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Biophys J, August 1998, p. 573-582, Vol. 75, No. 2
*National Center for Supercomputing Applications, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61807, and #Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Medicine Department, Rheumatology Section, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157 USA
The serine protease inhibitor antithrombin undergoes
extensive conformational changes during functional interaction with its target proteases. Changes include insertion of the reactive loop region
into a
-sheet structure in the protein core. We explore the
possibility that these changes are linked to water transfer. Volumes of
water transferred during inhibition of coagulation factor Xa are
compared to water-permeable volumes in the x-ray structure of two
different antithrombin conformers. In one conformer, the reactive loop
is largely exposed to solvent, and in the other, the loop is inserted.
Hydration fingerprints of antithrombin (that is, water-permeable
pockets) are analyzed to determine their location, volume, and size of
access pores, using
shape-based methods from computational
geometry. Water transfer during reactions is calculated from changes in
rate with osmotic pressure. Hydration fingerprints prove markedly
different in the two conformers. There is an excess of 61-76 water
molecules in loop-exposed as compared to loop-inserted conformers.
Quantitatively, rate increases with osmotic pressure are consistent
with the transfer of 73 ± 7 water molecules. This study
demonstrates that conformational changes of antithrombin, including
loop insertion, are linked to water transfer from antithrombin to bulk
solution. It also illustrates the combined use of osmotic stress and
analytical geometry as a new and effective tool for structure/function
studies.
Biophys J, August 1998, p. 573-582, Vol. 75, No. 2
© 1998 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/98/08/573/10 $2.00
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