Abstract
Saliva of the cattle tick Boophilus microplus contains two thrombin inhibitors, BmAP and microphilin. This work presents the purification and characterization of microphilin. It was purified from the saliva by gel filtration, ultrafiltration through a 3 kDa cut-off membrane and affinity chromatography in a thrombin–Sepharose column. Analysis by mass spectrometry showed a molecular mass of 1770 Da. Microphilin is the smallest salivary thrombin inhibitor peptide known to date. It inhibits fibrinocoagulation and thrombin-induced platelet aggregation with an IC 50 of 5.5 μM, is temperature resistant and its inhibitory activity was abolished by protease K treatment. Microphilin did not inhibit the amidolytic activity of the enzyme upon a small chromogenic substrate, but inhibited the hydrolysis of a substrate that binds both catalytic site and exosite I. Therefore, we propose that microphilin blocks thrombin at exosite I.
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