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1.
Blood ; 141(26): 3215-3225, 2023 06 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36862974

RESUMO

Coagulation factor V (fV) is the precursor of activated fV (fVa), an essential component of the prothrombinase complex required for the rapid activation of prothrombin in the penultimate step of the coagulation cascade. In addition, fV regulates the tissue factor pathway inhibitor α (TFPIα) and protein C pathways that inhibit the coagulation response. A recent cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure of fV has revealed the architecture of its A1-A2-B-A3-C1-C2 assembly but left the mechanism that keeps fV in its inactive state unresolved because of an intrinsic disorder in the B domain. A splice variant of fV, fV short, carries a large deletion of the B domain that produces constitutive fVa-like activity and unmasks epitopes for the binding of TFPIα. The cryo-EM structure of fV short was solved at 3.2 Å resolution and revealed the arrangement of the entire A1-A2-B-A3-C1-C2 assembly. The shorter B domain stretches across the entire width of the protein, making contacts with the A1, A2, and A3 domains but suspended over the C1 and C2 domains. In the portion distal to the splice site, several hydrophobic clusters and acidic residues provide a potential binding site for the basic C-terminal end of TFPIα. In fV, these epitopes may bind intramolecularly to the basic region of the B domain. The cryo-EM structure reported in this study advances our understanding of the mechanism that keeps fV in its inactive state, provides new targets for mutagenesis and facilitates future structural analysis of fV short in complex with TFPIα, protein S, and fXa.


Assuntos
Fator V , Fator Xa , Fator V/metabolismo , Microscopia Crioeletrônica , Fator Xa/metabolismo , Fator Va/química , Coagulação Sanguínea , Epitopos
2.
J Biol Chem ; 298(1): 101458, 2022 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34861239

RESUMO

The catalytic activity of thrombin and other enzymes of the blood coagulation and complement cascades is enhanced significantly by binding of Na+ to a site >15 Å away from the catalytic residue S195, buried within the 180 and 220 loops that also contribute to the primary specificity of the enzyme. Rapid kinetics support a binding mechanism of conformational selection where the Na+-binding site is in equilibrium between open (N) and closed (N∗) forms and the cation binds selectively to the N form. Allosteric transduction of this binding step produces enhanced catalytic activity. Molecular details on how Na+ gains access to this site and communicates allosterically with the active site remain poorly defined. In this study, we show that the rate of the N∗→N transition is strongly correlated with the analogous E∗→E transition that governs the interaction of synthetic and physiologic substrates with the active site. This correlation supports the active site as the likely point of entry for Na+ to its binding site. Mutagenesis and structural data rule out an alternative path through the pore defined by the 180 and 220 loops. We suggest that the active site communicates allosterically with the Na+ site through a network of H-bonded water molecules that embeds the primary specificity pocket. Perturbation of the mobility of S195 and its H-bonding capabilities alters interaction with this network and influences the kinetics of Na+ binding and allosteric transduction. These findings have general mechanistic relevance for Na+-activated proteases and allosteric enzymes.


Assuntos
Sódio , Trombina , Sítios de Ligação , Domínio Catalítico , Cátions , Cátions Monovalentes , Cinética , Modelos Moleculares , Conformação Proteica , Sódio/química , Sódio/metabolismo , Trombina/química , Trombina/metabolismo
3.
Blood ; 135(9): 689-699, 2020 02 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31977000

RESUMO

Although thrombin is a key enzyme in the coagulation cascade and is required for both normal hemostasis and pathologic thrombogenesis, it also participates in its own negative feedback via activation of protein C, which downregulates thrombin generation by enzymatically inactivating factors Va and VIIIa. Our group and others have previously shown that thrombin's procoagulant and anticoagulant activities can be effectively disassociated to varying extents through site-directed mutagenesis. The thrombin mutant W215A/E217A (WE thrombin) has been one of the best characterized constructs with selective activity toward protein C. Although animal studies have demonstrated that WE thrombin acts as an anticoagulant through activated protein C (APC) generation, the observed limited systemic anticoagulation does not fully explain the antithrombotic potency of this or other thrombin mutants. AB002 (E-WE thrombin) is an investigational protein C activator thrombin analog in phase 2 clinical development (clinicaltrials.gov NCT03963895). Here, we demonstrate that this molecule is a potent enzyme that is able to rapidly interrupt arterial-type thrombus propagation at exceedingly low doses (<2 µg/kg, IV), yet without substantial systemic anticoagulation in baboons. We demonstrate that AB002 produces APC on platelet aggregates and competitively inhibits thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (carboxypeptidase B2) activation in vitro, which may contribute to the observed in vivo efficacy. We also describe its safety and activity in a phase 1 first-in-human clinical trial. Together, these results support further clinical evaluation of AB002 as a potentially safe and effective new approach for treating or preventing acute thrombotic and thromboembolic conditions. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT03453060.


