AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on how heparin and heparan sulfate influence the inhibition of Factor Xa (fXa) by antithrombin (AT), essential for regulating blood coagulation.
  • Short heparin chains initially promote AT/fXa binding but are excluded from the final stable complexes, while longer chains create stable ternary complexes, suggesting binding happens after initial inhibition.
  • The binding mechanism likely occurs in a bidentate fashion, supported by molecular dynamics simulations, and implies heparan sulfate may play a role in the breakdown of these complexes.

Article Abstract

Factor Xa (fXa) inhibition by antithrombin (AT) enabled by heparin or heparan sulfate is critical for controlling blood coagulation. AT activation by heparin has been investigated extensively, while interaction of heparin with trapped AT/fXa intermediates has received relatively little attention. We use native electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to study the role of heparin chains of varying length [hexa-, octa-, deca-, and eicosasaccharides (dp6, dp8, dp10, and dp20, respectively)] in AT/fXa complex assembly. Despite being critical promoters of AT/Xa binding, shorter heparin chains are excluded from the final products (trapped intermediates). However, replacement of short heparin segments with dp20 gives rise to a prominent ionic signal of ternary complexes. These species are also observed when the trapped intermediate is initially prepared in the presence of a short oligoheparin (dp6), followed by addition of a longer heparin chain (dp20), indicating that binding of heparin to AT/fXa complexes takes place after the inhibition event. The importance of the heparin chain length for its ability to associate with the trapped intermediate suggests that the binding likely occurs in a bidentate fashion (where two distinct segments of oligoheparin make contacts with the protein components, while the part of the chain separating these two segments is extended into solution to minimize electrostatic repulsion). This model is corroborated by both molecular dynamics simulations with an explicit solvent and ion mobility measurements in the gas phase. The observed post-inhibition binding of heparin to the trapped AT/fXa intermediates hints at the likely role played by heparan sulfate in their catabolism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6445383PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.8b00199DOI Listing

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