Structural basis of thrombin-mediated factor V activation: the Glu666-Glu672 sequence is critical for processing at the heavy chain–B domain junction

Author:

Corral-Rodríguez María Ángeles1,Bock Paul E.2,Hernández-Carvajal Erick1,Gutiérrez-Gallego Ricardo34,Fuentes-Prior Pablo1

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Biomedical Research, Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Barcelona, Spain;

2. Department of Pathology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN;

3. Bioanalysis Group, Neuropsychopharmacology Program, Institut Municipal d'Investigació Mèdica (IMIM)–Hospital del Mar, and

4. Department of Experimental and Health Sciences, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona, Spain

Abstract

Thrombin-catalyzed activation of coagulation factor V (FV) is an essential positive feedback reaction within the blood clotting system. Efficient processing at the N- (Arg709-Ser710) and C-terminal activation cleavage sites (Arg1545-Ser1546) requires initial substrate interactions with 2 clusters of positively charged residues on the proteinase surface, exosites I and II. We addressed the mechanism of activation of human factor V (FV) using peptides that cover the entire acidic regions preceding these cleavage sites, FV (657-709)/ (FVa2) and FV(1481-1545)/(FVa3). FVa2 appears to interact mostly with exosite I, while both exosites are involved in interactions with the C-terminal linker. The 1.7-Å crystal structure of irreversibly inhibited thrombin bound to FVa2 unambiguously reveals docking of FV residues Glu666-Glu672 to exosite I. These findings were confirmed in a second, medium-resolution structure of FVa2 bound to the benzamidine-inhibited proteinase. Our results suggest that the acidic A2-B domain linker is involved in major interactions with thrombin during cofactor activation, with its more N-terminal hirudin-like sequence playing a critical role. Modeling experiments indicate that FVa2, and likely also FVa3, wrap around thrombin in productive thrombin·FV complexes that cover a large surface of the activator to engage the active site.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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