Assuntos
Fibrinolíticos/farmacologia , Proteína C/efeitos dos fármacos , Trombina/análogos & derivados , Trombose/prevenção & controle , Adulto , Animais , Método Duplo-Cego , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Papio , Proteínas Recombinantes/farmacologia
4.
J Biol Chem ; 295(45): 15236-15244, 2020 11 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32855236

RESUMO

Activated protein C is a trypsin-like protease with anticoagulant and cytoprotective properties that is generated by thrombin from the zymogen precursor protein C in a reaction greatly accelerated by the cofactor thrombomodulin. The molecular details of this activation remain elusive due to the lack of structural information. We now fill this gap by providing information on the overall structural organization of these proteins using single molecule FRET and small angle X-ray scattering. Under physiological conditions, both zymogen and protease adopt a conformation with all domains vertically aligned along an axis 76 Å long and maximal particle size of 120 Å. This conformation is stabilized by binding of Ca2+ to the Gla domain and is affected minimally by interaction with thrombin. Hence, the zymogen protein C likely interacts with the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex through a rigid body association that produces a protease with essentially the same structural architecture. This scenario stands in contrast to an analogous reaction in the coagulation cascade where conversion of the zymogen prothrombin to the protease meizothrombin by the prothrombinase complex is linked to a large conformational transition of the entire protein. The presence of rigid epidermal growth factor domains in protein C as opposed to kringles in prothrombin likely accounts for the different conformational plasticity of the two zymogens. The new structural features reported here for protein C have general relevance to vitamin K-dependent clotting factors containing epidermal growth factor domains, such as factors VII, IX, and X.


Assuntos
Precursores Enzimáticos/química , Precursores Enzimáticos/metabolismo , Proteína C/química , Proteína C/metabolismo , Transferência Ressonante de Energia de Fluorescência , Humanos , Tamanho da Partícula , Conformação Proteica , Espalhamento a Baixo Ângulo , Difração de Raios X
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(21): 7630-5, 2014 May 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24821807

RESUMO

The zymogen prothrombin is proteolytically converted by factor Xa to the active protease thrombin in a reaction that is accelerated >3,000-fold by cofactor Va. This physiologically important effect is paradigmatic of analogous cofactor-dependent reactions in the coagulation and complement cascades, but its structural determinants remain poorly understood. Prothrombin has three linkers connecting the N-terminal Gla domain to kringle-1 (Lnk1), the two kringles (Lnk2), and kringle-2 to the C-terminal protease domain (Lnk3). Recent developments indicate that the linkers, and particularly Lnk2, confer on the zymogen significant flexibility in solution and enable prothrombin to sample alternative conformations. The role of this flexibility in the context of prothrombin activation was tested with several deletions. Removal of Lnk2 in almost its entirety (ProTΔ146-167) drastically reduces the enhancement of thrombin generation by cofactor Va from >3,000-fold to 60-fold because of a significant increase in the rate of activation in the absence of cofactor. Deletion of Lnk2 mimics the action of cofactor Va and offers insights into how prothrombin is activated at the molecular level. The crystal structure of ProTΔ146-167 reveals a contorted architecture where the domains are not vertically stacked, kringle-1 comes within 9 Å of the protease domain, and the Gla-domain primed for membrane binding comes in contact with kringle-2. These findings broaden our molecular understanding of a key reaction of the blood coagulation cascade where cofactor Va enhances activation of prothrombin by factor Xa by compressing Lnk2 and morphing prothrombin into a conformation similar to the structure of ProTΔ146-167.


