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Vitamin K dependent in vitro production of prothrombin

31

Citations

26

References

1982

Year

Abstract

During prothrombin biosynthesis, glutamyl residues in prothrombin precursor proteins are carboxylated to gamma-carboxyglutamyl residues by a vitamin K dependent carboxylase. Calcium-dependent and calcium-independent rat prothrombin antibody subpopulations have been produced and utilized to study the liver microsomal precursors of prothrombin that accumulate when vitamin K action is blocked. A substantial portion of the precursor pool accumulating in the vitamin K deficient or warfarin-treated rat will react with a Ca2+-dependent antibody at high calcium concentration and appears to be partially carboxylated. During in vitro incubation in the presence of vitamin K, the fraction of the precursor pool which is tightly bound to the microsomal membrane appears to be the preferred substrate for the vitamin K dependent carboxylation. A small amount of completely carboxylated rather than a large amount of partially carboxylated products are produced during these incubations. Treatment with a Sepharose-bound prothrombin antibody demonstrated that about 20-25% of the total carboxylated microsomal protein precursor pool consists of prothrombin precursors. This treatment removes an equal amount of total carboxylase activity, and the enzyme is active in this carboxylase precursor-antibody complex.

References

YearCitations

1970

251K

1971

8.6K

1970

2.8K

1973

860

1975

272

1981

225

1976

172

1980

99

1973

98

1981

97

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