(Received for publication, August 13, 1996, and in revised form, October 31, 1996)
From the Departments of Biochemistry and Biophysics
and § Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine
and Dentistry, Rochester, New York, 14642
The protein cofactor, factor (F) VIIIa, is required for the efficient conversion of the substrate FX to FXa by the serine protease FIXa. The interaction between human FVIII (and its constituent subunits) and FX was characterized using a solid phase binding assay performed in the absence of phospholipid and FIXa. Saturable binding of FX to heterodimeric FVIII, the FVIII heavy chain (contiguous A1-A2 domains), the FVIIIa-derived A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer, and the isolated A1 subunit was observed with estimated Kd values ranging from approximately 1 to 3 µM. The interaction of FX with FVIII was inhibited by moderate ionic strength and was Ca2+-dependent, consistent with the salt sensitivity observed in a phospholipid-independent FXa generation assay. Negligible binding to FX was observed for the isolated A2 and A3-C1-C2 subunits of FVIIIa, suggesting that the A1 subunit of FVIII contains a primary binding site for FX. A synthetic peptide to the COOH-terminal acidic region of the A1 subunit, designated FVIII337-372, bound FX and effectively competed with A1 for FX binding (Ki = ~16 µM). Cross-linking between the FVIII337-372 peptide and the FX heavy chain was observed following reaction with 1-ethyl-3-[(diethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide. The presence of FX reduced the rate of activated protein C-catalyzed cleavage at Arg336 by ~5-fold. These results identify a primary FX interactive site on the cofactor of the intrinsic FXase.
The plasma protein FVIII1 plays a central role in the formation and activity of the intrinsic FXase complex. This surface-dependent complex, consisting of the serine protease FIXa and protein cofactor FVIIIa, efficiently converts substrate FX to FXa (1). Kinetically, the role of FVIIIa in the intrinsic FXase complex is to amplify the rate of FIXa-catalyzed proteolysis of FX by several orders of magnitude (2). The exact mechanism by which FVIIIa functions is not known. However, FVIIIa likely increases the catalytic efficiency of FIXa through both cofactor-enzyme and cofactor-substrate interactions, which in turn alter the enzyme-substrate interaction accelerating the reaction rate. Indeed, several binding or structural sites have been identified on the FVIII molecule that have implications for its function and regulation. The fact that FVIII deficiency or dysfunction results in hemophilia A, the most common of the severe bleeding disorders, underscores its importance in the blood coagulation cascade.
FVIII is synthesized as a single chain (3, 4) of domainal structure A1-A2-B-A3-C1-C2 and circulates in the plasma as a two-chain species of approximately 300 kDa (5). Short regions (~40 residues) rich in acidic residues separate the A1-A2, A2-B, and B-A3 domains. The heavy chain (A1-A2-B domains) and light chain (A3-C1-C2 domains) are noncovalently linked by divalent metal ion(s) at residues localized to the A1 and A3 domains (6-8). Metal ion chelation disrupts the heterodimeric structure, which subsequently can be reconstituted by addition of Ca2+ or Mn2+ (9). FVIII is activated by specific proteolytic cleavages generated by thrombin (10), to form the heterotrimer FVIIIa (A1/A2/A3-C1-C2)2 (11, 12). The A1 and A3 subunits retain the noncovalent divalent ion linkage to form the stable A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer (12, 13), whereas the A2 subunit is weakly associated with this dimer through electrostatic forces (13, 14).
Previous results from our laboratory suggested that the FVIIIa A1 subunit may contain the interactive site for FX. APC-catalyzed cleavage of the A1 subunit at position Arg336 in the FVIIIa-derived A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer, markedly reduced its interaction with FX as judged by fluorescence anisotropy and solid phase binding assay (15). The aim of the present study was to further characterize the interaction between FVIII and FX and to localize the region of FVIII, which is primarily involved in this binary complex. This interaction was assessed by employing solid phase binding experiments with immobilized proteins, solution phase chemical cross-linking, and functional assays. Results from this study show that the COOH-terminal region of the A1 domain/subunit contains a primary binding site for FX that is exposed in both the unactivated and activated molecules.
