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. 2000 Jan;83(1):78-85.

Structural basis for hemophilia A caused by mutations in the C domains of blood coagulation factor VIII

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  • PMID: 10669159

Structural basis for hemophilia A caused by mutations in the C domains of blood coagulation factor VIII

A J Gale et al. Thromb Haemost. 2000 Jan.

Abstract

Three dimensional homology models for the C1 and C2 domains of factor VIII (FVIII) were generated. Each C domain formed a beta-sandwich, and C1 was covalently connected to C2 in a head-to-head orientation. Of the >250 missense mutations that cause FVIII deficiency and hemophilia A, 34 are in the C domains. We used the FVIII C1-C2 model to infer the structural basis for the pathologic effects of these mutations. The mutated residues were divided into four categories: 15 conserved buried residues that affect normal packing of the hydrophobic side chains, 2 non-conserved buried residues that affect structure, 11 conserved exposed residues and 6 non-conserved exposed residues. The effects of all 34 missense mutations can be rationalized by predictable disruptions of FVIII structure while at most four mutations (S2069F, T2154I, R2209Q/G/L and E2181D) may affect residues directly involved in intermolecular interactions of FVIII/VIIIa with other coagulation factors or vWF.

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