Peptide exosite inhibitors of factor VIIa as anticoagulants
- PMID: 10761907
- DOI: 10.1038/35006574
Peptide exosite inhibitors of factor VIIa as anticoagulants
Abstract
Potent anticoagulants have been derived by targeting the tissue factor-factor VIIa complex with naive peptide libraries displayed on M13 phage. The peptides specifically block the activation of factor X with a median inhibitory concentration of 1 nM and selectively inhibit tissue-factor-dependent clotting. The peptides do not bind to the active site of factor VIIa; rather, they work by binding to an exosite on the factor VIIa protease domain, and non-competitively inhibit activation of factor X and amidolytic activity. One such peptide (E-76) has a well defined structure in solution determined by NMR spectroscopy that is similar to the X-ray crystal structure when complexed with factor VIIa. These structural and functional studies indicate an allosteric 'switch' mechanism of inhibition involving an activation loop of factor VIIa and represent a new framework for developing inhibitors of serine proteases.
Comment in
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Enzymology. Not just an active site.Nature. 2000 Mar 30;404(6777):449-50. doi: 10.1038/35006540. Nature. 2000. PMID: 10761898 No abstract available.
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