Bis-anilinonaptholsulfonic acid (Molecular Probes), EDC (Pierce), PPACK (Calbiochem), S-2765 (Kabi/Chromogenix) and Hirudin (Sigma) were purchased from the indicated vendors. The ECL Western detection system was purchased from Amersham Corp. Several monoclonal antibodies were employed in this study. ESH-8, which recognizes residues 2248-2285 in the C2 domain of FVIII light chain (16), and the anti-FX heavy chain monoclonal antibody were obtained from American Diagnostica. R8B12 recognizes an epitope near the COOH terminus of the A2 domain of the FVIII heavy chain and was described previously (12). An antibody specific for the NH2-terminal sequence of the A1 subunit was kindly provided by Dr. Jim Brown of Bayer Corporation. The anti-FVIII337-372 polyclonal antibody has been described previously (17). Secondary antibodies used include goat anti-rabbit antibody conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (Bio-Rad) and goat anti-mouse antibody conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (Boeringer Mannheim). Recombinant human FVIII stabilized with albumin (KogenateTM) was provided by Bayer Corporation. Recombinant FVIII was also a generous gift from Debra Pittman and the Genetics Institute. Tick anticoagulant peptide was kindly provided by Dr. S. Krishnaswamy. The purified human FX, FXa, FIXa, and thrombin (Enzyme Research Labs), RVV-X, and human APC (Hemotologic Technologies) were obtained commercially. FX was reacted with PPACK to inactivate the trace levels of FXa present (typically less than 0.1% of the total protein). The synthetic peptide corresponding to FVIII residues Met337-Arg372 (designated as FVIII337-372) was prepared by the Biotechnology Analytical and Synthesis Facility at Cornell University and has been described previously (12).
Preparation of FVIII, FVIIIa, and SubunitsThe Kogenate concentrate was fractionated to separate FVIII from human serum albumin as described previously (17). FVIII heavy and light chains were prepared following treatment of FVIII with EDTA using Mono S/Mono Q chromatography (17). FVIII was converted to FVIIIa by reaction with thrombin (12). Purification of the A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer and A2 subunit was performed using Mono S chromatography (17) with elution at pH 7.2 to effect greater dissociation of A2 from the dimer. The A1 subunit was purified from the A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer following its treatment with EDTA (50 mM) at room temperature for 12 h. This mixture was then dialyzed against 20 mM Hepes, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, 0.01% Tween 20 overnight at 4 °C. The protein was loaded onto a Mono Q column equilibrated in the above buffer. A3-C1-C2 and a small amount of A2 subunit eluted in the unbound fraction. The column was washed in equilibration buffer and the A1 subunit was step eluted from the column in a buffer containing 20 mM Hepes, pH 8.0, 800 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, 0.01% Tween 20. Protein concentrations were determined using the method of Bradford (18) with BSA as the standard. The yield of A1 was 35-50% of the predicted recovery.
FX Solid Phase Binding AssayMicrotiter wells (Immunolon, Dynatech Laboratories, Inc.) were coated with 1 µg of monoclonal antibody (ESH-8 or R8B12) per well in a total volume of 100 µl of coating buffer (15 mM Na2CO3, 35 mM NaHCO3, pH 9.6) overnight at 4 °C. The wells were washed three times with 200 µl of wash buffer (20 mM Hepes, pH 7.2, 5 mM CaCl2, 100 mM NaCl, 0.1% Tween 20). The wells were blocked in 200 µl of wash buffer containing 5% BSA for 1 h at room temperature. Either FVIII or derivative subunits (50 nM) were added to the wells in a final volume of 100 µl of wash buffer containing 1% BSA. The protein was allowed to bind to the antibody for 2 h at room temperature. The plate was washed in wash buffer (with 15 mM NaCl) as before, and then varying amounts of FX were added in a total volume of 100 µl of wash buffer (with 15 mM NaCl) plus 1% BSA. The FX was incubated in the wells for 15 min at room temperature. The wells were then rapidly washed five times with 200 µl of the same wash buffer (total wash duration was less than 1 min). Subsequently, RVV-X activator enzyme (200 ng/well) was added in a final volume of 100 µl in activating buffer (20 mM Tris, pH 7.2, 200 mM NaCl, 5 mM CaCl2) and incubated for 15 min at room temperature. This was followed by the addition of the FXa-specific chromogenic substrate, S-2765 (200 nM) to the wells, and the plate was read at 405 nm for 20 min using a Vmax microtiter plate reader (Molecular Devices). The rates of chromogen hydrolysis were compared with a standard of known amounts of FXa to determine the amount of FX originally bound to the wells. Control experiments showed that the RVV-X enzyme did not hydrolyze the chromogenic substrate. The amount of specific binding was obtained by subtracting nonspecific binding of FX to antibody in the absence of FVIII (or subunits). The amount of nonspecific binding of FX to the ESH-8 antibody varied from 10-30% and was somewhat greater (up to ~40%) for the R8B12 antibody.
