Rapid and controlled clot formation is achieved through sequential activation of circulating serine proteinase precursors on phosphatidylserine-rich procoagulant membranes of activated platelets and endothelial cells. The homologous complexes Xase and prothrombinase, each consisting of an active proteinase and a non-enzymatic cofactor, perform critical steps within this coagulation cascade. The activated cofactors VIIIa and Va, highly specific for their cognate proteinases, are each derived from precursors with the same A1-A2-B-A3-C1-C2 architecture. Membrane binding is mediated by the C2 domains of both cofactors. Here we report two crystal structures of the C2 domain of human factor Va. The conserved beta-barrel framework provides a scaffold for three protruding loops, one of which adopts markedly different conformations in the two crystal forms. We propose a mechanism of calcium-independent, stereospecific binding of factors Va and VIIIa to phospholipid membranes, on the basis of (1) immersion of hydrophobic residues at the apices of these loops in the apolar membrane core; (2) specific interactions with phosphatidylserine head groups in the groove enclosed by these loops; and (3) favourable electrostatic contacts of basic side chains with negatively charged membrane phosphate groups.
Thrombin-activated factor Va exists as two isoforms, factor Va(1) and factor Va(2), which differ in the size of their light chains and their affinity for biological membranes. The heterogeneity of the light chain remained following incubation of factor Va with N-glycanase. However, we found that the factor V C2 domain, which contains a single potential glycosylation site at Asn-2181, was partially glycosylated when expressed in COS cells. To confirm the structural basis for factor Va(1) and factor Va(2), we mutated Asn-2181 to glutamine (N2181Q) and expressed this mutant using a B domain deletion construct (rHFV des B) in COS cells. Thrombin activation of N2181Q released a light chain with mobility identical to that of factor Va(2) on SDS-PAGE. The functional properties of purified N2181Q were similar to those of factor Va(2) in prothrombinase assays carried out in the presence of limiting concentrations of phosphatidylserine. The binding of human factor Va(1) and factor Va(2) to 75:25 POPC/POPS vesicles was also investigated in equilibrium binding assays using proteins containing a fluorescein-labeled heavy chain. The affinity of human factor Va(2) binding to POPC/POPS vesicles was approximately 3-fold higher than that of factor Va(1). These results indicate that partial glycosylation of factor V at asparagine-2181 is the structural basis of the light chain doublet and that the presence of this oligosaccharide reduces the affinity of factor Va for biological membranes.
Interactions between factor Va and membrane phosphatidylserine (PS) regulate activity of the prothrombinase complex. Two solvent-exposed hydrophobic residues located in the C2 domain, Trp(2063) and Trp(2064), have been proposed to contribute to factor Va membrane interactions by insertion into the hydrophobic membrane bilayer. However, the prothrombinase activity of rHFVa W(2063, 2064)A was found to be significantly impaired only at low concentrations of PS (5 mol %). In this study, we find that 10-fold higher concentrations of mutant factor Va are required for half-maximal prothrombinase activity on membranes containing 25% PS. The ability of the mutant factor Va to interact with factor Xa on a membrane was also impaired since 4-fold higher concentrations of factor Xa were required for half-maximal prothrombinase activity. The interaction of factor Va with 25% PS membranes was also characterized using fluorescence energy transfer and surface plasmon resonance. We found that the affinity of mutant factor Va for membranes containing 25% PS was reduced at least 400-fold with a K(d) > 10(-7) M. The binding of mutant factor Va to 25% PS membranes was markedly enhanced in the presence of factor Xa, indicating stabilization of the factor Va-factor Xa-membrane complex. Our findings indicate that Trp(2063) and Trp(2064) play a critical role in the high-affinity binding of factor Va to PS membranes. It remains to be determined whether occupancy of this PS binding site in factor Va is also required for high-affinity binding to factor Xa.
Coagulation Factor V is an essential component of the prothrombinase complex, which activates the zymogen prothrombin to thrombin. A patient was described who developed a Factor V inhibitor that neutralized the procoagulant activity of Factor V and resulted in a fatal hemorrhagic diathesis (Coots, M. C., A. F. Muhleman, and H. I. Glueck. 1978. Am. J. Hematol. 4:193-206). This inhibitor was shown to be an IgG antibody that bound to the light chain of Factor V. Using a series of light chain deletion mutants, we have found that this antibody binds to the second C-type domain of the light chain. Both inhibitor IgG and Fab fragments rapidly neutralized the procoagulant activity ofFactor Va, implying that the neutralization resulted from specific binding to the C2 domain. We have previously demonstrated that deletion of the C2 domain results in loss of procoagulant activity, as well as loss of phosphatidylserine-specific binding. Confirming these results, both inhibitor IgG and Fab fragments interfered with phosphatidylserinespecific binding of Factor V. Conversely, preincubation of Factor Va with procoagulant phospholipids protected the cofactor from inactivation by the inhibitor. Our results suggest that this inhibitor neutralizes the procoagulant activity of Factor Va by interfering with the C2-mediated interaction with phospholipid surfaces, thereby disrupting formation of the prothrombinase complex. (J. Clin. Invest. 1992. 90:2340-2347
Factor V(a) (FV(a)) is a cofactor for the serine protease factor X(a) that activates prothrombin to thrombin in the presence of Ca(2+) and a membrane surface. FV(a) is a heterodimer composed of one heavy chain (A1 and A2 domains) and one light chain (A3, C1, and C2 domains). We use fluorescence, circular dichroism, and equilibrium dialysis to demonstrate that (1) the FV C2 domain expressed in Sf9 cells binds one molecule of C6PS with a k(d) of approximately 2 microM, (2) stabilizing changes occur in the FV C2 domain upon C6PS binding, (3) the C6PS binding site in the FV C2 domain is located near residue Cys(2113), which reacts with DTNB, and (4) binding to a PS-containing membrane is an order of magnitude tighter than that to soluble C6PS. Coupled with a recently published crystal structure of the C2 domain, these results support a model for the mechanism of C2-membrane interaction.
