Inhibitory sequences within the B-domain stabilize circulating factor V in an inactive state

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Abstract

Blood coagulation factor V circulates as a procofactor with little or no procoagulant activity. It is activated to factor Va by thrombin following proteolytic removal of a large central B-domain. Although this reaction is well studied, the mechanism by which bond cleavage and B-domain release facilitate the transition to the active cofactor state has not been defined. Here we show that deletion or substitution of specific B-domain sequences drives the expression of procoagulant function without the need for proteolytic processing. Conversion to the constitutively active cofactor state is related, at least in part, to a cluster of amino acids that is highly basic and well conserved across the vertebrate lineage. Our findings demonstrate that discrete sequences in the B-domain serve to stabilize the inactive procofactor state, with proteolysis primarily functioning to remove these inhibitory constraints. These unexpected results provide new insight into the mechanism of factor V activation. © 2007 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Zhu, H., Toso, R., & Camire, R. M. (2007). Inhibitory sequences within the B-domain stabilize circulating factor V in an inactive state. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 282(20), 15033–15039. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M701315200

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