Assuntos
Fator Va/metabolismo , Fator Xa/metabolismo , Kringles/genética , Modelos Moleculares , Protrombina/metabolismo , Animais , Cálcio/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular , Cromatografia de Afinidade , Cromatografia em Gel , Cromatografia por Troca Iônica , Clonagem Molecular , Cricetinae , Cricetulus , Cristalografia por Raios X , Eletroforese em Gel de Poliacrilamida , Humanos , Hidrólise , Cinética , Espectrometria de Massas , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Conformação Proteica , Protrombina/química , Análise de Sequência de Proteína
6.
Biochemistry ; 54(7): 1457-64, 2015 Feb 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25664608

RESUMO

Although Thr is equally represented as Ser in the human genome and as a nucleophile is as good as Ser, it is never found in the active site of the large family of trypsin-like proteases that utilize the Asp/His/Ser triad. The molecular basis of the preference of Ser over Thr in the trypsin fold was investigated with X-ray structures of the thrombin mutant S195T free and bound to an irreversible active site inhibitor. In the free form, the methyl group of T195 is oriented toward the incoming substrate in a conformation seemingly incompatible with productive binding. In the bound form, the side chain of T195 is reoriented for efficient substrate acylation without causing steric clash within the active site. Rapid kinetics prove that this change is due to selection of an active conformation from a preexisting ensemble of reactive and unreactive rotamers whose relative distribution determines the level of activity of the protease. Consistent with these observations, the S195T substitution is associated with a weak yet finite activity that allows identification of an unanticipated important role for S195 as the end point of allosteric transduction in the trypsin fold. The S195T mutation abrogates the Na(+)-dependent enhancement of catalytic activity in thrombin, activated protein C, and factor Xa and significantly weakens the physiologically important allosteric effects of thrombomodulin on thrombin and of cofactor Va on factor Xa. The evolutionary selection of Ser over Thr in trypsin-like proteases was therefore driven by the need for high catalytic activity and efficient allosteric regulation.


Assuntos
Substituição de Aminoácidos , Serina/genética , Treonina/genética , Trombina/genética , Trombina/metabolismo , Tripsina/química , Regulação Alostérica , Clorometilcetonas de Aminoácidos/farmacologia , Domínio Catalítico , Cristalografia por Raios X , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Mutação Puntual , Conformação Proteica , Serina/química , Serina/metabolismo , Treonina/química , Treonina/metabolismo , Trombina/antagonistas & inibidores , Trombina/química
7.
J Biol Chem ; 288(16): 11601-10, 2013 Apr 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23467412

RESUMO

Trypsin-like proteases are synthesized as inactive zymogens and convert to the mature form upon activation by specific enzymes, often assisted by cofactors. Central to this paradigm is that the zymogen does not convert spontaneously to the mature enzyme, which in turn does not feed back to activate its zymogen form. In the blood, the zymogens prothrombin and prethrombin-2 require the prothrombinase complex to be converted to the mature protease thrombin, which is unable to activate prothrombin or prethrombin-2. Here, we show that replacement of key residues within the activation domain causes these zymogens to spontaneously convert to thrombin. The conversion is started by the zymogen itself, which is capable of binding ligands at the active site, and is abrogated by inactivation of the catalytic residue Ser-195. The product of autoactivation is functionally and structurally equivalent to wild-type thrombin. Zymogen autoactivation is explained by conformational selection, a basic property of the trypsin fold uncovered by structural and rapid kinetics studies. Both the zymogen and protease undergo a pre-existing equilibrium between active and inactive forms. The equilibrium regulates catalytic activity in the protease and has the potential to unleash activity in the zymogen to produce autoactivation. A new strategy emerges for the facile production of enzymes through zymogen autoactivation that is broadly applicable to trypsin-like proteases of biotechnological and clinical interest.


