High-resolution NMR studies of fibrinogen-like peptides in solution: structure of a thrombin-bound peptide corresponding to residues 7-16 of the A.alpha. chain of human fibrinogen

Abstract
The interaction of the following human fibrinogen-like peptides with bovine thrombin was studied by one- and two-dimensional NMR techniques in aqueous solution: acetyl-Phe(8)-Leu(9)-Ala(10)-Glu-(11)-Gly(12)-Gly(13)-Gly(14)-Val(15)-Ar g(16)- Gly(17)-Pro(18)-NHMe (F6), acetyl-Phe-Leu-Ala-Glu-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Arg(16) (tF6), acetyl-Asp(7)-Phe-Leu-Ala-Glu-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Arg(16)-Gly(17)-Pro- Arg(19)-Val(20)-NHMe (F8), and acetyl-Asp-Phe-Leu-Ala-Glu-Gly-Gly-Gly-Val-Arg(16) (tF8). At pH 5.3 and 25 degrees C, the Arg(16)-Gly(17) peptide bonds in both F6 and F8 were cleaved instantaneously in the presence of 0.5 mM thrombin, producing truncated peptides tF6 and tF8 and other peptide fragments. On the basis of observations of line broadening, thrombin was found to bind to the cleavage products, tF6 and tF8, of peptides F6 and F8. Peptide tF8 may have a higher affinity for thrombin than peptide tF6, as suggested by the more pronounced thrombin-induced line broadening on the proton resonances in peptide tF8. Transferred NOE (TRNOE) measurements were made of the complexes between thrombin and peptides tF6 and tF8. Medium- and long-range NOE interactions were found between the NH proton of Asp(7) and the C beta H protons of Ala(10), between the C alpha H proton of Glu(11) and the NH proton of Gly(13), and between the ring protons of Phe(8) and the C alpha H protons of Gly(14) and the C gamma H protons of Val(15). Sets of structures of the decapeptide tF8 were deduced by use of distance geometry calculations based on sequential and medium- and long-range TRNOEs from the thrombin-bound peptide. A predominant feature of these structures is the nonpolar cluster formed by the side chains of residues Phe(8), Leu(9), and Val(15) that are directly involved in binding to thrombin. This structural feature is brought about by an alpha-helical segment involving residues Phe(8)-Ala(10), followed by a multiple-turn structure involving residues Glu(11)-Val(15). These results provide an explanation for the observations that Asp(7), Phe(8), and Gly(12) are strongly conserved in mammalian fibrinogens and that the mutations of Asp(7) to Asn(7) and of Gly(12) to Val(12), result in delayed release of fibrinopeptide A, producing human bleeding disorders.