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Query: HUMANGGP:027518 (
factor Xa
)
5,167
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Snake venoms are complex mixtures containing many different biologically active proteins and peptides. A number of these proteins interact with components of the human hemostatic system. This review is focused on those venom constituents which affect the blood coagulation pathway, endothelial cells, and platelets. Only highly purified and well characterized snake venom proteins will be discussed in this review. Hemostatically active components are distributed widely in the venom of many different snake species, particularly from pit viper, viper and elapid venoms. The venom components can be grouped into a number of different categories depending on their hemostatic action. The following groups are discussed in this review: (i) enzymes that clot fibrinogen; (ii) enzymes that degrade fibrin(ogen); (iii) plasminogen activators; (iv) prothrombin activators; (v) factor V activators; (vi) factor X activators; (vii) anticoagulant activities including inhibitors of
prothrombinase
complex formation, inhibitors of thrombin, phospholipases, and protein C activators; (viii) enzymes with hemorrhagic activity; (ix) enzymes that degrade plasma serine proteinase inhibitors; (x) platelet aggregation inducers including direct acting enzymes, direct acting non-enzymatic components, and agents that require a cofactor; (xi) platelet aggregation inhibitors including: alpha-fibrinogenases, 5'-nucleotidases, phospholipases, and disintegrins. Although many snake venoms contain a number of hemostatically active components, it is safe to say that no single venom contains all the hemostatically active components described here. Several venom enzymes have been used clinically as anticoagulants and other venom components are being used in pre-clinical research to examine their possible therapeutic potential. The disintegrins are an interesting group of peptides that contain a cell adhesion recognition motif, Arg-Gly-
Asp
(RGD), in the carboxy-terminal half of their amino acid sequence. These agents act as fibrinogen receptor (integrin GPIIb/IIIa) antagonists. Since this integrin is believed to serve as the final common pathway leading to the formation of platelet-platelet bridges and platelet aggregation, blockage of this integrin leads to inhibition of platelet aggregation regardless of the stimulating agent. Clinical trials suggest that platelet GPIIb/IIIa blockade is an effective therapy for the thrombotic events and restenosis frequently accompanying cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease. Therefore, because of their clinical poten tial, a large number of disintegrins have been isolated and characterized.
...
PMID:Snake venoms and the hemostatic system. 983 63
The analysis of literature and our own data of regulatory peptides influence on the blood coagulation system is presenting. Various natural and synthetic peptides inhibit the activity of thrombin and platelet aggregation. Direct specific inhibitors of thrombin are peptides developed on the base of D-Phe-Pro-Arg sequence. Strong specific inhibitors of the
prothrombinase
complex
factor Xa
were isolated from tissues and saliva of the blood-sucking organisms. These inhibitors decrease thrombin generation at the early stage of blood coagulation cascade Anticoagulating peptides from the tick Ornithodoros moubata tissue (TAP), the recombinant rTAP from the saliva glands of tick Ornithodoros savignyi and peptide with even greater anticoagulating activity from saliva glands of fly Glossina morsitans morsitans were isolated and characterised. For complete and reliable suppression of thrombus formation simultaneous administration of thrombin and platelet aggregation inhibitors is necessary. Main terminal stage of platelet aggregation is the interaction of receptor GP IIb/IIIa with adhesive fibrinogen sequence Arg-Pro-
Asp
(RGD). Peptides derived on the base of this sequence compete with fibrinogen in reaction with platelet receptors. A lot of corresponding peptidomimetics were synthesised, e.g. MK-852, RO-44 and particularly effective compound integrelin. Many direct platelet aggregation inhibitors were found in snake venoms. Recombinant peptide TAP mentioned above exerts both antithrombin and antiaggregation activity. Peptides and peptide mimetics of this type rapidly and irreversibly bound with receptor GP IIb/IIIa. They have short half life time in the blood plasma. Their preference in comparison with other drugs is particularly rapid and strong action. In our experiments it was demonstrated, that simple proline-containing peptides Pro-Gly, Trp-Pro, Pro-Gly-Pro (putative fragments of collagen and elastin) possesses significant antithrombotic and anticoagulant potential in vitro and in in vivo. Perhaps these peptides are members on intrinsic complex of haemostasis regulators.