Assuntos
Substituição de Aminoácidos , Mutação de Sentido Incorreto , Protrombina/química , Protrombina/genética , Protrombina/metabolismo , Ativação Enzimática , Humanos , Tromboplastina/genética , Tromboplastina/metabolismo
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(13): 5221-5, 2011 Mar 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21368156

RESUMO

Enzyme activation by monovalent cations is widely documented in plants and the animal world. In type II enzymes, activation entails two steps: binding of the monovalent cation to its allosteric site and transduction of this event into enhanced catalytic activity. The effect has exquisite specificity for either Na(+) or K(+), the most abundant cations present in physiological environments. Enzymes requiring K(+) such as kinases and molecular chaperones are not activated as well or at all by the larger cation Cs(+) or the smaller cations Na(+) and Li(+). Enzymes requiring Na(+) such as ß-galactosidase and clotting proteases are not activated as well by Li(+), or the larger cations K(+), Rb(+), and Cs(+). Efforts to switch specificity between Na(+) and K(+) in this large class of enzymes and completely redesign the mechanism of allosteric transduction leading to enhanced catalytic activity have so far been unsuccessful. Here we show how mutagenesis of two loops defining the Na(+) binding site of thrombin, a Na(+)-activated clotting protease, generates a construct that is most active in the presence of K(+) toward synthetic and physiological substrates. The effect is the result of a higher binding affinity and more efficient allosteric transduction of binding into enhanced catalytic activity for K(+) compared to Na(+), which represents a complete reversal of the properties of wild type. In addition, the construct features altered specificity toward physiological substrates resulting in a significant anticoagulant profile. The findings are relevant to all Na(+)-activated proteases involved in blood coagulation and the complement system.


Assuntos
Cátions/química , Cátions/metabolismo , Conformação Proteica , Trombina/metabolismo , Regulação Alostérica , Sítio Alostérico , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Coagulação Sanguínea/fisiologia , Ativação Enzimática , Fibrinogênio/metabolismo , Hirudinas/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Potássio/metabolismo , Ligação Proteica , Proteína C/química , Proteína C/genética , Proteína C/metabolismo , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusão/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusão/metabolismo , Sódio/metabolismo , Trombina/química , Trombina/genética
9.
J Thromb Haemost ; 22(4): 1009-1015, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38160728

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The residue at the site of activation of protein C is Arg in all species except the ray-finned fish, where it is Trp. This feature raises the question of whether thrombin is the physiological activator of protein C across vertebrates. OBJECTIVES: To establish if thrombin can cleave at Trp residues. METHODS: The activity of wild-type thrombin and mutant D189S was tested with a library of chromogenic substrates and toward wild-type protein C and mutants carrying substitutions at the site of cleavage. RESULTS: Thrombin has trypsin-like and chymotrypsin-like specificity and cleaves substrates at Arg or Trp residues. Cleavage at Arg is preferred, but cleavage at Trp is significant and comparable with that of chymotrypsin. The D189S mutant of thrombin has broad specificity and cleaves at basic and aromatic residues without significant preference. Thrombin also cleaves natural substrates at Arg or Trp residues, showing activity toward protein C across vertebrates, including the ray-finned fish. The rate of activation of protein C in the ray-finned fish is affected by the sequence preceding Trp at the scissile bond. CONCLUSION: The results provide a possible solution for the paradoxical presence of a Trp residue at the site of cleavage of protein C in ray-finned fish and support thrombin as the physiological activator of protein C in all vertebrates. The dual trypsin-like and chymotrypsin-like specificity of thrombin suggests that the spectrum of physiological substrates of this enzyme is broader currently assumed.


Assuntos
Quimotripsina , Trombina , Animais , Tripsina/química , Tripsina/metabolismo , Trombina/metabolismo , Quimotripsina/química , Quimotripsina/metabolismo , Proteína C/metabolismo , Especificidade por Substrato , Cinética , Sítios de Ligação
10.
J Thromb Haemost ; 22(3): 709-714, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38007061

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Coagulation factor (F)V features an A1-A2-B-A3-C1-C2 domain organization and functions as the inactive precursor of FVa, a component of the prothrombinase complex required for rapid thrombin generation in the penultimate step of the coagulation cascade. An intramolecular interaction within the large B domain (residues 710-1545) involves the basic region (BR, residues 963-1008) and acidic region (AR, residues 1493-1537) and locks FV in its inactive state. However, structural information on this important regulatory interaction or on the separate architecture of the AR and BR remains elusive due to conformational disorder of the B domain. OBJECTIVES: To reveal the structure of the BR-AR interaction or of its separate components. METHODS: The structure of FV is solved by cryogenic electron microscopy. RESULTS: A new 3.05 Å resolution cryogenic electron microscopy structure of FV confirms the overall organization of the A and C domains but resolves the segment 1507 to 1545 within a largely disordered B domain. The segment contains most of the AR and is organized as recently reported in FV short, a spliced variant of FV with a significantly shorter and less disordered B domain. CONCLUSION: The similar architecture of the AR in FV and FV short provides structural context for physiologically important interactions of this region with the BR in FV and with the basic C-terminal end of tissue factor pathway inhibitor α in FV short.


