Abstract

We have purified human coagulation Factor V 6,000-fold to homogeneity from citrated plasma using polyethylene glycol 6000 precipitation, adsorption of Factor V to barium citrate, DEAE-Sepharose chromatography, and gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA 34 (yield 21%). Human Factor V is a single polypeptide chain before and after disulfide bond reduction with an apparent Mr = 335,000 as determined by electrophoresis on 5% acrylamide sodium dodecyl sulfate gels. Human Factor V is a glycoprotein containing 13% of weight carbohydrate and there is a high content of sialic acid (86 residues/mol) compared to the other sugars. When human Factor V is treated with thrombin, coagulation activity increases 25- to 30-fold to a specific activity of 1.7 to 2.0 units/microgram. Thrombin activation is accompanied by the cleavage of three bonds in the Factor V molecule. We have detected activation intermediates with apparent Mr = 295,000 and 248,000 and final products with apparent Mr = 150,000, 121,000, and a doublet at 95,000-91,000 as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The final products of thrombin activation of human Factor V and bovine Factor V are similar, yet the intermediates observed are different. This suggests that cleavages are made at similar locations in bovine and human Factor V, but that they occur in a different sequence. When human Factor V is treated with the Factor V activator from Russell's viper venom, it is split into two components with apparent Mr = 303,000 and 95,000-91,000 and is fully activated. The increase in coagulation activity observed upon treatment of human Factor V with thrombin or the Factor V activator from Russell's viper venom seems to correlate with the generation of the doublet Mr = 95,0090-91,000 component.

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