Dimeric organization of blood coagulation factor VIII bound to lipid nanotubes

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Abstract

Membrane-bound Factor VIII (FVIII) has a critical function in blood coagulation as the pro-cofactor to the serine-protease Factor IXa (FIXa) in the FVIIIa-FIXa complex assembled on the activated platelet membrane. Defects or deficiency of FVIII cause Hemophilia A, a mild to severe bleeding disorder. Despite existing crystal structures for FVIII, its membrane-bound organization has not been resolved. Here we present the dimeric FVIII membrane-bound structure when bound to lipid nanotubes, as determined by cryo-electron microscopy. By combining the structural information obtained from helical reconstruction and single particle subtomogram averaging at intermediate resolution (15-20 Å), we show unambiguously that FVIII forms dimers on lipid nanotubes. We also demonstrate that the organization of the FVIII membrane-bound domains is consistently different from the crystal structure in solution. The presented results are a critical step towards understanding the mechanism of the FVIIIa-FIXa complex assembly on the activated platelet surface in the propagation phase of blood coagulation.

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Dalm, D., Galaz-Montoya, J. G., Miller, J. L., Grushin, K., Villalobos, A., Koyfman, A. Y., … Stoilova-McPhie, S. (2015). Dimeric organization of blood coagulation factor VIII bound to lipid nanotubes. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep11212

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