Abstract
Thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor
(TAFI) is a pro-metallocarboxypeptidase
that can be proteolytically activated
(TAFIa). TAFIa is unique among carboxypeptidases
in that it spontaneously
inactivates with a short half-life, a property
that is crucial for its role in controlling
blood clot lysis.We studied the intrinsic
instability of TAFIa by solving crystal
structures of TAFI, a TAFI inhibitor
(GEMSA) complex and a quadruple TAFI
mutant (70-fold more stable active enzyme).
The crystal structures show that
TAFIa stability is directly related to the
dynamics of a 55-residue segment (residues
296-350) that includes residues of
the active site wall. Dynamics of this flap
are markedly reduced by the inhibitor
GEMSA, a known stabilizer of TAFIa, and
stabilizing mutations. Our data provide
the structural basis for a model of TAFI
auto-regulation: in zymogen TAFI the dynamic
flap is stabilized by interactions
with the activation peptide. Release of the
activation peptide increases dynamic flap
mobility and in time this leads to conformational
changes that disrupt the catalytic
site and expose a cryptic thrombincleavage
site present at Arg302. This
represents a novel mechanism of enzyme
control that enables TAFI to regulate its
activity in plasma in the absence of
specific inhibitors. (Blood. 2008;112:
2803-2809).
Original language | Undefined/Unknown |
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Pages (from-to) | 2803-2809 |
Number of pages | 7 |
Journal | Blood |
Volume | 112 |
Publication status | Published - 2008 |