Evaluation of the role of proline residues flanking the RGD motif of dendroaspin, an inhibitior of platelet aggregation and cell adhesion.
Biochem J 2001;
355:633-8. [PMID:
11311124 PMCID:
PMC1221777 DOI:
10.1042/bj3550633]
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Abstract
The effect of a panel of proline mutants of dendroaspin, an inhibitor of platelet aggregation and cell adhesion, including A(42)-dendroaspin, A(47)-dendroaspin, A(49)-dendroaspin, A(42,47)-dendroaspin and A(47,49)-dendroaspin, was investigated using platelet-aggregation and cell-adhesion assays. Here we show that a single alanine-for-proline substitution did not affect potency when measured as the ability either to inhibit platelet aggregation induced by ADP (IC(50) approximately 170 nM) or to block transfected A375-SM cell adhesion to fibrinogen in the presence of Mn(2+) as compared with wild-type dendroaspin. By comparison, double proline substitution with alanines significantly reduced the potency in both assays by approx. 5-8-fold. These observations, therefore, suggest that proline residues flanking the RGD motif in dendroaspin and other RGD-containing venom proteins, e.g. disintegrins, may contribute to maintaining a favourable conformation for the solvent-exposed RGD site for its recognition by integrin receptors.
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