In experiments where no capture antibody was used, 50 nM A1 or A2 subunits or 100 nM FVIII337-372 were bound directly to the well in 50 µl of coating buffer. The assay was then performed in a similar manner except that the FX binding was also carried out in a volume of 50 µl. The amount of nonspecific binding of FX to the blocked wells containing no FVIII protein varied from 5-10% of the total signal.
Data AnalysisThe data for FX binding to the immobilized proteins were fitted to a single site ligand binding equation (Bound = Capacity × Free/Kd + Free) using the Marquart algorithm and Ultrafit software (BioSoft). Robust weighting was used, and the fitting displayed a confidence level of 95-100%.
Phospholipid-independent FXa Generation AssayReactions (45 µl) contained 100 nM FIXa (or 50 nM where indicated), 100 nM FVIII in buffer containing 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.2, 50 mM NaCl, 5 mM CaCl2, 0.1% Tween 20, and 100 µg/ml BSA. The FVIII was converted to FVIIIa with the addition of 20 nM thrombin for 3 min, after which hirudin (100 nM) was added. FXa generation was initiated with the addition of 500 nM FX, and the reaction was incubated at 37 °C. Aliquots were removed at various intervals up to 20 min and quenched with EDTA (83 mM). For reactions containing FIXa only, aliquots were removed at intervals up to 100 min. A portion of each aliquot was diluted into buffer (20 mM Tris, pH 7.2, 100 mM NaCl; final volume, 44 µl), and 6 µl of S-2765 (4 mM stock) was added to the wells. The FXa generated was monitored by reading the wells at 405 nM for 20 min using a Vmax plate reader. The amount of FXa in each well was quantitated by comparison with a standard generated from known amounts of FXa.
EDC Cross-linking of FVIII337-372 Peptide to FXReactions contained 1 µM FX and 5 µM FVIII337-372 and were incubated for 1 h in buffer containing 20 mM Hepes, pH 6.5, 50 mM NaCl, 5 mM CaCl2 and 0.1% Tween 20. EDC was added to a final concentration of 2 mM, and cross-linking was allowed to proceed for 1.5 h. Control reactions contained FX or the FVIII337-372 peptide alone in the presence of EDC. Cross-linking was terminated by the addition of SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis sample buffer, and the samples were boiled for 3 min in preparation for electrophoresis.
APC Cleavage AssayCleavage at the Arg336 in the A1 subunit by APC was performed in reactions containing 300 nM A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer, 70 nM APC, 100 µg/ml phospholipid vesicles (phosphatidylcholine/phosphotidylserine (75:25 w/w)) and 500 nM FX (where indicated) in buffer containing 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.2, 100 mM NaCl, 5 mM CaCl2, 0.1% Tween 20, and 100 µg/ml BSA. The reactions were initiated with APC and incubated at 37 °C, and aliquots were removed at the times indicated. Reactions were terminated by adding SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis sample buffer concentrate and boiling for 3 min.
Electrophoresis and Western BlottingSDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was performed using the method of Laemmli (19) with a Bio-Rad minigel system. Electrophoresis was carried out at 150 V for 1 h. The proteins were transferred to polyvinylidene diflouride membranes (Bio-Rad, 0.2 µm) using a Bio-Rad minitransblot apparatus at 100 V for 1.5 h in buffer containing 192 mM glycine, 25 mM Tris, and 20% (v/v) methanol.
Cross-linked product was detected by Western blotting using the
anti-FVIII337-372 antibody, followed by a goat anti-rabbit
antibody horseradish peroxidase conjugate. The same blot was stripped
in buffer (62.5 mM Tris, pH 6.8, 2% SDS, 100 mM -mercaptoethanol) at 50 °C for 30 min. After
washing the blot 3 × 10 min in phosphate-buffered saline/0.05%
Tween, it was blocked in phosphate-buffered saline/Tween plus 10%
nonfat dry milk for 2 h at room temperature. The blot was then
incubated with the anti-FX antibody followed by a goat anti-mouse
antibody horseradish peroxidase conjugate. The ECL system was used to
detect the signal (with luminol as the substrate), and the blots were
exposed to film for various times. Western blotting of the APC cleavage
assay was performed using the anti-A1 subunit antibody followed by a
goat anti-mouse horseradish peroxidase conjugated secondary antibody as
described (8). Densitometric analysis was performed with a Macintosh
Power PC equipped with a ScanJet IIcx scanner (Hewlett-Packard) using
Scan Analysis software (BioSoft).
