Stabilization of the E* form turns thrombin into an anticoagulant

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Abstract

Previous studies have shown that deletion of nine residues in the autolysis loop of thrombin produces a mutant with an anticoagulant propensity of potential clinical relevance, but the molecular origin of the effect has remained unresolved. The x-ray crystal structure of this mutant solved in the free form at 1.55 Å resolution reveals an inactive conformation that is practically identical (root mean square deviation of 0.154 Å) to the recently identified E* form. The side chain of Trp215 collapses into the active site by shifting >10 Å from its position in the active E form, and the oxyanion hole is disrupted by a flip of the Glu192-Gly193 peptide bond. This finding confirms the existence of the inactive form E* in essentially the same incarnation as first identified in the structure of the thrombin mutant D102N. In addition, it demonstrates that the anticoagulant profile often caused by a mutation of the thrombin scaffold finds its likely molecular origin in the stabilization of the inactive E* form that is selectively shifted to the active E form upon thrombomodulin and protein C binding. © 2009 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Bah, A., Carrell, C. J., Chen, Z., Gandhi, P. S., & Di Cera, E. (2009). Stabilization of the E* form turns thrombin into an anticoagulant. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 284(30), 20034–20040. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.012344

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