Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Multifunctional specificity of the protein C/activated protein C Gla domain

Preston, Roger J. S. ; Ajzner, Eva LU ; Razzari, Cristina ; Karageorgi, Stalo ; Dua, Sonia ; Dahlbäck, Björn LU and Lane, David A. (2006) In Journal of Biological Chemistry 281(39). p.28850-28857
Abstract
Activated protein C (APC) has potent anticoagulant and antiinflammatory properties that are mediated in part by its interactions with its cofactor protein S and the endothelial cell protein C receptor (EPCR). The protein C/APC Gla domain is implicated in both interactions. We sought to identify how the protein C Gla domain enables specific protein-protein interactions in addition to its conserved role in phospholipid binding. The human prothrombin Gla domain, which cannot bind EPCR or support protein S cofactor activity, has 22/45 residues that are not shared with the human protein C Gla domain. We hypothesized that the unique protein C/APC Gla domain residues were responsible for mediating the specific interactions. To assess this, we... (More)
Activated protein C (APC) has potent anticoagulant and antiinflammatory properties that are mediated in part by its interactions with its cofactor protein S and the endothelial cell protein C receptor (EPCR). The protein C/APC Gla domain is implicated in both interactions. We sought to identify how the protein C Gla domain enables specific protein-protein interactions in addition to its conserved role in phospholipid binding. The human prothrombin Gla domain, which cannot bind EPCR or support protein S cofactor activity, has 22/45 residues that are not shared with the human protein C Gla domain. We hypothesized that the unique protein C/APC Gla domain residues were responsible for mediating the specific interactions. To assess this, we generated 13 recombinant protein C/APC variants incorporating the prothrombin residue substitutions. Despite anticoagulant activity similar to wild-type APC in the absence of protein S, APC variants APC(PT33 -39) (N33S/V34S/D35T/D36A/L38D/A39V) and APC(PT36/38/39) (D36A/L38D/A39V) were not stimulated by protein S, whereas APC(PT35/36) (D35T/D36A) exhibited reduced protein S sensitivity. Moreover, PC(PT8/10) (L8V/H10K) displayed negligible EPCR affinity, despite normal binding to anionic phospholipid vesicles and factor Va proteolysis in the presence and absence of protein S. A single residue variant, PC(PT8), also failed to bind EPCR. Factor VIIa, which also possesses Leu-8, bound soluble EPCR with similar affinity to wild-type protein C, collectively confirming Leu-8 as the critical residue for EPCR recognition. These results reveal the specific Gla domain residues responsible for mediating protein C/APC molecular recognition with both its cofactor and receptor and further illustrate the multifunctional potential of Gla domains. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Journal of Biological Chemistry
volume
281
issue
39
pages
28850 - 28857
publisher
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
external identifiers
  • wos:000240680500039
  • scopus:33749378618
  • pmid:16867987
ISSN
1083-351X
DOI
10.1074/jbc.M604966200
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2aba4738-9ce4-4a6f-badf-bc051a7a114a (old id 392700)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 11:55:03
date last changed
2022-02-18 07:14:08
@article{2aba4738-9ce4-4a6f-badf-bc051a7a114a,
  abstract     = {{Activated protein C (APC) has potent anticoagulant and antiinflammatory properties that are mediated in part by its interactions with its cofactor protein S and the endothelial cell protein C receptor (EPCR). The protein C/APC Gla domain is implicated in both interactions. We sought to identify how the protein C Gla domain enables specific protein-protein interactions in addition to its conserved role in phospholipid binding. The human prothrombin Gla domain, which cannot bind EPCR or support protein S cofactor activity, has 22/45 residues that are not shared with the human protein C Gla domain. We hypothesized that the unique protein C/APC Gla domain residues were responsible for mediating the specific interactions. To assess this, we generated 13 recombinant protein C/APC variants incorporating the prothrombin residue substitutions. Despite anticoagulant activity similar to wild-type APC in the absence of protein S, APC variants APC(PT33 -39) (N33S/V34S/D35T/D36A/L38D/A39V) and APC(PT36/38/39) (D36A/L38D/A39V) were not stimulated by protein S, whereas APC(PT35/36) (D35T/D36A) exhibited reduced protein S sensitivity. Moreover, PC(PT8/10) (L8V/H10K) displayed negligible EPCR affinity, despite normal binding to anionic phospholipid vesicles and factor Va proteolysis in the presence and absence of protein S. A single residue variant, PC(PT8), also failed to bind EPCR. Factor VIIa, which also possesses Leu-8, bound soluble EPCR with similar affinity to wild-type protein C, collectively confirming Leu-8 as the critical residue for EPCR recognition. These results reveal the specific Gla domain residues responsible for mediating protein C/APC molecular recognition with both its cofactor and receptor and further illustrate the multifunctional potential of Gla domains.}},
  author       = {{Preston, Roger J. S. and Ajzner, Eva and Razzari, Cristina and Karageorgi, Stalo and Dua, Sonia and Dahlbäck, Björn and Lane, David A.}},
  issn         = {{1083-351X}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{39}},
  pages        = {{28850--28857}},
  publisher    = {{American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology}},
  series       = {{Journal of Biological Chemistry}},
  title        = {{Multifunctional specificity of the protein C/activated protein C Gla domain}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M604966200}},
  doi          = {{10.1074/jbc.M604966200}},
  volume       = {{281}},
  year         = {{2006}},
}