...
PMID:[Peptides as inhibitors of thrombin coagulation activity and of thrombocyte aggregation]. 1042 Apr 78
Asparaginase (ASNase) is a widely used and successful agent against childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Asparaginase cleaves asparagine (Asn) to give
aspartic acid
and ammonia, thereby depleting free Asn in the blood. However, treatment with ASNase has been implicated in significant reduction of plasma levels of the coagulation serine protease inhibitor (serpin) antithrombin III (AT3), predisposing patients to thromboembolic complications. Our investigation was designed to delineate the biochemical mechanism of AT3 depletion that can occur in the plasma of ALL patients undergoing ASNase therapy. SDS-PAGE showed no cleavage of purified AT3 following treatment with ASNase. Furthermore, purified AT3 treated with ASNase demonstrated no decrease in inhibitory activity. Human plasma and whole blood treated with approximate therapeutic concentrations of ASNase showed no loss of AT3 activity as detected by a plasma-based
factor Xa
inhibition assay. Treatment of a confluent monolayer of HepG2 (hepatocarcinoma) cells with ASNase showed no gross loss in AT3 message levels detected by rtPCR. However, a decrease of cell viability was observed in cultures treated with ASNase. Interestingly, medium from HepG2 cells treated with ASNase showed a marked decrease in secretion of AT3 and another serpin, heparin cofactor II. Collectively, these data show that ASNase has no direct effect on AT3 in blood or plasma, but that ASNase may affect plasma levels of AT3 by interfering with translation and/or secretion of the protein in liver cells.
...
PMID:Insight into the mechanism of asparaginase-induced depletion of antithrombin III in treatment of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1086 29
The general amino acid permease (Gap1p) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an integral membrane protein that contains 12 hydrophobic regions predicted to be membrane-spanning segments. A topological reporter construct, encoding an internal 53-amino acid peptide of invertase (Suc2p) containing three
Asp
-X-Ser/Thr glycosylation sites, was inserted in-frame into the hydrophilic NH(2)- and COOH-terminal domains and each of the 11 hydrophilic loops that separate the 12 hydrophobic segments of Gap1p. The resulting 13 gene sandwich fusion proteins were expressed in a gap1Delta null mutant strain; 9 of these retain amino acid transport activity and are folded and correctly targeted to the plasma membrane. The glycosylation state of each of the fusion proteins was monitored; the results indicate that all 12 hydrophobic segments of Gap1p span the membrane, and the NH(2) and COOH termini are cytoplasmically oriented. These results were independently tested by isolating sealed right-side-out microsomes from sec12-1 strains expressing six different Gap1p constructs containing functional
factor Xa
protease cleavage sites. The pattern of
factor Xa
protease cleavage was found to be consistent with the presence of 12 membrane-spanning domains. Gap1p exhibited the same membrane topology in strains lacking Shr3p; therefore, Gap1p fully integrates into the ER membrane independently of this permease-specific packaging chaperone.
...
PMID:A method for determining the in vivo topology of yeast polytopic membrane proteins demonstrates that Gap1p fully integrates into the membrane independently of Shr3p. 1090 20
Based on homology, amino acids 326-336 (143-154 in chymotrypsin numbering) of factor X (fX) comprise a flexible surface loop, which is susceptible to self-proteolysis and influences substrate catalysis. To investigate the role of this autolysis loop in fX function, a recombinant variant with a new site for asparagine-linked glycosylation has been produced by changing glutamine 333 to asparagine. Q333N fX is activated normally by factor VIIa and tissue factor, factors IXa and VIIIa, and Russell's viper venom. Proteolysis of the loop is prevented by the mutation. Reactivity of the free enzyme toward substrates and inhibitors is attenuated 4-20-fold; relative to wild type fXa, Spectrozyme Xa(TM) hydrolysis is 25%, inhibition by antithrombin III and the tissue factor pathway inhibitor is approximately 20%, and prothrombin activation in the absence of the cofactor Va is only 5%. Surprisingly, activities of the variant and wild type enzymes are equivalent when part of the
prothrombinase
complex. N-Glycanase cleaves the new oligosaccharide from Q333N fXa leaving
aspartic acid
. Q333D fXa is approximately 1.6-fold more reactive with Spectrozyme Xa(TM), antithrombin III and tissue factor pathway inhibitor, and prothrombin than its glycosylated counterpart, Q333N fXa, but still quite abnormal relative to wild type fXa. Like Q333N fXa, Q333D fXa is fully functional as part of the
prothrombinase
complex. We conclude that Gln-333 is geographically close to a site of proteolytic degradation but not to activator, cofactor, or membrane binding sites. Mutation of Gln-333 impairs catalytic function, but given normal prothrombin activation by the complexed enzyme, the importance of Gln-333 for catalysis is not manifest in the
prothrombinase
assembly, suggesting a conformational change in complexed fXa.
