| Literature DB >> 21561861 |
Narjes Tavoosi1, Rebecca L Davis-Harrison, Taras V Pogorelov, Y Zenmei Ohkubo, Mark J Arcario, Mary C Clay, Chad M Rienstra, Emad Tajkhorshid, James H Morrissey.
Abstract
Many regulatory processes in biology involve reversible association of proteins with membranes. Clotting proteins bind to phosphatidylserine (Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21561861 PMCID: PMC3123091 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M111.251769
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157
FIGURE 1.GLA domain-PS interactions. A, the four most abundant plasma membrane phospholipids. Sphingomyelin and PC are abundant in the outer leaflet, whereas PS and PE are largely restricted to the inner leaflet; this membrane asymmetry is lost following platelet activation or cellular trauma (32). B, membrane-bound model of the human factor VII GLA domain obtained from MD simulations on the surface of a PS bilayer (12). The GLA domain backbone is a green tube, the γ-carboxyglutamate residues are white, tightly bound Ca2+ are yellow spheres, and the interacting PS is shown in stick representation. C and D, the proposed phospho-l-serine-specific binding site independently observed in the crystal structure of bovine prothrombin fragment 1 (PT; Protein Data Bank code 1NL2) (14) (C) and in our MD simulations of the fVIIa GLA domain-membrane complex (12) (D). In C and D, two Arg residues contributing to the site are shown as purple sticks, and the uniquely bound lyso-PS and dioleoyl-PS molecules are drawn using stick representations. E, examples of two phosphate-specific interactions from B.
FIGURE 2.All tested glycerophospholipids synergize with A, normalized rates of fX activation by fVIIa on TF-liposomes prepared with binary lipid mixtures (0–30% l-dioleoyl-PS, balance = dioleoyl-PC) or ternary lipid mixtures in which the sum of l-dioleoyl-PS plus dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (DOPE) or dioleoyl-PG equaled 30% (balance = 70% dioleoyl-PC). B, rates of fX activation by fVIIa on TF-liposomes prepared with ternary lipid mixtures in which the sum of dioleoyl-PG + DOPE equaled 30% (balance = 70% dioleoyl-PC). C, normalized rates of fX activation by fVIIa on TF-liposomes prepared with binary lipid mixtures (0–30% l-POPS, balance = POPC) or ternary lipid mixtures in which the sum of l-POPS plus the other test lipid equaled 30% (balance = 70% POPC). Lipids tested included PG, PI, PA, and d-POPS. fX activation rates for each TF-liposome preparation in A and C were normalized to the rate with 30% l-PS and 70% PC. Data are means ± S.E. (n = 3–10). Headgroup structures for lipids in this experiment are included on the right.
FIGURE 3.PG and A, binding affinities of fX for Nanodiscs with varying l-POPS content with or without 40% palmitoyloleoyl-PG (balance = POPC). Nanodiscs were immobilized on Biacore sensor chips, after which steady-state levels of fX binding were quantified. K values were derived from the resulting binding isotherms. Data are means ± S.E. (n = 3). B, steady-state binding of fX to nanoscale bilayers quantified by SPR using Nanodiscs with 50% POPC and 50% l-POPS, 50% d-POPS, or 25% l-POPS + 25% d-POPS.
FIGURE 4.Influence of PC methyl groups and PA phosphate on fX activation by TF-fVIIa. A, rates of fX activation by fVIIa on TF-liposomes prepared with varying l-dioleoyl-PS and no DOPE, 30% DOPE, 30% CH3-DOPE, or 30% (CH3)2-DOPE (balance = dioleoyl-PC). B, rates of fX activation by fVIIa on TF-liposomes prepared with binary lipid mixtures (0–30% l-POPS, balance = POPC) or ternary lipid mixtures in which the sum of l-POPS plus either palmitoyloleoyl-PA or DAG equaled 30% (balance = 70% PC). (DAG had palmitoyloleoyl acyl chains.) In both panels, fX activation rates for each TF-liposome preparation were normalized to the rate with 30% l-PS and 70% PC). Data are means ± S.E. (n = 3–7). Headgroup structures for lipids in this experiment are included on the right.
FIGURE 5.MD simulations show that PC has restricted phosphate accessibility. Upper, MD simulations showing that adding N-methyl groups to PE reduces the solvent-accessible surface areas (SASA) of the phosphate group: PE (red), CH3-PE (magenta), (CH3)2-PE (brown), and PC (black). The solvent-accessible surface areas were calculated using varying probe radii for the last 20 ns of 40-ns MD simulations of 1188 lipids. Water (radius of 1.4 Å), Arg (guanidinium group radius of ∼2.5 Å), and the fVIIa GLA domain ω-loop (radius of ∼8 Å) are shown to compare the results with the approximate sizes of functional groups that could interact with the phosphate groups. Lower, visual comparison of phosphate exposure in the bilayer simulations. Phosphate is black; the remainder of the lipid is white.
FIGURE 6.SSNMR spectroscopy demonstrates a novel PS headgroup environment induced upon GLA domain binding to bilayers. A 13C-13C two-dimensional SSNMR spectrum of 30% POPS* and 70% POPC Nanodiscs (25-ms dipolar assisted rotational resonance mixing, 2.6 h at 13 °C, 13.333-kHz MAS rate) is shown in blue. Overlaid in red is a spectrum of 30% POPS* and 70% POPC Nanodiscs in the presence of prothrombin fragment 1 (50-ms dipolar assisted rotational resonance mixing, 50 h at 13 °C, 10.000-kHz MAS rate). Both spectra were acquired on a 600-MHz (1H frequency) spectrometer. Inset, expansion of serine Cα-Cβ regions. PS1 and PS2 represent equally abundant chemical environments for PS headgroups in the presence of Ca2+, whereas PS3 represents a novel PS headgroup environment induced by Ca2+ plus prothrombin fragment 1.