Characterization of Kunitz-Domain Anticoagulation Peptides Derived from Exotoxin Protein F6W77.

Toxins (Basel)

Institute of Biomedicine, Hubei Key Laboratory of Embryonic Stem Cell Research, and Hubei Key Laboratory of Wudang Local Chinese Medicine Research, College of Basic Medicine, Hubei University of Medicine, Shiyan 442000, China.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research suggests that the coagulation system in mammals helps defend against bacterial infections by trapping bacteria in clots and producing antimicrobial peptides.
  • A study identified a new bacterial exotoxin called F6W77, which contains five Kunitz-type domains that have similarities to animal but not plant proteins.
  • Evaluation of these Kunitz-domain peptides revealed that KABP1 and KABP5 effectively inhibit specific coagulation factors, indicating a new mechanism by which bacteria may evade the host's defense system.

Article Abstract

Recent studies have revealed that the coagulation system plays a role in mammalian innate defense by entrapping bacteria in clots and generating antibacterial peptides. So, it is very important for the survival of bacteria to defend against the host coagulation system, which suggests that bacterial exotoxins might be a new source of anticoagulants. In this study, we analyzed the genomic sequences of and a new bacterial exotoxin protein, F6W77, with five Kunitz-domains, KABP1-5, was identified. Each Kunitz-type domain features a classical six-cysteine framework reticulated by three conserved disulfide bridges, which was obviously similar to animal Kunitz-domain peptides but different from plant Kunitz-domain peptides. Anticoagulation function evaluation showed that towards the intrinsic coagulation pathway, KABP1 and KABP5 had apparently inhibitory activity, KABP4 had weak inhibitory activity, and KBAP2 and KABP3 had no effect even at a high concentration of 20 μg/mL. All five Kunitz-domain peptides, KABP1-5, had no inhibitory activity towards the extrinsic coagulation pathway. Enzyme-inhibitor experiments showed that the high-activity anticoagulant peptide KABP1 had apparently inhibitory activity towards two key coagulation factors, Xa and XIa, which was further confirmed by pull-down experiments that showed that KABP1 can bind to coagulation factors Xa and XIa directly. Structure-function relationship analyses of five Kunitz-type domain peptides showed that the arginine of the P1 site of three new bacterial anticoagulants, KABP1, KABP4 and KABP5, might be the key residue for their anticoagulation activity. In conclusion, with bioinformatics analyses, peptide recombination, and functional evaluation, we firstly found bacterial-exotoxin-derived Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors with selectively inhibiting activity towards intrinsic coagulation pathways, and highlighted a new interaction between pathogenic bacteria and the human coagulation system.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11511053PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins16100450DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

inhibitory activity
16
coagulation system
12
kunitz-domain peptides
12
exotoxin protein
8
protein f6w77
8
coagulation
8
kunitz-type domain
8
intrinsic coagulation
8
coagulation pathway
8
coagulation factors
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!