...
PMID:Directed glycosylation of human coagulation factor X at residue 333. Insight into factor Va-dependent prothrombin catalysis. 1099 46
Factor Xa (FXa) hydrolyzes two peptide bonds in prothrombin having (Glu/
Asp
)-Gly-Arg-(Thr/Ile) for P(3)-P(2)-P(1)-P(1)' residues, but the exact preferences of its catalytic groove remain largely unknown. To investigate the specificity of FXa, we synthesized full sets of fluorescence-quenched substrates carrying all natural amino acids (except Cys) in P(3), P(2), P(1)', P(2)', and P(3)' and determined the k(cat)/K(m) values of cleavage. Contrary to expectation, glycine was not the "best" P(2) residue; peptide with phenylalanine was cleaved slightly faster. In fact, FXa had surprisingly limited preferences, barely more pronounced than trypsin; in P(2), the ratio of the k(cat)/K(m) values for the most favorable side chain over the least was 289 (12 with trypsin), but in P(1)', this ratio was only 30 (versus 80 with trypsin). This unexpected selectivity undoubtedly distinguished FXa from thrombin, which exhibited ratios higher than 19,000 in P(2) and P(1)'. Thus, with respect to the catalytic groove, FXa resembles a low efficiency trypsin rather than the highly selective thrombin. The rates of cleavage of the peptidyl substrates were virtually identical whether or not FXa was in complex with factor Va, suggesting that the cofactor did not exert a direct allosteric control on the catalytic groove. We conclude that the remarkable efficacy of FXa within
prothrombinase
originates from exosite interaction(s) with factor Va and/or prothrombin rather than from the selectivity of its catalytic groove.
...
PMID:Mapping of the catalytic groove preferences of factor Xa reveals an inadequate selectivity for its macromolecule substrates. 1192 40
Two loop segments (183-189 and 221-225) in the protease domain of
factor Xa
contribute to the formation of a Na(+)-binding site. Studies with
factor Xa
indicate that binding of a single Na(+) ion to this site influences its activity by altering the S1 specificity site, and substitution of Tyr(225) with Pro diminishes sensitivity to Na(+). Using full-length
factor Xa
(Y225P), the allosteric relationship between the Na(+) site and other structural determinants in
factor Xa
and
prothrombinase
was investigated. Direct binding and kinetic measurements with probes that target the S1 specificity pocket indicate that assembly of the mutant in
prothrombinase
corrected the impaired binding of these probes observed with free
factor Xa
(Y225P). This appears to result from the apparent allosteric linkage between the factor Va, S1, and Na(+)-binding sites, since binding of the cofactor to membrane-bound
factor Xa
(Y225P) enhances binding at the S1 site and vice versa. Additional studies revealed that the internal salt bridge (Ile(16)-
Asp
(194)) of
factor Xa
(Y225P) is partially destabilized, a process that is reversible upon occupation of the S1 site. The data establish that alterations at the
factor Xa
Na(+)-binding site shift the zymogen-protease equilibrium to a more zymogen-like state, and as a consequence binding of S1-directed probes and factor Va are adversely affected. Therefore, the zymogen-like characteristics of
factor Xa
(Y225P) have allowed for the apparent allosteric linkage between the S1, factor Va, and Na(+) sites to become evident and has provided insight into the structural transitions which accompany the conversion of factor X to
factor Xa
.
...
PMID:Prothrombinase assembly and S1 site occupation restore the catalytic activity of FXa impaired by mutation at the sodium-binding site. 1214 52
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.
...
