| Literature DB >> 24764297 |
Kanako Sugiyama1, Mitsuhiro Iyori2, Asuka Sawaguchi2, Satoko Akashi3, Jeremy R H Tame1, Sam-Yong Park4, Shigeto Yoshida5.
Abstract
Blood clotting is a vitally important process that must be carefully regulated to prevent blood loss on one hand and thrombosis on the other. Severe injury and hemophilia may be treated with pro-coagulants, whereas risk of obstructive clotting or embolism may be reduced with anti-coagulants. Anti-coagulants are an extremely important class of drug, one of the most widely used types of medication, but there remains a pressing need for novel treatments, however, as present drugs such as warfarin have significant drawbacks. Nature provides a number of examples of anti-coagulant proteins produced by blood-sucking animals, which may provide templates for the development of new small molecules with similar physiological effects. We have, therefore, studied an Anopheles anti-platelet protein from a malaria vector mosquito and report its crystal structure in complex with an antibody. Overall the protein is extremely sensitive to proteolysis, but the crystal structure reveals a stable domain built from two helices and a turn, which corresponds to the functional region. The antibody raised against Anopheles anti-platelet protein prevents it from binding collagen. Our work, therefore, opens new avenues to the development of both novel small molecule anti-clotting agents and anti-malarials.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-coagulant; Antibody Engineering; Blood Coagulation Factors; Collagen; Crystal Structure; Malaria
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24764297 PMCID: PMC4047399 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.564526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157