Assuntos
Coagulação Sanguínea , Fator V , Humanos , Fator V/metabolismo , Domínios Proteicos , Microscopia Eletrônica
11.
Blood ; 117(23): 6326-37, 2011 Jun 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21436072

RESUMO

Thrombin is a positive mediator of thrombus formation through the proteolytic activation of protease-activated receptors (PARs), fibrinogen, factor XI (fXI), and other substrates, and a negative regulator through activation of protein C, a natural anticoagulant with anti-inflammatory/cytoprotective properties. Protease-engineering studies have established that 2 active-site substitutions, W215A and E217A (fII(WE)), result in dramatically reduced catalytic efficiency with procoagulant substrates while largely preserving thrombomodulin (TM)-dependent protein C activation. To explore the hypothesis that a prothrombin variant favoring antithrombotic pathways would be compatible with development but limit inflammatory processes in vivo, we generated mice carrying the fII(WE) mutations within the endogenous prothrombin gene. Unlike fII-null embryos, fII(WE/WE) mice uniformly developed to term. Nevertheless, these mice ultimately succumbed to spontaneous bleeding events shortly after birth. Heterozygous fII(WT/WE) mice were viable and fertile despite a shift toward an antithrombotic phenotype exemplified by prolonged tail-bleeding times and times-to-occlusion after FeCl3 vessel injury. More interestingly, prothrombin(WE) expression significantly ameliorated the development of inflammatory joint disease in mice challenged with collagen-induced arthritis (CIA). The administration of active recombinant thrombin(WE) also suppressed the development of CIA in wild-type mice. These studies provide a proof-of-principle that pro/thrombin variants engineered with altered substrate specificity may offer therapeutic opportunities for limiting inflammatory disease processes.


Assuntos
Artrite Experimental/metabolismo , Mutação de Sentido Incorreto , Protrombina/metabolismo , Substituição de Aminoácidos , Animais , Artrite Experimental/genética , Hemorragia/genética , Hemorragia/metabolismo , Humanos , Camundongos , Camundongos Mutantes , Proteína C/genética , Proteína C/metabolismo , Protrombina/genética
12.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(45): 19278-83, 2010 Nov 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20974933

RESUMO

Prothrombin is the zymogen precursor of the clotting enzyme thrombin, which is generated by two sequential cleavages at R271 and R320 by the prothrombinase complex. The structure of prothrombin is currently unknown. Prethrombin-1 differs from prothrombin for the absence of 155 residues in the N-terminal domain and is composed of a single polypeptide chain containing fragment 2 (residues 156-271), A chain (residues 272-320), and B chain (residues 321-579). The X-ray crystal structure of prethrombin-1 solved at 2.2-Å resolution shows an overall conformation significantly different (rmsd = 3.6 Å) from that of its active form meizothrombin desF1 carrying a cleavage at R320. Fragment 2 is rotated around the y axis by 29° and makes only few contacts with the B chain. In the B chain, the oxyanion hole is disrupted due to absence of the I16-D194 ion pair and the Na(+) binding site and adjacent primary specificity pocket are highly perturbed. A remarkable feature of the structure is that the autolysis loop assumes a helical conformation enabling W148 and W215, located 17 Å apart in meizothrombin desF1, to come within 3.3 Å of each other and completely occlude access to the active site. These findings suggest that the zymogen form of thrombin possesses conformational plasticity comparable to that of the mature enzyme and have significant implications for the mechanism of prothrombin activation and the zymogen â†’ protease conversion in trypsin-like proteases.