The
interaction between FX and FVIII was assessed by immobilizing the
cofactor protein forms in microtiter wells directly or through a
capture antibody. Bound FX was quantitated following its conversion to
FXa by the FX activator in RVV and subsequent reaction with a
FXa-specific chromogenic substrate. FX bound to FVIII and A1/A3-C1-C2
(immobilized to ESH-8 via the light chain) in a saturable and
dose-dependent manner (Fig. 1). Binding
isotherms for the two dimeric forms were similar, suggesting that
thrombin activation was not a prerequisite for recognition of the
substrate interactive site on the cofactor. A similar result was
obtained with FVIII heavy chain (contiguous A1-A2-B domains) using the anti-A2 monoclonal antibody, R8B12 to capture heavy chain on the well
(data not shown). Furthermore, FX binding to the A3-C1-C2 light chain
was negligible compared with intact FVIII and the A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer.
This result was not due to reduced levels of A3-C1-C2 bound to the
wells, because control experiments (not shown) indicated equivalent
amounts of all light chain-containing forms adsorbed to the capture
antibody. These results suggested that the heavy chain-derived A1
(domain) subunit was essential for FX interaction with the
cofactor.
To determine whether the association of FVIII forms with the ESH-8 capture antibody affected the interaction of cofactor with FX, we utilized a phospholipid-independent FXa generation assay. Recent data have shown that FVIIIa markedly increases the catalytic efficiency of FX conversion by FIXa in the absence of a surface (20). Rates of FX conversion by 50 nM FIXa in the absence (0.273 ± 0.005 pmol/min) or the presence (76.9 ± 0.01 pmol/min) of 100 nM FVIIIa showed that in the absence of phospholipid, low levels of FXa were formed by FIXa alone, and this rate was increased nearly 300-fold by the cofactor (data not shown). Preincubation of FVIIIa with ESH-8 (145 nM) prior to the reaction had no effect on the FVIIIa-dependent enhancement of FXa generation (67.7 ± 0.75 pmol/min). This result indicated that the capture antibody did not perturb the interaction of cofactor with substrate.
Estimated Kd values derived from the binding curves are presented in Table I. It is important to note that these values are estimates derived from nonequilibrium conditions in that washing of the microtiter wells following interaction of FX resulted in dissociation of FX. For this reason we performed this step rapidly (<1 min total) to minimize loss of bound material. Experiments (not shown) to assess the effect of duration of the wash step on loss of bound FX indicated that minimally 15% of material was lost under the conditions we employed. Thus the values obtained are subject to this limitation of the assay.
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The effect of
pH, ionic strength, and Ca2+ were examined to further
characterize the interaction of FX with FVIII. FX (300 nM) was incubated with ESH-8 immobilized FVIII at varying concentrations of
NaCl. Fig. 2 shows that FX binding to FVIII was enhanced
at low ionic strength. A slightly acidic pH (6.5) resulted in ~3-fold increase in bound FX compared with experiments performed at pH = 7.2, and both conditions showed similar salt sensitivity (data not
shown). Control experiments (not shown) to detect the amount of FVIII
bound to ESH-8 using a biotinylated anti-R8B12 antibody showed that the
ESH-8 antibody-FVIII interaction and the FVIII interchain association
were not affected by the ionic strength of the wash buffer nor the
duration of the wash and incubation steps subsequent to FVIII
binding.
The effect of ionic strength on the interaction of FVIII with FX was also assessed using the phospholipid-independent FXa generation assay. FIXa in the absence or the presence of FVIIIa was incubated with FX under conditions that varied from 15 to 150 mM NaCl. Fig. 2 shows that FXa generation in the presence of FVIIIa was markedly affected by increasing ionic strength compared with FIXa alone. The rate of FXa generated in the presence of FVIIIa was nearly 30-fold greater at 15 mM than at 100 mM NaCl, whereas in the absence of FVIIIa this difference was less than 2-fold. The FVIIIa-dependent salt effects observed in this functional assay parallel the effects observed in the solid phase binding assay and are consistent with the cofactor-substrate interaction being sensitive to ionic strength.