Tightly associated factor V(a) (FVa) and factor X(a) (FXa) serve as the essential prothrombin-activating complex that assembles on phosphatidylserine (PS)-containing platelet membranes during blood coagulation. We have previously shown that (1) a soluble form of PS (C6PS) triggers assembly of a fully active FVa-FXa complex in solution and (2) that 2 molecules of C6PS bind to FVa light chain with one occupying a site in the C2 domain. We expressed human factor V(a) (rFVa) with mutations in either the C1 domain (Y1956,L1957)A, the C2 domain (W2063,W2064)A, or both C domains (Y1956,L1957,W2063,W2064)A. Mutations in the C1 and C1-C2 domains of rFVa reduced the rate of activation of prothrombin to thrombin by FXa in the presence of 400 muM C6PS by 14 000- to 15 000-fold relative to either wild-type or C2 mutant factor rFVa. The K(d')s of FXa binding with rFVa (wild-type, C2 mutant, C1 mutant, and C1-C2 mutant) were 3, 4, 564, and 624 nM, respectively. Equilibrium dialysis experiments detected binding of 4, 3, and 2 molecules of C6PS to wild-type rFVa, C1-mutated, and C1,C2-mutated rFVa, respectively. Because FVa heavy chain binds 2 molecules of C6PS, we conclude that both C2 and C1 domains bind one C6PS, with binding to the C1 domain regulating prothrombinase complex assembly.
Factors V(a) and X(a) (FV(a) and FX(a), respectively) assemble on phosphatidylserine (PS)-containing platelet membranes to form the essential "prothrombinase" complex of blood coagulation. The C-terminal domain (C2) of FV(a) (residues 2037-2196 in human FV(a)) contains a soluble phosphatidylserine (C6PS) binding pocket flanked by a pair of tryptophan residues, Trp(2063) and Trp(2064). Mutating these tryptophans abolishes FV(a) membrane binding. To address both the roles of these tryptophans in C6PS or membrane binding and the role of the C2 domain lipid binding site in regulation of FV(a) cofactor activity, we expressed W(2063,2064)A mutants of the recombinant C2 domain (rFV(a2)-C2) and of a B domain-deleted factor V light isoform (rFV(a2)) in Hi-5 and COS cells, respectively. Intrinsic fluorescence showed that wild-type rFV(a2)-C2 binds to C6PS and to 20% PS/PC membranes with apparent K(d) values of 2.8 microM and 9 nM, respectively, while mutant rFV(a2)-C2 does not. Equilibrium dialysis confirmed that mutant rFV(a2)-C2 does not bind to C6PS. Mutant rFV(a2) binds to C6PS (K(d) approximately 37 microM) with an affinity comparable to that of wild-type rFV(a2) (K(d) approximately 20 microM), although it does not bind to PS/PC membranes to which wild-type rFV(a2) binds with native affinity (K(d) approximately 3 nM). Both wild-type and mutant rFV(a2) bind to active site-labeled FX(a) (DEGR-X(a)) in the presence of 400 microM C6PS with native affinity (K(d) approximately 3-4 nM) to produce a solution rFV(a2)-FX(a) complex of native activity. We conclude that (1) the C2 domain PS site provides all but approximately 1 kT of the free energy of FV(a) membrane binding, (2) tryptophans lining the C2 lipid binding pocket are critical to C6PS and membrane binding and insert into the bilayer interface during membrane binding, (3) occupancy of the C2 lipid binding pocket is not necessary for C6PS-induced formation of the FX(a)-FV(a) complex or its activity, but (4) another PS site on FV(a) does have a regulatory role.
The contribution of the factor Va C1 domain (fVa-C1) to assembly of the prothrombinase complex has not been previously investigated. The homologous fVa-C2 domain contains a binding site for phosphatidylserine (PS) that includes the indole moieties of Trp(2063)/Trp(2064) at the apex of spike-1. In order to investigate the structure and function of fVa-C1 a molecular model was constructed based on the structure of fVa-C2. The aromatic and hydrophobic side chains of Tyr (1956) /Leu (1957) in fVa-C1 are located at the predicted apex of spike-3. Exposed charged and hydrophobic residues in fVa-C1 were changed to alanine in clusters of 1-3 mutations per construct. The resultant 20 mutants were expressed in COS cells and screened for binding to immobilized PS and prothrombinase activity on phospholipid vesicles containing either 25% or 5% PS. Two mutants, (Y1956,L1957)A, and (R2023,R2027)A showed both decreased binding to immobilized PS and a selective decrease in prothrombinase activity on membranes containing 5% PS. The interaction of purified (Y1956,L1957)A with phospholipid vesicles was studied using fluorescence resonance energy transfer and prothrombinase assays. The affinity of (Y1956,L1957)A binding to 25% PS membranes was reduced 12-fold compared to rHFVa. Prothrombin activation in the presence of (Y1956,L1957)A was markedly impaired on phos-pholipid vesicles containing 10% or less PS. We conclude that solvent exposed hydrophobic and aromatic amino acids in both fVa-C1 and fVa-C2 contribute to the interaction of factor V with PS membranes.
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