Factor Xa-aptamer
Timeline
An RNA aptamer (RNA11F7t), which was selected from a combinatorial library for its ability to bind factor Xa, is characterized in our study[1]
Description
In 2009, Buddai, Sai K et al. present the characterization of an RNA aptamer (RNA11f7t) developed by cyclical screening of a combinatorial library against factor Xa. They show that potent inhibition of thrombin formation catalyzed by prothrombinase unexpectedly results from the ability of RNA11f7t to bind factor Xa with high affinity and inhibit its interaction with factor Va on the membrane surface. In 2018, Gunaratne, Ruwan et al. solved X-ray crystal structures of the aptamer bound to factor Xa (FXa). They demonstrate that combinations of 11F7t and catalytic-site FXa inhibitors enhance anticoagulation in purified reaction mixtures and plasma[1,2].SELEX
They present the characterization of an RNA aptamer (RNA11f7t) developed by cyclical screening of a combinatorial library against factor Xa. They show that potent inhibition of thrombin formation catalyzed by prothrombinase unexpectedly results from the ability of RNA11f7t to bind factor Xa with high affinity and inhibit its interaction with factor Va on the membrane surface.After 11 rounds of selection, the products were digested with EcoR1 and BamH1 (New England Biolabs) and directionally cloned into pUC19 linearized with the same enzymes. Individual clones were sequenced, and clonal RNA transcripts were analyzed in filter binding assays. The lead molecule was systematically shortened to obtain a truncated version (RNA11F7t) that retained binding activity[2].
Detailed information are accessible on SELEX page.
Structure
2D representation
FXa aptamer, 11F7t, mFold predicted structure, 36 nts in length.Here we used ribodraw to complete the figure, through the 3D structure information. 11F7t was the aptamer sequence mainly studied in SELEX article[2,4].
5'-GAGAGCCCCAGCGAGAUAAUACUUGGCCCCGCUCUU-3'
3D visualisation
Gunaratne, Ruwan et al. able to crystallize and solve the structure of a ternary complex between GD-FXaS195A, 11F7t, and rivaroxaban bound to the active site of the proteinase at 2.25 Å resolution. The PDB ID of this structure is 5VOF[1].Additional available structures that have been solved and detailed information are accessible on Structures page.
(Clicking the "Settings/Controls info" to turn Spin off)
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Binding pocket
Left: Surface representation of the binding pocket of the aptamer generated from PDB ID: 5VOF. FXaS195A (shown in vacuumm electrostatics), blue is positive charge, red is negative charge. Right: The hydrogen bonds of binding sites of the aptamer bound with FXaS195A.Ligand information
SELEX ligand
The dependence of the initial rate of thrombin formation on increasing concentrations of factor Va at different fixed concentrations of aptamer were analyzed by assuming mutually exclusive binding interactions in rapid equilibrium between Xa and factor Va versus Xa and aptamer. Analysis according to the cubic equation of reference yielded fitted values for Kd for the membrane-dependent interaction between Xa and Va (Kd Xa,Va), mol of Va bound/mol of Xa at saturation, Kd for aptamer binding to Xa (Kd RNA, Xa), mol of aptamer bound/mol of Xa at saturation, rate at zero Va, and rate at infinite Va[2].Name | Ligand | Affinity |
---|---|---|
117Ft aptamer | DesGla-XaS195A | 1.1 ± 0.2 nM |
Structure ligand
Rivaroxaban is a factor Xa inhibitor used to treat deep vein thrombosis (DVT) and pulmonary embolism (PE). May also be used as thrombosis prophylaxis in specific situations.-----from drugbank
PubChem CID | Molecular Formula | MW | CAS | Solubility | Drugbank ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
9875401 | C19H18ClN3O5S | 435.9 g/mol | 366789-02-8 | 50 mg/ml(in DMSO) | DB06228 |
Factor Xa is a vitamin K-dependent glycoprotein that converts prothrombin to thrombin in the presence of factor Va, calcium and phospholipid during blood clotting.-----from Uniprot
Uniprot ID | Pfam | MW | Amino acids sequences | PDB ID | GenBank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
P00742 | PIRSF001143 | 28.51 kDa | IVGGQECKDGECPWQALLINEENEGFCGGTILSEFYILTAAHCLYQAKRFKVRVGDRNTEQEEGGEAVHEVEVVIKHNRFTKETYDFDIAVLRLKTPITFRMNVAPACLPERDWAESTLMTQKTGIVSGFGRTHEKGRQSTRLKMLEVPYVDRNSCKLSSSFIITQNMFCAGYDTKQEDACQGDSGGPHVTRFKDTYFVTGIVSWGEGCARKGKYGIYTKVTAFLKWIDRSMKTRGLPKAKSHAPEVITSSPLK | 1FAX | 9606 |
Similar compound
We used the Dail server website to compare the structural similarities of ligand proteins, and selected the previous information with high similarity for presentation.The Dali server is a network service for comparing protein structures in 3D. Dali compares them against those in the Protein Data Bank (PDB).
PDB | Z-score | RMSD | Description |
---|---|---|---|
5VOF-H | 48.5 | 0 | Coagulation factor x |
5VOE-H | 46.4 | 0.3 | Coagulation factor x |
2Y5G-A | 45.8 | 0.4 | Activated factor xa heavy |
2JKH-A | 45.8 | 0.4 | Activated factor xa heavy |
2XC4-A | 45.8 | 0.4 | Activated factor xa heavy |
3IIT-A | 45.8 | 0.4 | Activated factor xa heavy |
2Y5F-A | 45.8 | 0.4 | Activated factor xa heavy |
2Y5H-A | 45.7 | 0.4 | Activated factor xa heavy |
2EI8-A | 45.7 | 0.4 | Coagulation factor x, heavy |
3TK5-A | 45.6 | 0.4 | Factor x heavy chain |
References
[1] An Anticoagulant RNA Aptamer That Inhibits Proteinase-Cofactor Interactions within Prothrombinase.Buddai, S. K., Layzer, J. M., Lu, G., Rusconi, C. P., Sullenger, B. A., Monroe, D. M., & Krishnaswamy, S.
The Journal of biological chemistry, 285(8), 5212–5223. (2009)
[2] Targeting Two Coagulation Cascade Proteases with a Bivalent Aptamer Yields a Potent and Antidote-Controllable Anticoagulant.
Soule, E. E., Bompiani, K. M., Woodruff, R. S., & Sullenger, B. A.
Nucleic acid therapeutics, 26(1), 1–9. (2016)
[3] Combination of aptamer and drug for reversible anticoagulation in cardiopulmonary bypass.
Gunaratne, R., Kumar, S., Frederiksen, J. W., Stayrook, S., Lohrmann, J. L., Perry, K., Bompiani, K. M., Chabata, C. V., Thalji, N. K., Ho, M. D., Arepally, G., Camire, R. M., Krishnaswamy, S., & Sullenger, B. A.
Nature biotechnology, 36(7), 606–613. (2018)
[4] Combining Heparin and a FX/Xa Aptamer to Reduce Thrombin Generation in Cardiopulmonary Bypass and COVID-19.
Chabata, C. V., Frederiksen, J. W., Olson, L. B., Naqvi, I. A., Hall, S. E., Gunaratne, R., Kraft, B. D., Que, L. G., Chen, L., & Sullenger, B. A.
Nucleic acid therapeutics, 32(3), 139–150. (2022)