The effect of Ca2+ on the FX-FVIII interaction was examined, because this ion is required for both structural and functional considerations related to efficient FXa generation. FX (300 nM) was incubated in wells containing FVIII captured via the ESH-8 antibody. The binding of FX was carried out in buffer containing varying amounts of CaCl2, and the total ionic strength of the buffer was kept constant with the addition of NaCl. The interaction was determined to be Ca2+-dependent because we observed no binding in the absence of Ca2+ and a linear increase in FX binding up to 5 mM CaCl2 (data not shown). Therefore, although Ca2+ appears to be essential for the cofactor-substrate interaction, it is not possible to distinguish between a direct or indirect role for Ca2+ in mediating this effect.
An additional experiment assessed the potential contribution of exposed
hydrophobic sites on FVIII to FX binding. Binding was measured in the
presence of increasing amounts of the apolar compound
bis-anilinonaptholsulfonic acid. This reagent binds to exposed
hydrophobic sites on the FVIII subunits with high ( µM) affinity (21). Occupancy of these hydrophobic areas on FVIII by
bis-anilinonaptholsulfonic acid did not alter the binding of FX (data
not shown). Collectively, these data indicate that electrostatic forces
are important and probably predominate in the FX-FVIII interaction.
The binding of
FX to isolated A1 or A2 subunits directly immobilized to the microtiter
wells is shown in Fig. 3. The A1 subunit supported
appreciable binding of FX, whereas the A2 subunit did not. Control
experiments (not shown) using biotinylated antibodies specific for each
of the two subunits indicated that similar amounts of A1 and A2
subunits were bound to the wells and that 50 nM protein essentially saturated the binding sites on the well. The binding of FX
to the A1 subunit was Ca2+-dependent and could
be reversed by the addition of EDTA or high ionic strength (results not
shown). The apparent Kd value estimated for the
FX-A1 interaction (Table I) was similar to those observed for the
higher order FVIII structures, consistent with the notion that
sequences and/or structures present on the A1 subunit constitute the FX
interactive site on the cofactor.
The COOH Terminus Region of A1 Represents a FX Interactive Site
In a recent report from our laboratory, we showed that
cleavage of the A1 subunit in the A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer by APC reduced the
ability of that molecule to bind FX (15). This loss of FX binding
activity in the truncated dimer was tentatively attributed to altered
conformation rather than loss of an interactive site. We have
reinvestigated the role of the acidic COOH-terminal region of A1
subunit (residues 337-372), which is removed by APC cleavage, in the
interaction with FX. Fig. 4 shows the binding of FX to this immobilized synthetic peptide (designated
FVIII337-372). The estimated affinity of FX for this
peptide was equivalent to that estimated for the A1 subunit. Further
characterization of this interaction suggested that the highly acidic
nature of the peptide was not responsible for FX binding, because
synthetic polymers of aspartic acid or glutamic acid were not
functional in this assay.
In addition to supporting direct binding of FX, the
FVIII337-372 peptide effectively competed with the A1
subunit for FX (Fig. 5). In this experiment, immobilized
A1 subunit (50 nM) was reacted with FX (300 nM)
in the absence or the presence of increasing concentrations of the
peptide. The apparent Ki calculated (15.9 µM), a measure of the affinity of peptide for FX in the solution phase, was an order of magnitude greater than the
Kd value estimated from the direct plate binding
assay. The reason for this disparity is not known but likely reflects
the uncertainty in the value obtained from the direct binding assay
resulting from nonequilibrium conditions. For this reason the
Ki value obtained from the competition assay may be
a more accurate representation of the intermolecular affinity.
To complement the data obtained using solid phase assays, the
interaction of FX and the FVIII337-372 peptide was further
demonstrated in solution phase. Association of the two components was
assessed following cross-linking using EDC, a zero-length cross-linking
reagent reactive toward residues containing primary amines and carboxyl
groups (22). Formation of covalent cross-links implies direct contact
between these residues. Fig. 6 shows that this reaction
results in the covalent attachment of the peptide to the heavy chain of
FX. Western blotting using the anti-FVIII337-372 antibody
(left panel) recognized a product that migrated at a position on the gel slightly higher than the FX heavy chain only in the
presence of FX and peptide. The peptide alone was not detected in this
blot. The companion blot (right panel) assessed the same reactants using an anti-FX heavy chain antibody. EDC-treatment of FX
(right panel, lane 2) shows the FX heavy chain
and low levels of a higher molecular weight band of a size consistent
with formation of a cross-link between the FX heavy and light chains.