Assuntos
Protrombina/química , Cristalografia por Raios X , Ativação Enzimática , Precursores Enzimáticos/química , Humanos , Peptídeo Hidrolases , Conformação Proteica , Subunidades Proteicas , Protrombina/genética
13.
Res Pract Thromb Haemost ; 6(7): e12830, 2022 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36349261

RESUMO

A State of the Art lecture titled "Cryo-EM structures of coagulation factors" was presented at the ISTH Congress in 2022. Cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) is a revolutionary technique capable of solving the structure of high molecular weight proteins and their complexes, unlike nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and under conditions not biased by crystal contacts, unlike X-ray crystallography. These features are particularly relevant to the analysis of coagulation factors that are too big for NMR and often recalcitrant to X-ray investigation. Using cryo-EM, we have solved the structures of coagulation factors V and Va, prothrombinase on nanodiscs, and the prothrombin-prothrombinase complex. These structures have advanced basic knowledge in the field of thrombosis and hemostasis, especially on the function of factor V and the molecular mechanism for prothrombin activation, and set the stage for exciting new lines of investigation. Finally, we summarize relevant new data on this topic presented during the 2022 ISTH Congress.

14.
Biochemistry ; 50(47): 10195-202, 2011 Nov 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22049947

RESUMO

Prethrombin-2 is the immediate zymogen precursor of the clotting enzyme thrombin, which is generated upon cleavage at R15 and separation of the A chain and catalytic B chain. The X-ray structure of prethrombin-2 determined in the free form at 1.9 Å resolution shows the 215-217 segment collapsed into the active site and occluding 49% of the volume available for substrate binding. Remarkably, some of the crystals harvested from the same crystallization well, under identical solution conditions, diffract to 2.2 Å resolution in the same space group but produce a structure in which the 215-217 segment moves >5 Å and occludes 24% of the volume available for substrate binding. The two alternative conformations of prethrombin-2 have the side chain of W215 relocating >9 Å within the active site and are relevant to the allosteric E*-E equilibrium of the mature enzyme. Another unanticipated feature of prethrombin-2 bears on the mechanism of prothrombin activation. R15 is found buried within the protein in ionic interactions with E14e, D14l, and E18, thereby making its exposure to solvent necessary for proteolytic attack and conversion to thrombin. On the basis of this structural observation, we constructed the E14eA/D14lA/E18A triple mutant to reduce the level of electrostatic coupling with R15 and promote zymogen activation. The mutation causes prethrombin-2 to spontaneously convert to thrombin, without the need for the snake venom ecarin or the physiological prothrombinase complex.


Assuntos
Protrombina/química , Protrombina/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Sítios de Ligação , Domínio Catalítico , Cristalografia por Raios X , Ativação Enzimática , Humanos , Cinética , Conformação Molecular , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Conformação Proteica , Protrombina/genética
15.
Biochemistry ; 50(29): 6301-7, 2011 Jul 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21707111

RESUMO

Protein allostery is based on the existence of multiple conformations in equilibrium linked to distinct functional properties. Although evidence of allosteric transitions is relatively easy to identify by functional studies, structural detection of a pre-existing equilibrium between alternative conformations remains challenging even for textbook examples of allosteric proteins. Kinetic studies show that the trypsin-like protease thrombin exists in equilibrium between two conformations where the active site is either collapsed (E*) or accessible to substrate (E). However, structural demonstration that the two conformations exist in the same enzyme construct free of ligands has remained elusive. Here we report the crystal structure of the thrombin mutant N143P in the E form, which complements the recently reported structure in the E* form, and both the E and E* forms of the thrombin mutant Y225P. The side chain of W215 moves 10.9 Å between the two forms, causing a displacement of 6.6 Å of the entire 215-217 segment into the active site that in turn opens or closes access to the primary specificity pocket. Rapid kinetic measurements of p-aminobenzamidine binding to the active site confirm the existence of the E*-E equilibrium in solution for wild-type and the mutants N143P and Y225P. These findings provide unequivocal proof of the allosteric nature of thrombin and lend strong support to the recent proposal that the E*-E equilibrium is a key property of the trypsin fold.


