4.8 Article

Structural basis for the anticoagulant activity of the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex

Journal

NATURE
Volume 404, Issue 6777, Pages 518-525

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/35006683

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The serine proteinase alpha-thrombin causes blood clotting through proteolytic cleavage of fibrinogen and protease-activated receptors and amplifies its own generation by activating the essential clotting factors V and VIII1, Thrombomodulin(2), a transmembrane thrombin receptor with six contiguous epidermal growth factor-like domains (TME1-6), profoundly alters the substrate specificity of thrombin from pro- to anticoagulant by activating protein C (see, for example, reference 2). Activated protein C then deactivates the coagulation cascade by degrading activated factors V and VIII2. The thrombin-thrombomodulin complex inhibits fibrinolysis by activating the procarboxypeptidase thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor(3). Here we present the 2.3 Angstrom crystal structure of human alpha-thrombin bound to the smallest thrombomodulin fragment required for full protein-C co-factor activity, TME456. The Y-shaped thrombomodulin fragment binds to thrombin's anion-binding exosite-I, preventing binding of procoagulant substrates. Thrombomodulin binding does not seem to induce marked allosteric structural rearrangements at the thrombin active site. Rather, docking of a protein C model to thrombin-TME456 indicates that TME45 may bind substrates in such a manner that their zymogen-activation cleavage sites are presented optimally to the unaltered thrombin active site.

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