipids, do not inhibit protein C activation on endothelial cells or TM incorporated into phosphatidylcholine vesicles, but do inhibit when TM is incorporated into phosphatidylcholine:phosphatidylserine vesicles. These studies suggest that neutral phospholipids lead to exposure of a site, probably on thrombomodulin, capable of recognizing the Gla domain of protein C.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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