Publication | Closed Access
Tick anticoagulant peptide: kinetic analysis of the recombinant inhibitor with blood coagulation factor X.alpha.
68
Citations
20
References
1990
Year
Tick Anticoagulant PeptideRecombinant InhibitorImmunologyPeptide ScienceChemical BiologyThrombosisBioanalysisHematologyAntisense TherapyProteomicsInhibitory ActivityBiochemistryMechanism Of ActionBiochemical InteractionBiomolecular InteractionKinetic AnalysisNative TapPharmacologyNatural SciencesHemostasisProtein EngineeringCoagulopathyMedicineAnticoagulantRtap InhibitionDrug DiscoveryAntithrombotic Agents
Tick anticoagulant peptide (TAP) is a 60 amino acid protein which is a highly specific inhibitor of human blood coagulation factor Xa (fXa) isolated from the tick Ornithodoros moubata [Waxman, L., Smith, D. E., Arcuri, K. E., & Vlasuk, G. P. (1990) Science 248, 593-596]. Due to the limited quantities of native TAP, a recombinant version of TAP produced in Saccharomyces cerevisiae was used for a detailed kinetic analysis of the inhibition interaction with human fXa. rTAP was determined to be a reversible, slow, tight-binding inhibitor of fXa, displaying a competitive type of inhibition. The binding of rTAP to fXa is stoichiometric with a dissociation constant of (1.8 +/- 0.02) x 10(-10) M, a calculated association rate constant of (2.85 +/- 0.07) x 10(6) M-1 s-1, and a dissociation rate constant of (0.554 +/- 0.178) x 10(-3) s-1. Binding studies show that 35S-rTAP binds only to fXa and not to DFP-treated fXa or zymogen factor X, which suggests the active site of fXa is required for rTAP inhibition. That rTAP is a unique serine proteinase inhibitor is suggested both by its high specificity for its target enzyme, fXa, and also by its unique structure.
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