Paramount Importance of Core Conformational Changes for Heparin Allosteric Activation of Antithrombin.

2021 
Antithrombin is unique among serpin family protein protease inhibitors with respect to the major reactive center loop (RCL) and core conformational changes that mediate allosteric activation of its anticoagulant function by heparin. A critical role for expulsion of the RCL hinge from a native stabilizing interaction with the hydrophobic core in the activation mechanism has been proposed from reports that antithrombin variants that block this change through engineered disulfide bonds block activation. However, the sufficiency of core conformational changes for activation without expulsion of the RCL from the core is suggested by variants that are activated without the need for heparin and retain the native RCL-core interaction. To resolve these apparently conflicting findings, we engineered variants in which disulfides designed to block the RCL conformational change were combined with constitutively activating mutations. Our findings demonstrate that while a reversible constitutive activation can be engineered in variants that retain the native RCL-core interaction, engineered disulfides that lock the RCL native conformation can also block heparin allosteric activation. Such findings support a three-state allosteric activation model in which constitutive activating mutations stabilize an intermediate-activated state wherein core conformational changes and a major activation have occurred without the release of the RCL from the core but with a necessary repositioning of the RCL to allow productive engagement with an exosite. Rigid disulfide bonds that lock the RCL native conformation block heparin activation by preventing both RCL repositioning in the intermediate-activated state and the release of the RCL from the core in the fully activated state.
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