Assuntos
Serina Endopeptidases/química , Serina Endopeptidases/metabolismo , Trombina/química , Trombina/metabolismo , Regulação Alostérica , Benzamidinas/metabolismo , Cristalografia por Raios X , Cinética , Proteínas Mutantes/química , Proteínas Mutantes/metabolismo , Estrutura Secundária de Proteína
16.
J Biol Chem ; 285(25): 19145-52, 2010 Jun 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20404340

RESUMO

Thrombin elicits functional responses critical to blood homeostasis by interacting with diverse physiological substrates. Ala-scanning mutagenesis of 97 residues covering 53% of the solvent accessible surface area of the enzyme identifies Trp(215) as the single most important determinant of thrombin specificity. Saturation mutagenesis of Trp(215) produces constructs featuring k(cat)/K(m) values for the hydrolysis of fibrinogen, protease-activated receptor PAR1, and protein C that span five orders of magnitude. Importantly, the effect of Trp(215) replacement is context dependent. Mutant W215E is 10-fold more specific for protein C than fibrinogen and PAR1, which represents a striking shift in specificity relative to wild-type that is 100-fold more specific for fibrinogen and PAR1 than protein C. However, when the W215E mutation is combined with deletion of nine residues in the autolysis loop, which by itself shifts the specificity of the enzyme from fibrinogen and PAR1 to protein C, the resulting construct features significant activity only toward PAR1. These findings demonstrate that thrombin can be re-engineered for selective specificity toward protein C and PAR1. Mutations of Trp(215) provide important reagents for dissecting the multiple functional roles of thrombin in the blood and for clinical applications.


Assuntos
Proteína C/química , Engenharia de Proteínas/métodos , Receptor PAR-1/química , Alanina/química , Sequência de Bases , Fibrinogênio/química , Humanos , Cinética , Ligantes , Conformação Molecular , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Mutagênese , Mutação , Ligação Proteica , Trombina/química
17.
Stroke ; 42(6): 1736-41, 2011 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21512172

RESUMO

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Treatment of ischemic stroke by activation of endogenous plasminogen using tissue plasminogen activator is limited by bleeding side effects. In mice, treatment of experimental ischemic stroke with activated protein C improves outcomes; however, activated protein C also has bleeding side effects. In contrast, activation of endogenous protein C using thrombin mutant W215A/E217A (WE) is antithrombotic without hemostasis impairment in primates. Therefore, we investigated the outcome of WE-treated experimental ischemic stroke in mice. METHODS: The middle cerebral artery was occluded with a filament for 60 minutes to induce ischemic stroke. Vehicle, recombinant WE, or tissue plasminogen activator was administered during middle cerebral artery occlusion or 2 hours after middle cerebral artery occlusion. Neurological performance was scored daily. Intracranial bleeding and cerebral infarct size, defined by 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride exclusion, were determined on autopsy. Hemostasis was evaluated using tail bleeding tests. RESULTS: WE improved neurological performance scores, increased laser Doppler flowmetry-monitored post-middle cerebral artery occlusion reperfusion of the parietal cortex, and reduced 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride-defined cerebral infarct size versus vehicle controls. However, unlike tissue plasminogen activator, WE did not increase tail bleeding or intracranial hemorrhage. CONCLUSIONS: WE treatment is neuroprotective without hemostasis impairment in experimental acute ischemic stroke in mice and thus may provide an alternative to tissue plasminogen activator for stroke treatment.


Assuntos
Anticoagulantes/uso terapêutico , Isquemia Encefálica , Infarto Cerebral/tratamento farmacológico , Infarto Cerebral/patologia , Acidente Vascular Cerebral , Trombina/genética , Trombina/uso terapêutico , Animais , Isquemia Encefálica/tratamento farmacológico , Isquemia Encefálica/patologia , Infarto Cerebral/fisiopatologia , Modelos Animais de Doenças , Hemostasia , Humanos , Infarto da Artéria Cerebral Média/tratamento farmacológico , Fluxometria por Laser-Doppler , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Mutação , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/tratamento farmacológico , Acidente Vascular Cerebral/patologia , Ativador de Plasminogênio Tecidual/uso terapêutico , Resultado do Tratamento
18.
J Biol Chem ; 284(52): 36175-36185, 2009 Dec 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19846563

