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A more recent version of this article appeared on October 8, 2004
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M406716200v1
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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print August 2, 2004
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M406716200
Submitted on June 16, 2004
Revised on August 2, 2004
Accepted on August 2, 2004

Molecular mapping of the thrombin-heparin cofactor II complex

Yolanda M. Fortenberry, Herbert C. Whinna, Holly R. Gentry, Timothy Myles, Lawrence L. K. Leung, and Frank C. Church

Division of Hematology-Oncology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7035

Corresponding Author: fchurch{at}email.unc.edu

We used 55 Ala-scanned recombinant thrombin molecules to define residues important for inhibition by the serpin heparin cofactor II (HCII) in the absence and presence of glycosaminoglycans. We verified the importance of numerous basic residues in exosite-1 and found four additional residues, Gln24, Lys65, His66, and Tyr71 (using the thrombin numbering system) that were resistant to HCII inhibition with and without glycosaminoglycans. Inhibition rate constants for these exosite-1 (Q24A, K65A, H66A, Y71A) thrombin mutants (0.02-0.38 x 108 M-1 min-1 for HCII-heparin compared to 2.36 x 108 M-1 min-1 with wild-type thrombin and 0.03-0.53 x 108 M-1 min-1 for HCII-dermatan sulfate compared to 5.23 x 108 M-1 min-1 with wild-type thrombin) confirmed that the structural integrity of thrombin exosite-1 is critical for optimal HCII-thrombin interactions in the presence of glycosaminoglycans. However, our results are also consistent for HCII-glycosaminoglycan-thrombin ternary complex formation. Ten residues surrounding the active site of thrombin were implicated in HCII interactions. Four mutants (Asp51, Lys52, Lys145/Thr147/Trp148, Asp234) showed normal increased rates of inhibition by HCII-glycosaminoglycans, while four mutants (Trp50, Glu202, Glu229, Arg233) remained resistant to inhibition by HCII with glycosaminoglycans. Using eleven exosite-2 thrombin mutants with 20 different mutated residues, we saw no major perturbations of HCII-glycosaminoglycan inhibition reactions. Collectively, our results support a “double bridge” mechanism for HCII inhibition of thrombin in the presence of glycosaminoglycans, which relies in part on ternary complex formation but is primarily dominated by an allosteric process involving contact of the “hirudin-like” domain of HCII with thrombin exosite-1.


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