The interaction of thrombomodulin with Ca2+

30Citations
Citations of this article
12Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Thrombomodulin (TM) is a cofactor for protein C activation by thrombin and each residue of a consensus Ca2+ site in the sixth epidermal growth factor domain (EGF6) is essential for this cofactor activity [Nagashima, M., Lundh, E., Leonard, J.C., Morser, J. and Parkinson, J.F. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 2888-2892]. Three soluble analogs of the extracellular domain of TM, solulin (Glu4-Pro490), TM(E)1-6 (Cys227-Cys462) and TM(E)i4-6 (Va1345- Cys462) were prepared for equilibrium dialysis experiments by exhaustive dialysis against Ca2+-depleted buffer. However, all three analogs still contained one tightly bound Ca2+ (K(d) ≃ 2 μM), which could only be removed by EDTA. Epitope mapping with Ca2+-dependent monoclonal antibodies to EGF6 provided further localization of this tight Ca2+ site. Equilibrium dialysis of the soluble TM analogs in [45Ca2+] between 10 and 200 μM revealed a second Ca2+ site (K(d) = 30 ± 10 μM) in both solulin and TM(E)1-6, but not in TM(E)i4-6. Ca2+ binding to this second site was unaffected by bound thrombin and we attribute it to the consensus Ca2+ site in EGF3. A 75-fold decrease in the binding affinity of thrombin to TM was observed with immobilized solulin treated with EDTA to remove the high affinity Ca2+ by measuring k(assoc) and k(diss) rates in a BIAcore(TM) instrument. Ca2+-dependent conformational transitions detected by CD spectroscopy in the far UV indicate a more ordered structure upon Ca2+ binding. Bound Ca2+ stabilized soluble TM against protease digestion at a trypsin-like protease-sensitive site between Arg456 and His457 in EGF6 compared with protease treatment in EDTA. Finally, TM containing EGF domains 4-6, but lacking the interdomain loop between EGF3 and 4 (TM(E)4-6), has an identical Ca2+ dependence for the activation of protein C as found for TM(E)i4-6, indicating this interdomain loop is not involved in Ca2+ binding.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Light, D. R., Glaser, C. B., Betts, M., Blasko, E., Campbell, E., Clarke, J. H., … Morser, J. (1999). The interaction of thrombomodulin with Ca2+. European Journal of Biochemistry, 262(2), 522–533. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1432-1327.1999.00398.x

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free