Abstract
Factor VIII circulates as a divalent metal ion-dependent heterodimer comprised of a light chain (LC) and a heavy chain (HC). Reassociation of factor VIII subunits was assessed using fluorescence energy transfer where LC and HC were labeled with acrylodan (Ac; fluorescence donor) and fluorescein-5-maleimide (Fl; fluorescence acceptor), respectively. The reduction of donor fluorescence due to the acceptor was used as an indicator of binding. Subunits associated with high affinity (K(d) = 53.8 nM) in the absence of metal ion and presence of EDTA. However, this product showed no cofactor activity, as measured by a factor Xa generation assay. In the presence of 25 mM Ca(2+), no increase in the intersubunit affinity was observed (K(d) = 48.7 nM) but specific activity of the cofactor was approximately 30% that of native factor VIII. At saturating levels of Fl-HC relative to Ac-LC, donor fluorescence decreased to 79.3 and 73.5% of its original value in the absence and presence of Ca(2+), respectively. Thrombin cleaved the heterodimers that were associated in the absence or presence of Ca(2+) with similar efficiency, indicating that the lack of activity was not the result of a defect in activation. Cu(2+) (0.5 microM) increased the intersubunit affinity by approximately 100 fold (K(d) = 0.52 nM) and the specific activity to approximately 60% of native factor VIII. The former effect was independent of Ca(2+), whereas the latter effect required Ca(2+). These results indicate that the intersubunit association in factor VIII is primarily metal-ion independent while divalent metal ions serve specific roles. Ca(2+) appears essential to promote the active conformation of factor VIII while Cu(2+) primarily enhances the intersubunit affinity.
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