4.5 Article

Extracellular RNA is a natural cofactor for the (auto-)activation of Factor VII-activating protease (FSAP)

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 385, Issue -, Pages 831-838

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20041021

Keywords

blood coagulation; extracellular RNA; Factor VII-activating protease (FSAP); haemostasis; plasma hyaluronan-binding protease

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FSAP (Factor VII-activating protease) is a new plasma-derived serine protease with putative dual functions in haemostasis, including activation of coagulation Factor VII and generation of urinary-type plasminogen activator (urokinase). The (auto-)activation of FSAP is facilitated by polyanionic glycosaminoglycans, such as In heparin or dextran sulphate, whereas calcium ions stabilize the active form of FSAP. In the present study, extracelfular RNA was identified and characteized as a novel FSAP cofactor. The conditioned medium derived from various cell types such as smooth muscular cells, endothelial cells, osteosarcoma cells or CHO (Chinese -hamster ovary) cells contained an acidic factor that initiated (auto-)activation of FSAP. RNase A, but not other hydrolytic enzymes (proteases, glycanases and DNase), abolished the FSAP cofactor activity, which was subsequently isolated by anionexchange chromatography and unequivocally identified as RNA. In purified systems, as well as in plasma, different forms of natural RNA (rENA, tRNA, viral RNA and artificial RNA) were able to (auto-)activate FSAP into the two-chain enzyme form. The specific binding of FSAP to RNA (but not to DNA) was shown by mobility-shift assays and UV crosslinking, thereby identifying FSAP as a new extracellular RNA-binding protein, the Kn estimated to be 170-350 nM. Activation of FSAP occurred through an RNA-dependent template mechanism involving a nucleic acid size of at least 100 nt. In a purified system, natural RNA augmented the FSAP-dependent Factor VII activation severalfold (as shown by subsequent Factor Xa generation), as well as the FSAP-mediated generation of urokinase. Our results provide evidence for the first time that extracellular RNA, present at sites of cell damage or vascular injury, can serve an important as yet unrecognized cofactor function in haemostasis by inducing (auto-)activation of FSAP through a novel surface-dependent mechanism.

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