4.6 Article

Mutational Constraints on Local Unfolding Inhibit the Rheological Adaptation of von Willebrand Factor

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 291, Issue 8, Pages 3848-3859

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M115.703850

Keywords

mass spectrometry (MS); platelet glycoprotein Ib; protein denaturation; protein stability; protein structure; structural biology; surface plasmon resonance; trypsin; von Willebrand factor; x-ray crystallography

Funding

  1. Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the United States Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]

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Unusually large von Willebrand factor (VWF), the first responder to vascular injury in primary hemostasis, is designed to capture platelets under the high shear stress of rheological blood flow. In type 2M von Willebrand disease, two rare mutations (G1324A and G1324S) within the platelet GPIb binding interface of the VWF A1 domain impair the hemostatic function of VWF. We investigate structural and conformational effects of these mutations on the A1 domain's efficacy to bind collagen and adhere platelets under shear flow. These mutations enhance the thermodynamic stability, reduce the rate of unfolding, and enhance the A1 domain's resistance to limited proteolysis. Collagen binding affinity is not significantly affected indicating that the primary stabilizing effect of these mutations is to diminish the platelet binding efficiency under shear flow. The enhanced stability stems from the steric consequences of adding a side chain (G1324A) and additionally a hydrogen bond (G1324S) to His(1322) across the 2-3 hairpin in the GPIb binding interface, which restrains the conformational degrees of freedom and the overall flexibility of the native state. These studies reveal a novel rheological strategy in which the incorporation of a single glycine within the GPIb binding interface of normal VWF enhances the probability of local unfolding that enables the A1 domain to conformationally adapt to shear flow while maintaining its overall native structure.

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