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Role of the Thrombin Insertion Loop 144-155. Study of Thrombin Mutations W148G, K154E and a Thrombin-Based Synthetic Peptide

Authors :
Martine Jandrot-Perrus
Marie-Christine Bouton
Muriel Dembak
Marie-Claude Guillin
Jean-Luc Plantier
Marie-Josèphe Rabiet
Source :
European Journal of Biochemistry. 229:526-532
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Wiley, 1995.

Abstract

Thrombin is a multifunctional serine protease that plays a critical role in hemostasis. Crystallographic studies revealed that the insertion loop, residues 144-155 (human thrombin B chain numbering) located on the surface of thrombin, might be involved in the access of substrates to the active-site of the enzyme. This loop has also been proposed as a potential candidate for a binding site for thrombomodulin and selected thrombin substrates. In order to examine this hypothesis, we have introduced single amino acid substitutions into the loop 144-155 (W148G, K154E). These point mutations did not result in major changes in thrombin specificity. However, the mutant thrombins presented slight modifications in their catalytic activity on the tripeptidic substrate H-D-Lys-(epsilon-benzyloxycarbonyl)-Pro-Arg-NH-nitroanilide ([K154E]thrombin) or tosyl-Gly-Pro-Arg-NH-nitroanilide ([W148G]thrombin), and in the second-order rate constants of inhibition by antithrombin III ([K154E]thrombin) and ([W148G]thrombin) compared to recombinant wild-type thrombin. Kinetics of fibrinogen hydrolysis were minimally affected by the K154E mutation and were not affected by the W148G mutation. Neither of the mutations affected thrombin interaction with hirudin or its C-terminal tail, protein C activation by thrombin or thrombin-thrombomodulin, or platelet activation. We also examined the properties of a synthetic peptide corresponding to the sequence T147-S158. The synthetic peptide T147-S158 did not inhibit thrombin interaction with fibrin, thrombomodulin or protein C. Together, our results indicate that the thrombin loop 144-155 is indirectly involved in the catalytic function of the enzyme, most probably by limiting the access of the substrates to the catalytic site, and argue against the presence of a recognition exosite for fibrin(ogen), thrombomodulin or platelets within the loop.

Details

ISSN :
14321033 and 00142956
Volume :
229
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4586710c09a83f3433ce98403f5f6bf5