scholarly journals Activation of Bovine Blood Coagulation Factor V, A Prerequisite for it of Bind Both Prothrombin and Factor Xa.

1977 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.C. Guillin ◽  
A. Bezeaud ◽  
J.P. Freeman ◽  
C.M. Jackson

It is known that prior to bind bovine prothrombin and to become fully functional, bovine Factor V must itself be “activated” by either thrombin or an enzyme isolable from Russell’s viper venom. The purpose of this work was to determine if Factor V activation is also required in order for it to bind bovine Factor Xa.This has been investigated by measuring the binding of both “native” (unactivated) Factor V and Factor V activated by the Russell’s viper venom activating enzyme, to a column of agarose-bound Factor Xa. The experiments were also performed using diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP) inhibited Factor Xa covalently bound to agarose. Both purified bovine Factor V (Va) and bovine plasma were used and gave the same results. In order to prevent initiation of clotting in bovine plasma, heparin wad added to the plasma to promote inactivation of Factor Xa by antithrombin III.The results indicate that Factor V activation is a prerequisite for it to bind Factor Xa ; Factor Va binds both Factor Xa and DFP inhibited Factor Xa, unmodified Factor V does not.These experiments suggest that Factor V may not participate in prothrombin activation at all, until after some thrombin has been formed. If this is so, an alternate pathway by which the first thrombin is generated must be considered and may be proposed to be simply that involving Factor Xa, phospholipid and Ca2+ alone.

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.


1972 ◽  
Vol 27 (01) ◽  
pp. 033-042 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. C Hemker ◽  
M. J. P Kahn

SummaryThe disappearance of factor V-activity from human plasma on storage can be described as a first order reaction with an activation energy of about 44 kcal/mol.The disappearance of factor V- activity from bovine plasma in vitro is a second order reaction with an activation energy of about 66 kcal/mol.The inactivation of human prothrombinase during coagulation is a second order reaction; the activation energy is about 10 kcal/mol. It is concluded that this inactivation involves a reaction of the factor V moiety of prothrombinase with free factor V.


Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 89 (2) ◽  
pp. 397-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ariella Zivelin ◽  
John H. Griffin ◽  
Xiao Xu ◽  
Ingrid Pabinger ◽  
Michel Samama ◽  
...  

Abstract A common genetic risk factor for venous thrombosis among Caucasoid subpopulations is a polymorphism, nt G1691A, in blood coagulation factor V that replaces Arg506 with Gln and imparts resistance of factor Va to the anticoagulant, activated protein C. Haplotype analyses using six dimorphic sites in the factor V gene for 117 Caucasian subjects of Jewish, Arab, Austrian, and French origin who were homozygous for nt A1691 compared with 167 controls (nt G1691) support a single origin for this polymorphism. The nt G1691A mutation is estimated to have arisen circa 21,000 to 34,000 years ago, ie, after the evolutionary divergence of Africans from non-Africans and of Caucasoid from Mongoloid subpopulations.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
B Dahlbäck ◽  
A LundWall

Coagulation factor V is a single chain, 330 kDa glycoprotein functioning as a cofactor to factor Xa in the activation of prothrombin. Thrombin cleaves factor V into four major fragments, out of which the N-terminal (105kDa) and the C-terminal (71-74kDa) fragments together constitute the active factor V species. To isolate cDNA clones a λ-gt 11 liver library was screened with a polyclonal, monospecific antiserum against human factor V. Four positive clones (two "weak", Aland A2 and two "strong", A3 and A4) were identified and isolated. Al(0.7kb), A2 (1.25kb) and A4 (0.85kb) reacted strongly with an antiserum against the 105 kDa, N-terminal fragment (heavy chain of factor Va), whereas A3 (1.25kb) gave the best signal with an antiserum against the 71-74 kDa, C-terminal fragment (light chain of factor Va). A1 hybridized with A2 and A4, whereas A2 only hybridized with Al. A3, which did not hybridize to any of the other clones, was used to rescreen the library and 9 positive clones (Bl-9) were isolated. B9 (3kb) coded for the entire C-terminal factor V fragment and the 3' noncoding sequence. B8 (1.8kb) partially overlapped B9 but extented the 5' sequence with 0.8kb. In a third screening round Al was used in combination with B8 and a 1.1 kb clone (CIO) was identified which hybridized to both. C10 did not hybridize with A2. The following overlapping cDNA clones can be orderedfrom the 5´end: A2-A1-C10-B8-B9 and together they cover 6 kb of coding sequence


2005 ◽  
Vol 93 (03) ◽  
pp. 420-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thi Nguyet Minh Le ◽  
Md Abu Reza ◽  
Sanjay Swarup ◽  
R. Manjunatha Kini

SummaryThe origin and evolution of venom toxins is a mystery that has evoked much interest. We have recently shown that pseutarin C, a prothrombin activator from Pseudonaja textilis venom, is structurally and functionally similar to mammalian coagulation factor Xa – factor Va complex. Its catalytic subunit is homologous to factor Xa while the nonenzymatic subunit is homologous to factor Va. P.textilis therefore has two parallel prothrombin activator systems: one expressed in its venom gland as a toxin and the other expressed in its liver and released into its plasma as a haemostatic factor. Here we report the complete amino acid sequence of factor V (FV) from its liver determined by cDNA cloning and sequencing. The liver FV shows 96% identity to pseutarin C nonenzymatic subunit. Most of the functional sites involved in its interaction with factor Xa and prothrombin are conserved. However, many potential sites of post-translational modifications and one critical cleavage site for activated protein C are different. The absence of the latter cleavage site makes pseutarin C nonenzymatic subunit resistant to inactivation and enhances its potential as an excellent toxin. By PCR and real-time quantitative analysis, we show that pseutarin C nonenzymatic subunit gene is expressed specifically in the venom gland at ~280 fold higher than that of FV gene in liver. These two are thus encoded by two separate genes that express in a highly tissue-specific manner. Our results imply that the gene encoding pseutarin C nonenzymatic subunit was derived by the duplication of plasma FV gene and they have evolved to perform distinct functions.


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.


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