In the presence of the FVIII337-372 peptide (right
panel, lane 3), we observed the FX heavy chain band and
a product of slightly lower mobility with similar staining intensity.
The latter product represents the cross-linked FX heavy chain-peptide
adduct based upon its reactivity with both anti-peptide and anti-FX
antibodies. As judged by silver staining (data not shown), the mobility
of FX light chain was unaffected by inclusion of the
FVIII337-372 peptide in the presence of EDC. This result,
coupled with the failure to observe a FX light chain-peptide adduct
with the anti-peptide antibody, suggested the heavy chain of FX
contains the FVIIIa interactive site.
FX Protects A1/A3-C1-C2 from APC Cleavage
Because FX binds
within the COOH-terminal region of the A1 subunit, one might predict
that its binding would affect APC-catalyzed cleavage at the nearby
Arg336-Met337 bond. Rates of cleavage of the
A1/A3-C1-C2 substrate were determined by densitometry following
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting using a
monoclonal antibody specific for the NH2 terminus of the A1
subunit. We observed that the presence of FX reduced the rate of
cleavage at the Arg336 site by ~5-fold (Fig.
7). This result was consistent with FX sterically
blocking the protease and/or masking the scissile bond.
In this report we investigated the interaction between the cofactor FVIII and the substrate FX of intrinsic FXase. Direct binding of FX to immobilized FVIII and its derived subunits was evaluated in the absence of FIXa and phospholipid using an assay system capable of detecting subnanomolar amounts of FX following its conversion to FXa. These analyses were complemented by solution phase assays utilizing chemical cross-linking and protease protection. Results from this study indicate that the FX interactive site is contained within the A1 subunit of FVIIIa and is localized to the COOH-terminal acidic region. Interestingly, activation of FVIII does not appear to be a prerequisite for exposure of the FX site, as suggested by the similar affinity of FX for FVIII (FVIII heavy chain) and the A1 subunit. This result is consistent with the early observation that immobilized FX could be used in a purification scheme for FVIII (23).
Several of our findings parallel the data that have been obtained for the FVa-prothrombin interaction. The heavy chain of FVa (contiguous A1-A2 domains) contains the major binding site for prothrombin (24, 25), although a more localized site has not been identified. The affinity for this interaction (~10 µM) has been determined by solution phase condition (24-26). This value is similar to the Ki observed for the inhibition of the A1-FX interaction by FVIII337-372 peptide, which is likely a more accurate estimation of the intermolecular affinity than results directly obtained with the solid phase binding assay. The latter values, which range from ~1 to 3 µM should be considered estimates based upon limitations of the assay. Additionally, APC cleavage of analogous sites in FVa and FVIIIa results in a decreased affinity for prothrombin (24, 25) and FX (15), respectively. In contrast to the calcium dependence of the FVIII-FX interaction, the association of FVa with prothrombin is calcium-independent (25). Fluorescence studies have also revealed that FVa increased both the emission intensity and polarization of membrane-bound DEGR-meizothrombin, as well as reduced the distance of closest approach between the active site probe and the phospholipid surface (27). From that study it was concluded that one role for FVa in prothrombinase complex is to modulate the conformation and orientation of substrate. Based upon the similarity in location and affinity of the substrate binding sites, FVIIIa may possess a similar role relative to substrate in the intrinsic FXase complex.
Lollar et al. (28) have shown that FVIIIa supported a FX-dependent increase in the fluorescence anisotropy of an active site-labeled FIXa, suggesting that the cofactor and substrate may interact directly. Recently, Regan et al. (15) demonstrated a similar effect, but to a lesser extent, for the FVIIIa-derived A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer, and this property was abolished following APC-catalyzed cleavage at Arg336 in the A1 subunit. The truncated A1336/A3-C1-C2 dimer also showed a markedly reduced affinity for FX as measured by a solid phase binding assay. Inclusion of an anti-FVIII337-373 polyclonal antibody did not affect the binding of FX to the A1/A3-C1-C2, suggesting that the A1 subunit COOH-terminal acidic residues, removed by APC cleavage, alone did not constitute the FX binding site. However, that conclusion was tentative and based upon the premise that binding of FX and the antibody to the FVIII segment delineated by residues 337-372 was mutually exclusive. We now show that the antibody detects the cross-linked peptide-FX complex, indicating that the premise was incorrect.
