Abstract

In the blood coagulation cascade, thrombin cleaves fibrinopeptides A and B from fibrinogen revealing sites for fibrin polymerization that lead to insoluble clot formation. Factor XIII stabilizes this clot by catalyzing the formation of intermolecular cross-links in the fibrin network. Thrombin activates the Factor XIII a(2) dimer by cleaving the Factor XIII activation peptide segment at the Arg(37)-Gly(38) peptide bond. Using a high performance liquid chromatography assay, the kinetic constants K(m), k(cat), and k(cat)/K(m) were determined for thrombin hydrolysis of fibrinogen Aalpha-(7-20), Factor XIII activation peptide-(28-41), and Factor XIII activation peptide-(28-41) with a Val(34) to Leu substitution. This Val to Leu mutation has been correlated with protection from myocardial infarction. In the absence of fibrin, the Factor XIII activation peptide-(28-41) exhibits a 10-fold lower k(cat)/K(m) value than fibrinogen Aalpha-(7-20). With the Factor XIII V34L mutation, decreases in K(m) and increases in k(cat) produce a 6-fold increase in k(cat)/K(m) relative to the wild-type Factor XIII sequence. A review of the x-ray crystal structures of known substrates and inhibitors of thrombin leads to a hypothesis that the new Leu generates a peptide with more extensive interactions with the surface of thrombin. As a result, the Factor XIII V34L is proposed to be susceptible to wasteful conversion of zymogen to activated enzyme. Premature depletion may provide cardioprotective effects.

Highlights

  • Fibrinogen is composed of three chains A␣, B␤, and ␥ arranged into the dimer (A␣B␤␥

  • For the A␣ chain, cleavage occurs at the Arg16-Gly17 peptide bond and fibrinopeptide A (FpA)1 is released; whereas, for the B␤ chain, cleavage occurs at the Arg14

  • The hydrolyzed products Fbg A␣-(7–16), FXIII AP-(28 –37), and FXIII AP-(28 –37) Val34 to a Leu (V34L) all eluted from the Brownlee Aquapore C8 column as distinct peaks at about 4.5 min whereas the parent substrate peptides eluted around 9.3 min

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Fibrinogen is composed of three chains A␣, B␤, and ␥ arranged into the dimer (A␣B␤␥). The Factor XIII a2 dimer contains in the N-terminal portion of each monomer a sequence known as the activation peptide [3, 4]. Each activation peptide segment crosses the dimer interface and extends over the catalytic site of the opposing Factor XIII a subunit. Cleavage of the activation peptide segments by thrombin at the Arg37-Gly peptide bond aids in exposure of the Factor XIII active site residues. Within the Factor XIII activation peptide segment, there is a stretch of amino acids that contains features reminiscent of several diverse agents that interact with thrombin.

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call