Evaluation of a potential redox switch in blood coagulation tenase
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Abstract
Blood coagulation factor IXa (FIXa) activates factor X that leads to thrombin and fibrin formation and a stable thrombus. FIXa catalytic efficiency is markedly enhanced when bound to the co-factor, factor VIII (FVIII), and a negatively charged phospholipid surface in the tenase complex. Small redox active peptides and protein oxidoreductases have been shown previously to have some FIXa co-factor activity and thiol modifying agents have been reported to influence FVIII activity. These observations suggested that FIXa might contain an allosteric disulfide that is regulated by FVIII. This idea was tested by measuring the influence of FVIII on the redox state of FIXa disulfide bonds and the effect of plasma oxidoreductases on FIXa activity. The redox state of nine of the 11 disulfide bonds in FIXa was measured using differential cysteine labelling and mass spectrometry and all were oxidized in the protein, and this did not change upon binding of the enzyme to FVIII. All eight disulfide bonds in FVIII were also predominantly oxidized and this did not appreciably change upon FIXa binding. In addition, relevant protein reductants in the circulation inhibited rather than activated FIXa activity. In conclusion, we found no evidence that the co-factor function of FVIII involves a change in the redox state of one or more FIXa disulfide bonds.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00