Faculty Opinions recommendation of Prothrombotic skeletal muscle myosin directly enhances prothrombin activation by binding factors Xa and Va.

Author(s):  
Toshiyuki Miyata
Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (14) ◽  
pp. 1870-1878 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Deguchi ◽  
Ranjeet K. Sinha ◽  
Patrizia Marchese ◽  
Zaverio M. Ruggeri ◽  
Jevgenia Zilberman-Rudenko ◽  
...  

Key Points Skeletal muscle myosin promotes thrombus formation and enhances prothrombin activation by binding factors Xa and Va. The procoagulant activity of skeletal muscle myosin might contribute to the hypercoagulability in plasmas of acute trauma patients.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 3622-3622
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Deguchi ◽  
Zihan Guo ◽  
Mohammed Hayat ◽  
Elsa Pflimlin ◽  
Weijun Shen ◽  
...  

Skeletal muscle myosin (SkM) is a muscle protein consisting of a dimer of heterotrimers, each trimer comprising a regulatory light chain (RLC), an essential light chain (ELC), and a heavy chain (HC). Recently it was discovered that SkM has potent procoagulant and prothrombotic activity (Deguchi H, et al, Blood. 2016;128:1870-1878). Mechanistic studies showed that SkM's potent prothrombotic activity involved enhancing thrombin generation due to SkM's ability to bind coagulation factors Xa and Va which accelerates prothrombin activation. However, detailed molecular mechanisms for SkM's binding of these coagulation factors have not been described. Since a well-known myosin inhibitor, trifluoperazine (TFP), inhibited SkM's procoagulant activity and since this inhibitor binds to the ELC in SkM's "neck" region which connects the HC head region to the HC tail (Figure, panel A), we hypothesized that SkM's TFP binding region on the ELC in the neck region directly contributes to SkM's procoagulant activity. To identify potential binding site(s) on SkM for factors Xa and Va, 22 peptides representing the neck region's RLC, ELC, and HC were screened for inhibition of SkM-supported prothrombin activation by purified factor Xa, factor Va, and calcium ions. These peptides contained 25-40 residues and overlapped by approximately 5-10 amino acids. Peptides ELC109-138 and ELC129-159, corresponding to amino acid residues 109-138 and 129-159 of the ELC, inhibited SkM-supported prothrombin activation at 100 μM, whereas their partially overlapping neighboring peptides, ELC99-122 and ELC149-173, did not. Three HC peptides (peptides HC781-810, HC796-835, HC815-854) and one RLC peptide (RLC133-162) inhibited SkM-supported prothrombin activation at 100 μM, and each was also inhibitory, to varying degrees, when assayed at 5 μM. Dose-dependency inhibition assays gave IC50 values (50% inhibition of activity) for the peptides HC781-810, HC796-835, HC815-854, and RLC133-162 of 64, 1.2, 2.3 and 26 μM. Peptides HC781-810 and HC815-854 also inhibited prothrombin activation in the absence of myosin but in the presence of phospholipid vesicles containing 20 % phosphatidylserine (IC50 = 7.5 and 104 μM, respectively). In contrast, the strong inhibitory effects of peptides HC796-835, RLC133-162, ELC109-138 and ELC129-159 seen in the presence of myosin were not at all apparent in the presence of phospholipid-supported prothrombin activation when myosin was absent. This suggests that peptides HC796-835, RLC133-162, ELC109-138 and ELC129-159 specifically inhibit SkM-supported prothrombin activation. The 19 synthetic peptides representing the SkM neck region were also screened at 25 µM (final) for their inhibition of recalcification-induced thrombin generation in human plasma which contains significant circulating levels of SkM. Among the 19 peptides tested, HC796-835 and HC815-854 significantly inhibited thrombin generation when screened at 25 µM in plasma. Immobilized peptide HC796-835 showed direct binding of purified factor Xa with apparent Kd of 1.4 μM. This very potent inhibitory peptide, HC796-835, exhibited 50% inhibition of SkM-enhanced prothrombin activation at 1.2 μM, indicating that this peptide's sequence provides a factor Xa binding site on SkM which contributes to its inhibitory action. More specifically, an overlapping peptide containing amino acid residues 815-835 inhibited SkM-enhanced prothrombin activation by factors Xa and Va while a peptide comprising residues 796-811 did not. These studies suggest that residues 815-835 of SkM's HC are responsible for directly binding factor Xa and implies that this binding is responsible for SkM's procoagulant activity (Figure, panel B). In summary, we identified human SkM peptides which specifically blocked SkM-enhanced thrombin generation but not phospholipid-stimulated prothrombin activation in purified reaction mixtures and which inhibited blood clotting in plasma. The most potent anticoagulant HC peptide also directly binds purified factor Xa. These findings strongly suggest that the neck region of SkM, as defined by these inhibitory peptides (Figure, panel B), provides a phospholipid-independent procoagulant surface for thrombin generation that, depending on the in vivo physiologic context, may contribute to either hemostasis or thrombosis. Figure Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 20-21
Author(s):  
Shravan Morla ◽  
Hiroshi Deguchi ◽  
Rolf Brekken ◽  
John H. Griffin

