Role of residue 99 at the S2 subsite of factor Xa and activated protein C in enzyme specificity |
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Authors: | AR Rezaie |
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Affiliation: | Cardiovascular Biology Research Program, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73104, USA. |
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Abstract: | It is thought that only a limited number of residues in the extended binding pocket of coagulation proteases are critical for substrate and inhibitor specificity. A candidate residue from the crystal structures of thrombin and factor Xa (FXa) that may be critical for specificity at the S2 subsite is residue 99. Residue 99 is Tyr in FXa and Thr in activated protein C (APC). To determine the role of residue 99 in S2 specificity, a Gla-domainless mutant of protein C (GDPC) was prepared in which Thr99 was replaced with Tyr of FXa. GDPC T99Y bound Ca2+ and was activated by the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex normally. The T99Y mutant, similar to FXa, hydrolyzed the chromogenic substrates with a Gly at the P2 positions. This mutant was also inhibited by antithrombin (AT) (k2 = 4.2 +/- 0.2 x 10(1) M-1 s-1), and heparin accelerated the reaction >350-fold (k2 = 1.5 +/- 0.1 x 10(4) M-1 s-1). The T99Y mutant, however, did not activate prothrombin but inactivated factor Va approximately 2-fold better than wild type. To try to switch the specificity of FXa, both Tyr99 and Gln192 of FXa were replaced with those of APC in the Gla-domainless factor X (GDFX Y99T/Q192E). This mutant was folded correctly as it bound Ca2+ with a similar affinity as GDFX and was also activated by the Russell's viper venom at similar rate, but it cleaved the chromogenic substrates with a Gly at the P2 positions poorly. The mutant, instead, cleaved the APC-specific chromogenic substrates efficiently. The Y99T/Q192E mutant became resistant to inhibition by AT in the absence of heparin but was inhibited by AT almost normally in the presence of heparin (k2 = 3.4 +/- 0.5 x 10(5) M-1 s-1). The Y99T/Q192E mutant did not inactivate factor Va, and prothrombin activation by this mutant was impaired. These results indicate that 1) residue 99 is critical for enzyme specificity at the S2 subsite, 2) a role for heparin in acceleration of FXa inhibition by AT may involve the S2-P2 modulation, and 3) the exchange of residues 99 and 192 in FXa and APC may switch the enzyme specificity with the chromogenic substrates and inhibitors but not with the natural substrates. |
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