Results from the present study demonstrate the FVIII-FX interaction possesses a high sensitivity to ionic strength. Both the solid phase binding assay and the lipid-independent FXa generation assay show salt optima at less than physiologic, suggesting that this interaction is primarily electrostatic. This conclusion is supported by the formation of a covalent cross-link between FVIII337-372 and FX by EDC. This reagent initially reacts with an acidic residue to form an unstable O-acylisourea adduct and subsequently reacts with a closely associated nucleophilic side chain, thereby covalently preserving the original salt bridge (22). Low (µM) concentrations of peptide and FX resulted in significant complex formation with the amount of FX driven into complex by 5 µM peptide approaching 50%. Thus, these results suggest the presence of a salt bridge(s) involving presumably acidic residue(s) the COOH-terminal region of A1 subunit of FVIIIa and basic residue(s) in the heavy chain of FX.
Both APC (10, 29) and FIXa (30, 31) cleave FVIIIa at the Arg336-Met337 bond, which precedes the proposed interactive site for FX and which results in the inactivation of the cofactor. Recently, our laboratory showed that the presence of FX reduced the rate at which FIXa cleaved this site by ~10-fold (32). Results from the current study show that FX similarly protects the Arg336 site from APC cleavage. Operationally, the protection of cofactor by substrate could help to sustain maximal FXase activity until substrate becomes limiting. Although the mechanism for this effect remains to be determined, the proximity of the FX binding site and scissile bond is consistent with FX masking the scissile bond and/or sterically precluding the enzymes from efficient catalysis.
The acidic COOH-terminal region of the A1 subunit appears to participate in at least two protein-protein interactions. Earlier results from our laboratory indicated that this region was involved in A2 subunit retention following thrombin cleavage at the A1-A2 junction (14, 17). This interaction was determined to be essentially electrostatic and pH-dependent. However, the ionic strength sensitivity of FVIIIa reconstitution is significantly reduced compared with the salt sensitivity of the FVIII-FX interaction. The acidic character of this sequence plays an important role in the inter-FVIIIa subunit interaction, and polymers of aspartic acid or glutamic acid also inhibited the reconstitution of FVIIIa from the A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer and A2 subunit (17). The interaction of this region with FX appears less dependent upon the charge of the peptide in that the synthetic acidic polymers do not support FX binding. Although the affinity values obtained from the solid phase binding assays are equivocal, the similarity in values obtained for the intact A1 and FVIII337-372 peptide make it tempting to speculate that the majority of binding energy for the FX interaction is contained within this sequence. Comparison of the human (5) and murine (33) cDNA sequences for FVIII show marked homologies in this region as well as a region of identity at the end of the segment.
Based upon electron microscopy (34, 35) and hydrodynamic (8) analyses, the A domains (subunits) of FVIII (FVIIIa) form a globular structure. Modeling by homology mapping with nitrite reductase, a protein containing A domains homologous to those of FVIII, suggests the three A domains are arranged such that each is similarly exposed to solvent (36). The recent determination of the x-ray structure of porcine FIXa suggests an interesting model for the membrane-bound FXase (37). The model depicts the tulip-shaped FIXa and an equivalently arranged FX arching across the cofactor from opposite sides, such that the FIXa active site is juxtaposed with the scissile bond in FX. This arrangement is compatible with predictions of the various contacts that are formed within the FXase complex. FIXa possesses a high affinity site in the A3 subunit (38) and a weaker affinity site in the A2 subunit (39), the latter of which directly modulates the active site. Results from the current study indicate that the A1 subunit possesses a primary FX binding site, which contacts the FX heavy chain. Thus all three A subunits participate in protein-protein interactions, providing essential contacts between enzyme and substrate, which manifest in an accelerated rate of catalysis.
We thank Tammy Beattie for excellent technical assistance, Dr. Jim Brown and the Bayer Corporation for the anti-A1 monoclonal antibody as well as recombinant factor VIII, Debra Pittman and the Genetics Institute for recombinant factor VIII, and Drs. Mark Dumont and Lynn O'Brien for helpful discussions.