Identification of an Inactivating Cleavage Site for Alpha-Thrombin on the Heavy Chain of Factor VA

Abstract

Previous studies of factor (F)Va inactivation on human umbilical vein endothelial cells have shown that alpha-thrombin cleaves the heavy chain near the COOH-terminus to produce a M(r) 97,000 fragment containing the NH(2)-terminal portion of the heavy chain and a M(r) 8,000 peptide containing the rest of the molecule. The alpha-thrombin cleavage appeared to occur between amino acid residues 586 and 654 of FV. This region contains a consensus sequence for alpha-thrombin cleavage located at residues 640-644 (S-S-P-R-S). To test the hypothesis that alpha-thrombin cleaves the FVa heavy chain at Arg(643) and to evaluate the functional importance of this cleavage for FVa inactivation, site-directed mutagenesis was used to create recombinant FV molecules with mutations R(643) --\u3e Q (FV(R643Q)) and R(643) --\u3e A (FV(R643A)). All recombinant molecules were purified to homogeneity and assayed for activity following extended activation with alpha-thrombin. Under similar experimental conditions, appearance of the M(r) 97,000 heavy chain fragment in the plasma and wild-type FVa molecules correlated with partial loss of cofactor activity, while following extended incubation of FV(R643Q) and FV(R643A) with alpha-thrombin no cleavage of the heavy chain at Arg(643) was detected and no presence of the M(r) 97,000 heavy-chain fragment was noticed. Further, no loss in cofactor activity was observed using these mutant recombinant FVa molecules. Our data demonstrate that cleavage of FVa at Arg(643) by alpha-thrombin results in a partially inactive cofactor molecule and provides for an activated protein C (APC)-independent anticoagulant effect of alpha-thrombin

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