Abstract

The critical and multiple roles of thrombin in blood coagulation are regulated by ligands and cofactors. Zymogen activation imparts proteolytic activity to thrombin and also affects the binding of ligands to its two principal exosites. We have used the activation peptide fragment 1.2 (F12), a ligand for anion-binding exosite 2, to probe the zymogenicity of thrombin by isothermal titration calorimetry. We show that F12 binding is sensitive to subtle aspects of proteinase formation beyond simply reporting on zymogen cleavage. Large thermodynamic differences in F12 binding distinguish between a series of thrombin species poised along the transition of zymogen to proteinase. Active-site ligands transitioned a zymogen-like state to a proteinase-like state. Conversely, removal of Na(+) converted proteinase-like thrombin to a more zymogen-like form. Thrombin mutants, with deformed x-ray structures, previously considered to be emblematic of specific regulated states of the enzyme, are instead shown to be variously zymogen-like and can be made proteinase-like by active-site ligation. Thermodynamic linkage between anion-binding exosite 2, the Na(+)-binding site, and the active site arises from interconversions of thrombin between a continuum of zymogen- and proteinase-like states. These interconversions, reciprocally regulated by different ligands, cast new light on the problem of thrombin allostery and provide a thermodynamic framework to explain the regulation of thrombin by different ligands.

Highlights

  • Thrombin is a pivotal serine proteinase product of the blood coagulation cascade

  • Distinguishing Zymogen-like and Proteinase States of Thrombin—Thermodynamic studies have previously established that fragment 1.2 region (F12) binds with ϳ20-fold higher affinity to the zymogen prethrombin 2 (P2) than it does to thrombin [18]

  • We investigated the binding of F12 to a thrombin variant (IIaTAT) bearing ThrAla-Thr in place of the N-terminal Ile16-Val17-Glu18 sequence, intended to impair salt bridge formation and the conformational transition to proteinase

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Summary

Introduction

Thrombin is a pivotal serine proteinase product of the blood coagulation cascade. In addition to catalyzing fibrinogen cleavage and platelet activation to form the blood clot, it plays essential regulatory roles [1, 2]. Our finding that thrombin can interconvert between zymogen- and proteinase-like states in a ligand-dependent manner provides a new framework for understanding how its multiple functions are regulated.

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