The location of the carboxy-terminal region of γ chains in fibrinogen and fibrin D domains
- Michael W. Mosesson*,†,
- Kevin R. Siebenlist*,
- David A. Meh*,
- Joseph S. Wall‡, and
- James F. Hainfeld‡
- *Sinai Samaritan Medical Center, Milwaukee Clinical Campus, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Milwaukee, WI 53233; and ‡Biology Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY 11973
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Communicated by John W. Suttie, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI (received for review March 20, 1998)
Abstract
Elongated fibrinogen molecules are comprised of two outer “D” domains, each connected through a “coiled-coil” region to the central “E” domain. Fibrin forms following thrombin cleavage in the E domain and then undergoes intermolecular end-to-middle D:E domain associations that result in double-stranded fibrils. Factor XIIIa mediates crosslinking of the C-terminal regions of γ chains in each D domain (the γXL site) by incorporating intermolecular ɛ-(γ-glutamyl)lysine bonds between amine donor γ406 lysine of one γ chain and a glutamine acceptor at γ398 or γ399 of another. Several lines of evidence show that crosslinked γ chains extend “transversely” between the strands of each fibril, but other data suggest instead that crosslinked γ chains can only traverse end-to-end-aligned D domains within each strand. To examine this issue and determine the location of the γXL site in fibrinogen and assembled fibrin fibrils, we incorporated an amine donor, thioacetyl cadaverine, into glutamine acceptor sites in fibrinogen in the presence of XIIIa, and then labeled the thiol with a relatively small (0.8 nm diameter) electron dense gold cluster compound, undecagold monoaminopropyl maleimide (Au11). Fibrinogen was examined by scanning transmission electron microscopy to locate Au11-cadaverine-labeled γ398/399 D domain sites. Seventy-nine percent of D domain Au11 clusters were situated in middle to proximal positions relative to the end of the molecule, with the remaining Au11 clusters in a distal position. In fibrin fibrils, D domain Au11 clusters were located in middle to proximal positions. These findings show that most C-terminal γ chains in fibrinogen or fibrin are oriented toward the central domain and indicate that γXL sites in fibrils are situated predominantly between strands, suitably aligned for transverse crosslinking.
Footnotes
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↵ † To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: mosesson{at}facstaff.wisc.edu.
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- STEM,
- scanning transmission electron microscopy;
- Au11,
- undecagold-monoaminopropyl maleimide;
- ATA,
- N-[(acetylthio) acetyl];
- HBS,
- Hepes-buffered saline;
- TA,
- thioacetyl
- Copyright © 1998, The National Academy of Sciences





