Na+ Site in Blood Coagulation Factor IXa: Effect on Catalysis and Factor VIIIa Binding
pmid: 15913649
Na+ Site in Blood Coagulation Factor IXa: Effect on Catalysis and Factor VIIIa Binding
During blood coagulation, factor IXa (FIXa) activates factor X (FX) requiring Ca2+, phospholipid, and factor VIIIa (FVIIIa). The serine protease domain of FIXa contains a Ca2+ site and is predicted to contain a Na+ site. Comparative homology analysis revealed that Na+ in FIXa coordinates to the carbonyl groups of residues 184A, 185, 221A, and 224 (chymotrypsin numbering). Kinetic data obtained at several concentrations of Na+ and Ca2+ with increasing concentrations of a synthetic substrate (CH3-SO2-d-Leu-Gly-Arg-p-nitroanilide) were fit globally, assuming rapid equilibrium conditions. Occupancy by Na+ increased the affinity of FIXa for the synthetic substrate, whereas occupancy by Ca2+ decreased this affinity but increased k(cat) dramatically. Thus, Na+-FIXa-Ca2+ is catalytically more active than free FIXa. FIXa(Y225P), a Na+ site mutant, was severely impaired in Na+ potentiation of its catalytic activity and in binding to p-aminobenzamidine (S1 site probe) validating that substrate binding in FIXa is linked positively to Na+ binding. Moreover, the rate of carbamylation of NH2 of Val16, which forms a salt-bridge with Asp194 in serine proteases, was faster for FIXa(Y225P) and addition of Ca2+ overcame this impairment only partially. Further studies were aimed at delineating the role of the FIXa Na+ site in macromolecular catalysis. In the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid, with or without saturating FVIIIa, FIXa(Y225P) activated FX with similar K(m) but threefold reduced k(cat). Further, interaction of FVIIIa:FIXa(Y225P) was impaired fourfold. Our previous data revealed that Ca2+ binding to the protease domain increases the affinity of FIXa for FVIIIa approximately 15-fold. The present data indicate that occupancy of the Na+ site further increases the affinity of FIXa for FVIIIa fourfold and k(cat) threefold. Thus, in the presence of Ca2+, phospholipid, and FVIIIa, binding of Na+ to FIXa increases its biologic activity by approximately 12-fold, implicating its role in physiologic coagulation.
- University of California, Los Angeles United States
- Children's Hospital of Philadelphia United States
- Orthopaedic Hospital United States
- University of Pennsylvania United States
- University of Mary United States
Models, Molecular, Binding Sites, Hydrolysis, Sodium, Valine, Cations, Monovalent, Catalysis, Cell Line, Factor IXa, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Kinetics, Factor X, Humans, Tyrosine, Calcium, Protein Structure, Quaternary, Factor VIIIa, Protein Binding
Models, Molecular, Binding Sites, Hydrolysis, Sodium, Valine, Cations, Monovalent, Catalysis, Cell Line, Factor IXa, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Kinetics, Factor X, Humans, Tyrosine, Calcium, Protein Structure, Quaternary, Factor VIIIa, Protein Binding
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