4.6 Article

Factor VIIa modified in the 170 loop shows enhanced catalytic activity but does not change the zymogen-like property

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 276, Issue 20, Pages 17229-17235

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M009206200

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Factor VIIa (VIIa) is an unusual trypsin-type serine proteinase that appears to exist in an equilibrium between minor active and dominant zymogen-like inactive conformational states. The binding of tissue factor to VIIa is assumed to shift the equilibrium into the active state. The proteinase domain of VIIa contains a unique structure: a loop formed by a disulfide bond between Cys(310) and Cys(329), which is five residues longer than those of other trypsin types. To examine the functional role of the loop region, we prepared two mutants of VIIa, One of the mutants, named VII-11, had five extra corresponding residues 316-320 of VII deleted. The other mutant, VII-31, had all of the residues in its loop replaced! with those of trypsin, Functional analysis of the two mutants showed that VIIa-11 (K-d = 41 nM) and VIIa-31 (K-d = 160 nM) had lower affinities for soluble tissue factor as compared with the wild-type VIIa (K-d = 11 nM). The magnitude of tissue factor-mediated acceleration of amidolytic activities of VIIa-11 (7-fold) and that of VIIa-31 (2-fold) were also smaller than that of wild-type VIIa (30-fold). In the absence of tissue factor, VIIa-31 but not VIIa-11 showed enhanced activity; the catalytic efficiencies of VIIa-31 toward various chromogenic substrates were 2-18-fold greater than those off the wildtype VIIa. Susceptibility of the alpha -amino group of IIe-153 of VIIa-31 to carbamylation was almost the same as that of wild-type VIIa, suggesting that VIIa-31 as well as wildtype VIIa exist predominantly in the zymogen-like state. Therefore, the tested modifications in the loop region had adverse effects on affinity for tissue factor, disturbed the tissue factor-induced conformational transition, and changed the catalytic efficiency of VIIa, but they did not affect the equilibrium between active and zymogen-like conformational states.

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