PMID:Insight into the molecular basis of coagulation proteinase specificity by mutagenesis of the serpin antithrombin. 1235 19
Coagulation FVa (factor Va) accelerates the essential generation of thrombin by FXa (
factor Xa
). Although the noncovalent Ca2+-dependent association between the FVa light and heavy subunits (FVaL and FVaH) is required for function, little is known about the specific residues involved. Previous fragmentation studies and homology modelling led us to investigate the contribution of Leu-94-
Asp
-112. Including prospective divalent cation-binding acidic amino acids, nine conserved residues were individually replaced with Ala in the recombinant B-domainless FVa precursor (DeltaFV). While mutation of Thr-104, Glu-108,
Asp
-112 or Tyr-100 resulted in only minor changes to FXa-mediated thrombin generation, the functions of E96A (81%), D111A (70%) and D102A (60%) mutants (where the single-letter amino acid code is used) were notably reduced. The mutants targeting neighbouring acidic residues,
Asp
-79 and Glu-119, had activity comparable with DeltaFV, supporting the specific involvement of select residues. Providing a basis for reduced activity, thrombin treatment of D111A resulted in spontaneous dissociation of subunits. Since FVaH and FVaL derived from E96A or D102A remained associated in the presence of Ca2+, like the wild type, but conversely dissociated rapidly upon chelation, a subtle difference in divalent cation co-ordination is implied. Subunit interactions for all other single-point mutants resembled the wild type. These data, along with corroborating multipoint mutants, reveal
Asp
-111 as essential for FVa subunit association. Although Glu-96 and
Asp
-102 can be mutated without gross changes to divalent cation-dependent FVaH-FVaL interactions, they too are required for optimal function. Thus Glu-96-
Asp
-111 imparts at least two discernible effects on FVa coagulation activity.
...
PMID:Coagulation factor Va Glu-96-Asp-111: a chelator-sensitive site involved in function and subunit association. 1294 96
There is strong evidence that a functionally important cluster of amino acids is located on the COOH-terminal portion of the heavy chain of factor Va, between amino acid residues 680 and 709. To ascertain the importance of this region for cofactor activity, we have synthesized five overlapping peptides representing this amino acid stretch (10 amino acids each, HC1-HC5) and tested them for inhibition of
prothrombinase
assembly and function. Two peptides, HC3 (spanning amino acid region 690-699) and HC4 (containing amino acid residues 695-704), were found to be potent inhibitors of
prothrombinase
activity with IC(50) values of approximately 12 and approximately 10 microm, respectively. The two peptides were unable to interfere with the binding of factor Va to active site fluorescently labeled Glu-Gly-Arg human
factor Xa
, and kinetic analyses showed that HC3 and HC4 are competitive inhibitors of
prothrombinase
with respect to prothrombin with K(i) values of approximately 6.3 and approximately 5.3 microm, respectively. These data suggest that the peptides inhibit
prothrombinase
because they interfere with the incorporation of prothrombin into
prothrombinase
. The shared amino acid motif between HC3 and HC4 is composed of
Asp
(695)-Tyr-
Asp
-Tyr-Gln(699) (DYDYQ). A pentapeptide with this sequence inhibited both
prothrombinase
function with an IC(50) of 1.6 microm (with a K(D) for prothrombin of 850 nm), and activation of factor V by thrombin. Peptides HC3, HC4, and DYDYQ were also found to interact with immobilized thrombin. A recombinant factor V molecule with the mutations
Asp
(695) --> Lys, Tyr(696) --> Phe,
Asp
(697) --> Lys, and Tyr(698) --> Phe (factor V(2K2F)) was partially resistant to activation by thrombin but could be readily activated by RVV-V activator (factor Va(RVV)(2K2F)) and
factor Xa
(factor Va(Xa)(2K2F)). Factor Va(RVV)(2K2F) and factor Va(Xa)(2K2F) had impaired cofactor activity within
prothrombinase
in a system using purified reagents. Our data demonstrate for the first time that amino acid sequence 695-698 of factor Va heavy chain is important for procofactor activation and is required for optimum
prothrombinase
function. These data provide functional evidence for an essential and productive contribution of factor Va to the activity of
prothrombinase
.
...
PMID:The contribution of amino acid region ASP695-TYR698 of factor V to procofactor activation and factor Va function. 1455 13
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