4.7 Article

An autoantibody epitope comprising residues R660, Y661, and Y665 in the ADAMTS13 spacer domain identifies a binding site for the A2 domain of VWF

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 115, Issue 8, Pages 1640-1649

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2009-06-229203

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Funding

  1. Landsteiner Foundation for Scientific Research (LSBR)
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  3. British Council Partnership in Science program [PPS 851]
  4. British Heart Foundation [RG/02/008, RG/06/007]
  5. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Center funding scheme
  6. British Heart Foundation [RG/06/007/22029] Funding Source: researchfish

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In the majority of patients with acquired thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP), antibodies are directed toward the spacer domain of ADAMTS13. We have previously shown that region Y658-Y665 is involved. We now show that replacement of R660, Y661, or Y665 with alanine in ADAMTS13 reduced/abolished the binding of 2 previously isolated human monoclonal antibodies and polyclonal antibodies derived from plasma of 6 patients with acquired TTP. We investigated whether these residues also influenced cleavage of short von Willebrand factor (VWF) fragment substrate VWF115. An ADAMTS13 variant (R660A/Y661A/Y665A, ADAMTS13-RYY) showed a 12-fold reduced catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K-m) arising from greatly reduced (> 25-fold) binding, demonstrated by surface plasmon resonance. The influence of these residue changes on full-length VWF was determined with denaturing and flow assays. ADAMTS13-RYY had reduced activity in both, with proteolysis of VWF unaffected by autoantibody. Binding of ADAMTS13-RYY mutant to VWF was, however, similar to normal. Our results demonstrate that residues within Y658-Y665 of the ADAMTS13 spacer domain that are targeted by auto-antibodies in TTP directly interact with a complementary exosite (E1660-R1668) within the VWF A2 domain. Residues R660, Y661, and Y665 are critical for proteolysis of short VWF substrates, but wider domain interactions also make important contributions to cleavage of full-length VWF. (Blood. 2010;115:1640-1649)

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