| Literature DB >> 22084659 |
Isis S R Carter1, Amanda L Vanden Hoek, Edward L G Pryzdial, Ross T A Macgillivray.
Abstract
Although prothrombin is one of the most widely studied enzymes in biology, the role of the thrombin A-chain has been neglected in comparison to the other domains. This paper summarizes the current data on the prothrombin catalytic domain A-chain region and the subsequent thrombin A-chain. Attention is given to biochemical characterization of naturally occurring prothrombin A-chain mutations and alanine scanning mutants in this region. While originally considered to be simply an activation remnant with little physiologic function, the thrombin A-chain is now thought to play a role as an allosteric effector in enzymatic reactions and may also be a structural scaffold to stabilize the protease domain.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22084659 PMCID: PMC3211113 DOI: 10.1155/2010/416167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Thrombosis ISSN: 2090-1488
Figure 1Activation of thrombin by the prothrombinase complex (reviewed in [4]). Prothrombin is colored by domain in this schematic, highlighting the A-chain (pink) and B-chain (yellow). The gamma carboxylated Gla residues are noted by (Y) at the N terminus of prothrombin, the carbohydrate attachment sites in kringle 1 (K1) and the B domain are noted by the shaded star, and the disulfide bridges are shown. Factor Xa initially cleaves Prothrombin (a) at Arg 320 to produce meizothrombin (d), followed by cleavage at Arg 271 to release fragment 1.2 from nascent thrombin (e). Thrombin then undergoes intermolecular autolysis to cleave the Arg 285/Thr 286 bond (f), liberating the A13 peptide (pale pink) to generate α-thrombin. Experimental constructs used in biochemical studies of the thrombin A-chain include prethrombin-1, which lacks fragment 1 (b) and prethrombin-2 (c).
Figure 2Pymol-generated structure of thrombin using the PDB 3GIS coordinates of Ser195Ala thrombin [8]. (a) Interactions between the A-chain and the B-chain of thrombin (B-chain residues are labeled in blue, the 36-amino acid residue A-chain is colored in green, and the covalently bound A13 peptide segment is colored magenta. The covalent disulfide bridge between the A- and B-chains is through Cys1(93)-Cys122, as shown in orange. Hydrogen bonds are colored yellow and residue numbering is based on chymotrypsinogen, with prothrombin numbering for the A-chain provided in brackets. The A-chain is stabilized by the Asp1a(92)-Lys9(301) and Arg14d(310)-Glu13(314) ion pairs and the ion quartet Arg4(96)-Glu8(300)-Asp14(306)-Glu14c(309). The ionic interactions include Glu8(300)-Lys202-Glu14c(309), Asp14(306)-Arg137, Lys14a(307)-Glu23, and Glu14e(311)-Lys135-Asn159-Tyr194a. Hydrophobic stacking interactions include Tyr14j(316)-Pro204 and Phe1m(280)-Phe1l(281)-Phe1g(286) in the A13 peptide of the A-chain. (b) Thrombin structure showing active site residues in red and location of the A-chain on the opposite face of the molecule.
Prothrombin A-chain sequence alignment across 11 vertebrate species. NCBI CDD Pfam09396 [12]. In the third column, conserved residues are shown in regular font, and nonconserved residues are marked in italic font. 12 human prothrombin A-chain residues interact with the B-chain and are shown underlined. Human prothrombin numbering is provided underneath the sequences.
| Species | Common name | A-chain sequence |
|---|---|---|
| Homo sapiens | Human |
|
| Mus musculus | Mouse |
|
| Rattus norvegicus | Norway rat |
|
| Bos Taurus | Cow |
|
| Elaphe sp. | Elephant |
|
| Gallus gallus | Chicken |
|
| Struthio camelus | Ostrich |
|
| Crocodylus niloticus | Nile crocodile |
|
| Danio rerio | Zebra fish |
|
| Oncorhynchus mykiss | Rainbow trout |
|
| Tetraodon nigroviridis | Puffer fish |
|
| Xenopus laevis | African clawed frog |
|
| Human prothrombin numbering: |
| |