Abstract
Zinc is an essential trace element for human nutrition and is critical to the structure, stability, and function of many proteins. Zinc ions were shown to enhance activation of the intrinsic pathway of coagulation but down-regulate the extrinsic pathway of coagulation. The protein C pathway plays a key role in blood coagulation and inflammation. At present there is no information on whether zinc modulates the protein C pathway. In the present study we found that Zn(2+) enhanced the binding of protein C/activated protein C (APC) to endothelial cell protein C receptor (EPCR) on endothelial cells. Binding kinetics revealed that Zn(2+) increased the binding affinities of protein C/APC to EPCR. Equilibrium dialysis with (65)Zn(2+) revealed that Zn(2+) bound to the Gla domain as well as sites outside of the Gla domain of protein C/APC. Intrinsic fluorescence measurements suggested that Zn(2+) binding induces conformational changes in protein C/APC. Zn(2+) binding to APC inhibited the amidolytic activity of APC, but the inhibition was reversed by Ca(2+). Zn(2+) increased the rate of APC generation on endothelial cells in the presence of physiological concentrations of Ca(2+) but did not further enhance increased APC generation obtained in the presence of physiological concentrations of Mg(2+) with Ca(2+). Zn(2+) had no effect on the anticoagulant activity of APC. Zn(2+) enhanced APC-mediated activation of protease activated receptor 1 and p44/42 MAPK. Overall, our data show that Zn(2+) binds to protein C/APC, which results in conformational changes in protein C/APC that favor their binding to EPCR.
Highlights
Calcium is an obligatory cofactor in the initiation and regulation of blood coagulation
There is no information on whether Zn2ϩ binds to protein C/activated protein C (APC) and how this affects protein C/APC binding to endothelial cell protein C receptor (EPCR) and their subsequent functions
The data presented in this manuscript show that Zn2ϩ binds to protein C/APC, induces conformational changes in the protein, promotes protein C/APC binding to EPCR and thereby enhances the activation of protein C and APC-mediated cell signaling
Summary
Calcium is an obligatory cofactor in the initiation and regulation of blood coagulation. To study the effect of zinc ions on EPCR mAb binding to EPCR, CHO-EPCR cells were incubated with varying concentrations of 125I-labeled EPCR mAb (JRK-1500; 0 –100 nM) with 5 mM Ca2ϩ in the presence or absence of 25 M ZnCl2 for 3 h at 4 °C. Physiological concentrations of Zn2ϩ enhanced the binding of APC to CHO-EPCR cells by ϳ7-fold.
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