[22] Snake venom proteases that activate blood-coagulation factor V

Author(s):  
Walter Kisiel ◽  
William M. Canfield
Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 850-850
Author(s):  
Mettine H.A. Bos ◽  
Rodney M. Camire

Abstract Abstract 850 Blood coagulation factor V (FV) is a multi-domain protein which circulates as an inactive procofactor and has high structural homology with factor VIII. To express procoagulant activity, FV must be proteolytically processed within its central B-domain (836 residues) with thrombin being considered the key physiological activator. Following liberation of the B-domain (residues 710-1545), activated FV (FVa) functions as a cofactor for factor Xa within the prothrombinase complex and dramatically enhances the rate of thrombin generation. The central role which FVa assumes in prothrombinase indicates that its activation must be a key regulatory step in hemostasis. Although the proteolytic events that lead to the activation of FV have been well studied, the molecular mechanism by which B-domain release facilitates the procofactor to cofactor transition is not well understood. Recently, we have shown that in the absence of intentional proteolysis, deletion or substitution of discrete B-domain sequences drives the expression of procoagulant function (JBC, 282, 15030-9, 2007). Conversion to the constitutively active cofactor state is related, at least in part, to a cluster of amino acids (963-1008) which is highly basic and well conserved, even though most of the B-domain has weak homology within the vertebrate lineage. In the current study, we examined if this basic B-domain region is sufficient to preserve FV as an inactive procofactor. To investigate this, the basic region (46 residues) was incorporated within the short B-domain of a previously characterized FV variant, FV-810. Factor V-810 has amino acids 811-1491 within the B-domain deleted and is a constitutively active cofactor, with functional properties equivalent to FVa. Using a PT-based clotting assay, purified prothrombinase assay, and direct fluorescent binding measurements with FXa-membranes we found that insertion of the basic region into FV-810 (inserted after residue 810) converted this cofactor-like species back to the procofactor-like state, despite >75% of the B-domain being absent. Next, using this new variant (FV+BR; B-domain of 201 residues), we assessed whether residual B-domain sequences within FV+BR contribute to maintaining FV in an inactive, procofactor state. Elimination of ∼100 residues on the N-terminal side of FV+BR was without functional consequence; that is, the procofactor state was maintained. In contrast, removal of B-domain sequences (∼50 residues, 30% of which are acidic) to the C-terminal side of the basic region shifted FV-810+BR from an inactive procofactor to an active cofactor. As expected, all purified FV derivatives exhibited full cofactor activity following treatment with thrombin. Together, these data show that B-domain sequences 963-1008 (basic region) appear to work in concert with the acidic C-terminal region of the B-domain (1492-1545) to keep FV in an inactive procofator state. These sequence elements appear to be necessary and sufficient as we were able to construct a FV variant with a B-domain length of only 103 amino acids that remarkably still had procofactor-like properties. Interestingly, these two regions of the B-domain (963-1008 and 1492-1545) are generally well conserved throughout the vertebrate lineage, while the remaining regions of the B-domain are not. We speculate that these B-domain sequences bind intramolecularly to heavy and/or light chain sequences thereby concealing critical binding sites on the FV molecule which govern the function of the active cofactor species. Disclosures: Camire: Wyeth: Patents & Royalties, Research Funding.


Nature ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 369 (6475) ◽  
pp. 64-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rogier M. Bertina ◽  
Bobby P. C. Koeleman ◽  
Ted Koster ◽  
Frits R. Rosendaal ◽  
Richard J. Dirven ◽  
...  

1972 ◽  
Vol 27 (01) ◽  
pp. 025-032 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. P Kahn ◽  
H. C Hemker

SummaryIt is confirmed that a protein from Russell’s viper venom has a direct activating action on human as well as bovine factor V.Unactivated human factor V has a molecular weight as estimated by gel filtration of ∼410,000, after activation the molecular weight is ∼110,000, thus suggesting the dissociation of a tetramer.The approximative molecular weight figures for unactivated and activated bovine factor V are 400,000 and 195,000, resp. This suggests the dissociation into a dimer accompanying the process of activation.


Toxins ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 358 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zorica Latinović ◽  
Adrijana Leonardi ◽  
Cho Yeow Koh ◽  
R. Manjunatha Kini ◽  
Alenka Trampuš Bakija ◽  
...  

A procoagulant snake venom serine protease was isolated from the venom of the nose-horned viper (Vipera ammodytes ammodytes). This 34 kDa glycoprotein, termed VaaSP-VX, possesses five kDa N-linked carbohydrates. Amino acid sequencing showed VaaSP-VX to be a chymotrypsin-like serine protease. Structurally, it is highly homologous to VaaSP-6 from the same venom and to nikobin from the venom of Vipera nikolskii, neither of which have known functions. VaaSP-VX does not affect platelets. The specific proteolysis of blood coagulation factors X and V by VaaSP-VX suggests that its blood-coagulation-inducing effect is due to its ability to activate these two blood coagulation factors, which following activation, combine to form the prothrombinase complex. VaaSP-VX may thus represent the first example of a serine protease with such a dual activity, which makes it a highly suitable candidate to replace diluted Russell’s viper venom in lupus anticoagulant testing, thus achieving greater reliability of the analysis. As a blood-coagulation-promoting substance that is resistant to serpin inhibition, VaaSP-VX is also interesting from the therapeutic point of view for treating patients suffering from hemophilia.


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