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Laminin G1 residues of protein S mediate its TFPI cofactor function and are competitively regulated by C4BP

Protein S is a cofactor in the tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) anticoagulant pathway. It enhances TFPIα-mediated inhibition of factor (F)Xa activity and generation. The enhancement is dependent on a TFPIα-protein S interaction involving TFPIα Kunitz 3 and protein S laminin G-type (LG)-1. C4b...

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Autores principales: Teraz-Orosz, Adrienn, Gierula, Magdalena, Petri, Anastasis, Jones, David, Keniyopoullos, Renos, Folgado, Patricia Badia, Santamaria, Salvatore, Crawley, James T. B., Lane, David A., Ahnström, Josefin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society of Hematology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8791571/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34731882
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2021005382
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author Teraz-Orosz, Adrienn
Gierula, Magdalena
Petri, Anastasis
Jones, David
Keniyopoullos, Renos
Folgado, Patricia Badia
Santamaria, Salvatore
Crawley, James T. B.
Lane, David A.
Ahnström, Josefin
author_facet Teraz-Orosz, Adrienn
Gierula, Magdalena
Petri, Anastasis
Jones, David
Keniyopoullos, Renos
Folgado, Patricia Badia
Santamaria, Salvatore
Crawley, James T. B.
Lane, David A.
Ahnström, Josefin
author_sort Teraz-Orosz, Adrienn
collection PubMed
description Protein S is a cofactor in the tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) anticoagulant pathway. It enhances TFPIα-mediated inhibition of factor (F)Xa activity and generation. The enhancement is dependent on a TFPIα-protein S interaction involving TFPIα Kunitz 3 and protein S laminin G-type (LG)-1. C4b binding protein (C4BP), which binds to protein S LG1, almost completely abolishes its TFPI cofactor function. However, neither the amino acids involved in TFPIα enhancement nor the mechanisms underlying the reduced TFPI cofactor function of C4BP-bound protein S are known. To screen for functionally important regions within protein S LG1, we generated 7 variants with inserted N-linked glycosylation attachment sites. Protein S D253T and Q427N/K429T displayed severely reduced TFPI cofactor function while showing normal activated protein C (APC) cofactor function and C4BP binding. Based on these results, we designed 4 protein S variants in which 4 to 6 surface-exposed charged residues were substituted for alanine. One variant, protein S K255A/E257A/D287A/R410A/K423A/E424A, exhibited either abolished or severely reduced TFPI cofactor function in plasma and FXa inhibition assays, both in the presence or absence of FV-short, but retained normal APC cofactor function and high-affinity C4BP binding. The C4BP β-chain was expressed to determine the mechanisms behind the reduced TFPI cofactor function of C4BP-bound protein S. Like C4BP-bound protein S, C4BP β-chain-bound protein S had severely reduced TFPI cofactor function. These results show that protein S Lys255, Glu257, Asp287, Arg410, Lys423, and Glu424 are critical for protein S-mediated enhancement of TFPIα and that binding of the C4BP β-chain blocks this function.
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spelling pubmed-87915712022-01-27 Laminin G1 residues of protein S mediate its TFPI cofactor function and are competitively regulated by C4BP Teraz-Orosz, Adrienn Gierula, Magdalena Petri, Anastasis Jones, David Keniyopoullos, Renos Folgado, Patricia Badia Santamaria, Salvatore Crawley, James T. B. Lane, David A. Ahnström, Josefin Blood Adv Thrombosis and Hemostasis Protein S is a cofactor in the tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) anticoagulant pathway. It enhances TFPIα-mediated inhibition of factor (F)Xa activity and generation. The enhancement is dependent on a TFPIα-protein S interaction involving TFPIα Kunitz 3 and protein S laminin G-type (LG)-1. C4b binding protein (C4BP), which binds to protein S LG1, almost completely abolishes its TFPI cofactor function. However, neither the amino acids involved in TFPIα enhancement nor the mechanisms underlying the reduced TFPI cofactor function of C4BP-bound protein S are known. To screen for functionally important regions within protein S LG1, we generated 7 variants with inserted N-linked glycosylation attachment sites. Protein S D253T and Q427N/K429T displayed severely reduced TFPI cofactor function while showing normal activated protein C (APC) cofactor function and C4BP binding. Based on these results, we designed 4 protein S variants in which 4 to 6 surface-exposed charged residues were substituted for alanine. One variant, protein S K255A/E257A/D287A/R410A/K423A/E424A, exhibited either abolished or severely reduced TFPI cofactor function in plasma and FXa inhibition assays, both in the presence or absence of FV-short, but retained normal APC cofactor function and high-affinity C4BP binding. The C4BP β-chain was expressed to determine the mechanisms behind the reduced TFPI cofactor function of C4BP-bound protein S. Like C4BP-bound protein S, C4BP β-chain-bound protein S had severely reduced TFPI cofactor function. These results show that protein S Lys255, Glu257, Asp287, Arg410, Lys423, and Glu424 are critical for protein S-mediated enhancement of TFPIα and that binding of the C4BP β-chain blocks this function. American Society of Hematology 2022-01-24 /pmc/articles/PMC8791571/ /pubmed/34731882 http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2021005382 Text en © 2022 by The American Society of Hematology. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), permitting only noncommercial, nonderivative use with attribution. All other rights reserved.
spellingShingle Thrombosis and Hemostasis
Teraz-Orosz, Adrienn
Gierula, Magdalena
Petri, Anastasis
Jones, David
Keniyopoullos, Renos
Folgado, Patricia Badia
Santamaria, Salvatore
Crawley, James T. B.
Lane, David A.
Ahnström, Josefin
Laminin G1 residues of protein S mediate its TFPI cofactor function and are competitively regulated by C4BP
title Laminin G1 residues of protein S mediate its TFPI cofactor function and are competitively regulated by C4BP
title_full Laminin G1 residues of protein S mediate its TFPI cofactor function and are competitively regulated by C4BP
title_fullStr Laminin G1 residues of protein S mediate its TFPI cofactor function and are competitively regulated by C4BP
title_full_unstemmed Laminin G1 residues of protein S mediate its TFPI cofactor function and are competitively regulated by C4BP
title_short Laminin G1 residues of protein S mediate its TFPI cofactor function and are competitively regulated by C4BP
title_sort laminin g1 residues of protein s mediate its tfpi cofactor function and are competitively regulated by c4bp
topic Thrombosis and Hemostasis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8791571/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34731882
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2021005382
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