epidermal-growth-factor and Blood-Platelet-Disorders

epidermal-growth-factor has been researched along with Blood-Platelet-Disorders* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for epidermal-growth-factor and Blood-Platelet-Disorders

ArticleYear
The role of the second growth-factor domain of human factor IXa in binding to platelets and in factor-X activation.
    The Biochemical journal, 1995, Sep-01, Volume: 310 ( Pt 2)

    To study the structural requirements for factor IXa binding to platelets, we have carried out equilibrium binding studies with human factor IXa after replacing the second epidermal growth factor (EGF) domain by the corresponding polypeptide region of factor X. The chimeric protein, factor IX(Xegf2), and the wild-type, factor IXwt, produced in embryonic kidney cells 293 were radiolabelled with 125I and activated with factor XIa. Direct binding studies with thrombin-activated platelets showed normal stoichiometry and affinity of binding of factor IXawt in the presence of factor VIIIa (2 units/ml) and factor X (1.5 microM). However, under similar experimental conditions, factor IXa(Xegf2) was bound to a smaller number of sites (396 sites/platelet) with decreased affinity, i.e. a dissociation constant (Kd) of 1.4 nM, compared with normal factor IXa, factor IXaN (558 sites/platelet; Kd 0.67 nM), or factor IXawt (590 sites/platelet; Kd 0.61 nM). The concentrations of factor IXaN and factor IXawt required for half-maximal rates of factor-X activation were 0.63 nM and 0.7 nM, indicating a close correspondence of the Kd,app. for binding of factor IXawt to the factor-X activating complex on activated platelets to the Kd obtained in equilibrium binding studies. In contrast, kinetic parameters for factor-X activation by factor IXa(Xegf2) showed a decreased affinity (Kd 1.5 nM), in agreement with results of binding studies. These studies with factor IX(Xegf2) suggest that the EGF-2 domain may be important for specific high-affinity factor IXa binding to platelets in the presence of factor VIIIa and factor X.

    Topics: Binding Sites; Binding, Competitive; Blood Platelet Disorders; Blood Platelets; Cell Line; Embryo, Mammalian; Epidermal Growth Factor; Factor IXa; Factor X; Humans; Kidney; Kinetics; Oligopeptides; Recombinant Fusion Proteins; Reference Values; Syndrome; Thrombin

1995