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Home  >  Medical Research Archives  >  Issue 149  > Interaction of factor V B-domain acidic region with its basic region and with TFPI/TFPI2: Structural insights from molecular modeling studies
Published in the Medical Research Archives
May 2017 Issue

Interaction of factor V B-domain acidic region with its basic region and with TFPI/TFPI2: Structural insights from molecular modeling studies

Published on May 21, 2017

DOI 

Abstract

 

Background: Factor V (FV) B-domain contains an acidic region (FV-AR2) and a basic region (FV-BR), which interact with each other and maintain FV in a procofactor form; removal of either region via deletion/proteolysis results in an active FVa molecule. Tissue factor pathway inhibitor type-1 (TFPI) and type-2 (TFPI2) each contain a C-terminus basic segment homologous to FV-BR; this region in TFPI (and predicted in TFPI2) binds to FV-AR2 in platelet FVa (that lacks FV-BR) with high affinity and inhibits FVa function.

Objectives: To understand molecular interactions between FV-AR2 with FV-BR, TFPI-BRand TFPI2-BR.

Methods: Circular dichroism (CD) and molecular modeling approaches.

Results and Conclusions: CD experiments reveal the presence of ~20% helical content in both FV-AR2 and FV-BR but each lacks beta-sheet. Predicted structures of FV-AR2 and FV-BR, obtained using threading (I-TASSER), are consistent with the CD data and have compact folds with hydrophobic residues in the interior and charged residues on the surface. Scores from QMEAN and ModFOLD servers indicate a very high probability for each structure to be native. Predicted models of Kunitz domain-3 of TFPI and TFPI2 each with C-terminal basic tail are consistent with known homologous structures. Docking experiments using ClusPro indicate that the acidic groove of FV-AR2 has high shape complementarity to accommodate the conserved basic residues in FV-BR (1002-RKKKK-1006), TFPI-BR (256-RKRKK-260) or TFPI2-BR (191-KKKKK-195). Further, similar electrostatic interactions occur in each case. These models, in the absence of experimentally determined structures, provide a guiding point for proper mutagenesis studies in FV, TFPI and TFPI2.    

Author info

S. Paul Bajaj, Kanagasabai Vadivel, Yogesh Kumar, Matthew Bunce, Rodney Camire, Madhu Bajaj

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