RESUMO

The molecular mechanism of thrombin activation by Na(+) remains elusive. Its kinetic formulation requires extension of the classical Botts-Morales theory for the action of a modifier on an enzyme to correctly account for the contribution of the E*, E, and E:Na(+) forms. The extended scheme establishes that analysis of k(cat) unequivocally identifies allosteric transduction of Na(+) binding into enhanced catalytic activity. The thrombin mutant N143P features no Na(+)-dependent enhancement of k(cat) yet binds Na(+) with an affinity comparable to that of wild type. Crystal structures of the mutant in the presence and absence of Na(+) confirm that Pro(143) abrogates the important H-bond between the backbone N atom of residue 143 and the carbonyl O atom of Glu(192), which in turn controls the orientation of the Glu(192)-Gly(193) peptide bond and the correct architecture of the oxyanion hole. We conclude that Na(+) activates thrombin by securing the correct orientation of the Glu(192)-Gly(193) peptide bond, which is likely flipped in the absence of cation. Absolute conservation of the 143-192 H-bond in trypsin-like proteases and the importance of the oxyanion hole in protease function suggest that this mechanism of Na(+) activation is present in all Na(+)-activated trypsin-like proteases.


Assuntos
Substituição de Aminoácidos , Mutação de Sentido Incorreto , Sódio/química , Trombina/química , Regulação Alostérica/genética , Cristalografia por Raios X , Ativação Enzimática/genética , Humanos , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Cinética , Ligação Proteica/genética , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína/fisiologia , Sódio/metabolismo , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Trombina/genética , Trombina/metabolismo
19.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 11079, 2020 07 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32632109

RESUMO

Protein C is a natural anticoagulant activated by thrombin in a reaction accelerated by the cofactor thrombomodulin. The zymogen to protease conversion of protein C involves removal of a short activation peptide that, relative to the analogous sequence present in other vitamin K-dependent proteins, contains a disproportionately high number of acidic residues. Through a combination of bioinformatic, mutagenesis and kinetic approaches we demonstrate that the peculiar clustering of acidic residues increases the intrinsic disorder propensity of the activation peptide and adversely affects the rate of activation. Charge neutralization of the acidic residues in the activation peptide through Ala mutagenesis results in a mutant activated by thrombin significantly faster than wild type. Importantly, the mutant is also activated effectively by other coagulation factors, suggesting that the acidic cluster serves a protective role against unwanted proteolysis by endogenous proteases. We have also identified an important H-bond between residues T176 and Y226 that is critical to transduce the inhibitory effect of Ca2+ and the stimulatory effect of thrombomodulin on the rate of zymogen activation. These findings offer new insights on the role of the activation peptide in the function of protein C.


Assuntos
Cálcio/metabolismo , Fator Xa/farmacologia , Fragmentos de Peptídeos/farmacologia , Proteína C/metabolismo , Trombina/farmacologia , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Anticoagulantes/metabolismo , Ativação Enzimática , Humanos , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Mutação , Proteína C/genética
20.
Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol ; 28(2): 329-34, 2008 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17962622

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Thrombin containing the mutations Trp215Ala and Glu217Ala (WE) selectively activates protein C and has potent antithrombotic effects in primates. The aim of this study was to delineate the molecular mechanism of direct WE-platelet interactions under static and shear conditions. METHODS AND RESULTS: Purified platelets under static conditions bound and spread on immobilized wild-type but not WE thrombin. In PPACK-anticoagulated blood under shear flow conditions, platelets tethered and rolled on both wild-type and WE thrombin, and these interactions were abrogated by the presence of a glycoprotein Ib (GPIb)-blocking antibody. Platelet deposition on collagen was blocked in the presence of WE, but not wild-type thrombin or prothrombin. WE also abrogated platelet tethering and rolling on immobilized von Willebrand factor in whole blood under shear flow. CONCLUSIONS: These observations demonstrate that the thrombin mutant WE, while not activating platelets, retains the ability to interact with platelets through GPIb, and inhibits GPIb-dependent binding to von Willebrand factor-collagen under shear.


Assuntos
Coagulação Sanguínea/fisiologia , Proteínas Mutantes/fisiologia , Ativação Plaquetária/fisiologia , Complexo Glicoproteico GPIb-IX de Plaquetas/fisiologia , Trombina/genética , Trombina/fisiologia , Adulto , Animais , Plaquetas/fisiologia , Enzimas Imobilizadas , Humanos , Camundongos , Adesividade Plaquetária/fisiologia , Proteínas Recombinantes , Reologia , Trombina/química , Trombose/fisiopatologia , Fator de von Willebrand/fisiologia
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