Skeletal muscle myosin (SkM) can bind factor (F)Xa and FVa, thereby providing a surface that promotes thrombin generation by the prothrombinase complex (FXa:FVa:Ca++) that cleaves prothrombin. A recent BLOOD paper (Novakovic & Gilbert, 2020) asserted that this activity of SkM preparations is entirely due to contaminating phosphatidylserine (PS)-containing phospholipid vesicles in SkM preparations because annexin V and lactadherin neutralized the ability of SkM to enhance prothrombin activation. However, annexin V and lactadherin are certainly not monospecific for binding PS as they are globular proteins that can bind other lipids and many proteins. Without any PS measurements or use of any reagents specific for PS (e.g., monoclonal (mAb) anti-PS antibodies), that report, in a gross overinterpretation of its incomplete data, dismissed any direct role for myosin for SkM's procoagulant activity. When we previously observed that annexin V is inhibitory of SkM's support for prothrombinase activity, we sent a sample of SkM (Cytoskeletal Inc) to Avanti Polar Lipids for quantitation of the PS content based on liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. That analysis showed that only a small amount of PS was present in the SkM, approximately 0.90 µmol PS per 40. µmol SkM. This amount of PS present in SkM preparations is not enough to explain SkM's procoagulant activity. For example, standardized purified prothrombinase reaction mixture assays show that 10 nM SkM enables formation of 3 nmol thrombin/min while 0.22 nM PS (in 1.1 nM phosphatidylcholine (PC)(80%)/PS(20%) vesicles) enables formation of only 0.4 nmol thrombin/min (Figure 1A). We directly assessed the role of contaminating PS for SkM's prothrombinase support using the well characterized anti-PS mAb 11.31 (aka mAb PGN632). When the ability of mAb 11.31 to inhibit prothrombinase enhancement by SkM or, in controls, by PC/PS vesicles was determined, the data showed that, in controls, mAb 11.31 at 1.0 nM severely inhibited PC/PS vesicle's enhancement of prothrombinase by > 90% (Figure 1B). The dose-response gave an inhibitory IC50 value of 0.2 nM which is near this mAb's reported Kd of 0.17-0.35 nM for PS, establishing the potent ability of this anti-PS mAb to neutralize PS procoagulant activity. However, there was no substantial inhibition of SkM's enhancement of prothrombinase by the anti-PS mAb 11.31 at up to 1 nM mAb 11.31 (Figure 1B). This indicates that contaminating, PS-containing vesicles are not a significant factor for SkM-dependent enhancement of prothrombin activation by the SkM preparation -- in direct contradiction of the assertion of Novakovic & Gilbert (BLOOD 2020). That recent report was correct that annexin V inhibits the ability of SkM to enhance prothrombinase as well as the ability of PC/PS vesicles to do so (Figure 1B). So it was the overinterpretation of the annexin V and lactadherin data as well as the failure to provide any direct measurement of PS that were problematic in that report. The observation that annexin V and lactadherin inhibit SkM's enhancement of prothrombinase merits further studies to understand what may be their mechanistic influences. Another informative test for an essential role for PS in SkM's enhancement of prothrombinase involves the use of FXa that lacks its gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (Gla) domain because this N-terminal domain of FXa is required for FXa binding to PS-containing phospholipid vesicles. Data in Figure 1A show that SkM, but not PS-containing PL vesicles, supports the prothrombinase activity of des-Gla Domain (DG)-FXa which lacks its Gla domain. Dose-response data show that, in prothrombinase assays, DG-FXa has only 1% activity in the presence of PC/PS vesicles but has 25-35% activity in presence of SkM (Figure 1A). These data indicate that SkM's procoagulant activity does not absolutely require the Gla domain of FXa whereas PS-containing vesicles do require the Gla domain of FXa for significant activity. These data prove that the recent assertion that PS vesicle contamination, not myosin, explains SkM's procoagulant activity represents an overinterpretation of annexin V and lactadherin data and is simply wrong. In conclusion, both new data here, i.e., PS content of SkM preparations and data for effects of anti-PS mAb 11.31 (Figure 1B) and previous data (Deguchi et al, Blood 2016 and J Biol Chem, 2019), affirm that the myosin protein is a key factor for SkM's ability to enhance prothrombin activation. Figure 1 Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1975 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
T D Pollard

Electron micrographs of negatively stained synthetic myosin filaments reveal that surface projections, believed to be the heads of the constituent myosin molecules, can exist in two configurations. Some filaments have the projections disposed close to the filament backbone. Other filaments have all of their projections widely spread, tethered to the backbone by slender threads. Filaments formed from the myosins of skeletal muscle, smooth muscle, and platelets each have distinctive features, particularly their lengths. Soluble mixtures of skeletal muscle myosin with either smooth muscle myosin or platelet myosin were dialyzed against 0.1 M KC1 at pH 7 to determine whether the simultaneous presence of two types of myosin would influence the properties of the filaments formed. In every case, a single population of filaments formed from the mixtures. The resulting filaments are thought to be copolymers of the two types of myosin, for several reasons: (a) their length-frequency distribution is unimodal and differs from that predicted for a simple mixture of two types of myosin filaments; (b) their mean length is intermediate between the mean lengths of the filaments formed separately from the two myosins in the mixture; (c) each of the filaments has structural features characteristic of both of the myosins in the mixture; and (d) their size and shape are determined by the proportion of the two myosins in the mixture.


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