Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7560857 | Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Proteins and Proteomics | 2013 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The plasma fibrin-stabilizing factor (pFXIII) function is to maintain a hemostasis by the fibrin clot stabilization. The conversion of pFXIII to the active form of the enzyme (FXIIIа) is a multistage process. Ozone-induced oxidation of pFXIII has been investigated at different stages of its enzyme activation. The biochemical results point to a decrease of an enzymatic activity of FXIIIа depending largely on the stage of the pFXIII conversion into FXIIIа at which oxidation was carried out. UV-, FTIR- and Raman spectroscopy demonstrated that chemical transformation of cyclic, NH, SH and S-S groups mainly determines the oxidation of amino acid residues of pFXIII polypeptide chains. Conversion of pFXIII to FXIIIa proved to increase protein sensitivity to oxidation in the order: pFXIII < pFXIII activated by thrombin < pFXIII in the presence of calcium ions < FXIIIa. The dynamic light scattering data indicate that the three-dimensional structure of pFXIII becomes loosened due to oxidative modification. ESR spectroscopy data also point to conformational changes of the fibrin-stabilizing factor under oxidation. Taking into account these new findings it seems reasonable to assume that the inhibitory/carrier FXIII-B subunits can serve as scavengers of ROS. Hypothetically, this mechanism could help to protect the key amino acid residues of the FXIII-A subunits responsible for the enzymatic function of FXIIIa.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Mark A. Rosenfeld, Anna V. Bychkova, Alexander N. Shchegolikhin, Vera B. Leonova, Marina I. Biryukova, Elizaveta A. Kostanova,