Isolation, Cloning and Structural Characterisation of Boophilin, a Multifunctional Kunitz-Type Proteinase Inhibitor from the Cattle Tick
Open Access
- 20 February 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 3 (2) , e1624
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001624
Abstract
Inhibitors of coagulation factors from blood-feeding animals display a wide variety of structural motifs and inhibition mechanisms. We have isolated a novel inhibitor from the cattle tick Boophilus microplus, one of the most widespread parasites of farm animals. The inhibitor, which we have termed boophilin, has been cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. Mature boophilin is composed of two canonical Kunitz-type domains, and inhibits not only the major procoagulant enzyme, thrombin, but in addition, and by contrast to all other previously characterised natural thrombin inhibitors, significantly interferes with the proteolytic activity of other serine proteinases such as trypsin and plasmin. The crystal structure of the bovine α-thrombin·boophilin complex, refined at 2.35 Å resolution reveals a non-canonical binding mode to the proteinase. The N-terminal region of the mature inhibitor, Q16-R17-N18, binds in a parallel manner across the active site of the proteinase, with the guanidinium group of R17 anchored in the S1 pocket, while the C-terminal Kunitz domain is negatively charged and docks into the basic exosite I of thrombin. This binding mode resembles the previously characterised thrombin inhibitor, ornithodorin which, unlike boophilin, is composed of two distorted Kunitz modules. Unexpectedly, both boophilin domains adopt markedly different orientations when compared to those of ornithodorin, in its complex with thrombin. The N-terminal boophilin domain rotates 9° and is displaced by 6 Å, while the C-terminal domain rotates almost 6° accompanied by a 3 Å displacement. The reactive-site loop of the N-terminal Kunitz domain of boophilin with its P1 residue, K31, is fully solvent exposed and could thus bind a second trypsin-like proteinase without sterical restraints. This finding explains the formation of a ternary thrombin·boophilin·trypsin complex, and suggests a mechanism for prothrombinase inhibition in vivo.Keywords
This publication has 73 references indexed in Scilit:
- Crystal structures of murine thrombin in complex with the extracellular fragments of murine protease-activated receptors PAR3 and PAR4Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Exosites in the substrate specificity of blood coagulation reactionsJournal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 2007
- SWISS-MODEL: an automated protein homology-modeling serverNucleic Acids Research, 2003
- Use of TLS parameters to model anisotropic displacements in macromolecular refinementActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 2001
- Substitutions at the P 1 ′ position in BPTI strongly affect the association energy with serine proteinases 1 1Edited by R. HuberJournal of Molecular Biology, 2000
- The crystal structures of the complexes between bovine β-trypsin and ten P1 variants of BPTIJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- Unexpected binding mode of tick anticoagulant peptide complexed to bovine factor XaJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- The second Kunitz domain of human tissue factor pathway inhibitor: cloning, structure determination and interaction with factor Xa 1 1Edited by T. RichmondJournal of Molecular Biology, 1997
- The CCP4 suite: programs for protein crystallographyActa Crystallographica Section D-Biological Crystallography, 1994
- Binding of the bovine basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (Kunitz) to human α-, β- and γ-thrombin; a kinetic and thermodynamic studyBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Protein Structure and Molecular Enzymology, 1988