Background: The protein C system regulates blood coagulation, inflammation, and vascular integrity. AB002 is an injectable protein C activating enzyme under investigation to safely prevent and treat thrombosis. In preclinical models, AB002 is antithrombotic, cytoprotective, and anti-inflammatory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thromb Haemost
October 2024
The hemostatic response to vascular injury entails a sequence of proteolytic events where several inactive zymogens of the trypsin family are converted to active proteases. The cascade starts with exposure of tissue factor from the damaged endothelium and culminates with conversion of prothrombin to thrombin in a reaction catalyzed by the prothrombinase complex composed of the enzyme factor Xa, cofactor Va, Ca, and phospholipids. This cofactor-dependent activation is paradigmatic of analogous reactions of the blood coagulation and complement cascades, which makes elucidation of its molecular mechanism of broad significance to the large class of trypsin-like zymogens to which prothrombin belongs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thromb Haemost
September 2024
Background: Unique among all amino acids, Ser is encoded by 2 sets of codons, TCN and AGY (N = any nucleotide, Y = pyrimidine), that cannot interconvert through single nucleotide substitutions. Both codons are documented at the essential residues S195 and S214 within the active site of serine proteases. However, it is not known how the codons interconverted during evolution because replacement of S195 or S214 by other amino acids typically results in loss of activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany interactions involving a ligand and its molecular target are studied by rapid kinetics using a stopped-flow apparatus. Information obtained from these studies is often limited to a single, saturable relaxation that is insufficient to resolve all independent rate constants even for a two-step mechanism of binding obeying induced fit (IF) or conformational selection (CS). We introduce a simple method of general applicability where this limitation is overcome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: 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.
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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Current assays that monitor thrombin generation in plasma rely on fluorogenic substrates to follow the kinetics of zymogen activation, which may be complicated by substrate cleavage from other proteases. In addition, these assays depend on activation following cleavage at the prothrombin R320 site and fail to report the cleavage at the alternative R271 site, leading to the shedding of the auxiliary Gla and kringle domains of prothrombin.
Objectives: To develop a plasma assay that directly monitors prothrombin activation independent of fluorogenic substrate hydrolysis.
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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDirect oral anticoagulants (DOACs), which includes thrombin and factor Xa inhibitors, have emerged as the preferred therapeutics for thrombotic disorders, penetrating a market previously dominated by warfarin and heparin. This article describes the discovery and profiling of a novel series of N-acylpyrazoles, which act as selective, covalent, reversible, non-competitive inhibitors of thrombin. We describe in vitro stability issues associated with this chemotype and, importantly, demonstrate that N-acylpyrazoles successfully act in vivo as anticoagulants in basic thrombotic animal models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllostery is a property of biological macromolecules featuring cooperative ligand binding and regulation of ligand affinity by effectors. The definition was introduced by Monod and Jacob in 1963, and formally developed as the "concerted model" by Monod, Wyman, and Changeux in 1965. Since its inception, this model of cooperativity was seen as distinct from and not reducible to the "sequential model" originally formulated by Pauling in 1935, which was developed further by Koshland, Nemethy, and Filmer in 1966.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thromb Haemost
December 2022
Background: Prothrombin, protein C, and factors VII, IX, and X are vitamin K (VK)-dependent coagulation proteins that play an important role in the initiation, amplification, and subsequent attenuation of the coagulation response. Blood coagulation evolved in the common vertebrate ancestor as a specialization of the complement system and immune response, which in turn bear close evolutionary ties with developmental enzyme cascades. There is currently no comprehensive analysis of the evolutionary changes experienced by these coagulation proteins during the radiation of vertebrates and little is known about conservation of residues that are important for zymogen activation and catalysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe intrinsic and extrinsic pathways of the coagulation cascade converge to a common step where the prothrombinase complex, comprising the enzyme factor Xa (fXa), the cofactor fVa, Ca2+ and phospholipids, activates the zymogen prothrombin to the protease thrombin. The reaction entails cleavage at 2 sites, R271 and R320, generating the intermediates prethrombin 2 and meizothrombin, respectively. The molecular basis of these interactions that are central to hemostasis remains elusive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the penultimate step of the coagulation cascade, the multidomain vitamin-K-dependent zymogen prothrombin is converted to thrombin by the prothrombinase complex composed of factor Xa, cofactor Va, and phospholipids. Activation of prothrombin requires cleavage at two residues, R271 and R320, along two possible pathways generating either the intermediate prethrombin-2 (following initial cleavage at R271) or meizothrombin (following initial cleavage at R320). The former pathway is preferred in the absence of and the latter in the presence of cofactor Va.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCoagulation factor V (fV) is the precursor of fVa, which, together with fXa, Ca2+, and phospholipids, defines the prothrombinase complex and activates prothrombin in the penultimate step of the coagulation cascade. We solved the cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of human fV and fVa at atomic (3.3 Å) and near-atomic (4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany processes in chemistry and biology involve interactions of a ligand with its molecular target. Interest in the mechanism governing such interactions has dominated theoretical and experimental analysis for over a century. The interpretation of molecular recognition has evolved from a simple rigid body association of the ligand with its target to appreciation of the key role played by conformational transitions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActivated 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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein 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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe conformational properties of trypsin-like proteases and their zymogen forms remain controversial because of a lack of sufficient information on their free forms. Specifically, it is unclear whether the free protease is zymogen-like and shifts to its mature form upon a ligand-induced fit or exists in multiple conformations in equilibrium from which the ligand selects the optimal fit via conformational selection. Here we report the results of F NMR measurements that reveal the conformational properties of a protease and its zymogen precursor in the free form.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: High incidence of bleeding events remains a key risk for patients taking anticoagulants, especially those in need of long-term combination therapy with antiplatelet agents. As a consequence, patients may not receive clinically indicated combination antithrombotic therapy. Here, we report on VE-1902, a member of a novel class of precision oral anticoagulants (PROACs) that combines effective anticoagulation with reduced bleeding in preclinical testing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough 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.
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