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Showing papers by "James A. Huntington published in 1999"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These findings provide a framework for understanding the uncleaved alpha1-antitrypsin polymer and fibrillar and amyloid deposition of proteins seen in other conformational diseases, with the ordered array of polymers in the crystal resulting from slow accretion of the cleaved serpin over the period of a year.

121 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
15 Nov 1999-Blood
TL;DR: This linked and selective loss of activity of beta-antithrombin provides an explanation for the unexpected severity of thrombotic episodes in heterozygotes with conformationally unstable antithrombins.

91 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A range of sequences that can bind to and activate antithrombin in the natural heparan sulfates that line the vascular endothelium are likely to be found, supported by molecular modeling of possible binding modes for the heptasaccharide at high ionic strength.
Abstract: Antithrombin requires heparin for efficient inhibition of the final two proteinases of the blood coagulation cascade, factor Xa and thrombin. Antithrombin binds heparin via a specific pentasaccharide domain in a two-step mechanism whereby initial weak binding is followed by a conformational change and subsequent tight binding. The goal of this study is to investigate the role of a reducing-end extension in the binding of the longer oligosaccharides that contain the cognate pentasaccharide sequence. We determined the antithrombin binding properties of a synthetic heptasaccharide containing the natural pentasaccharide sequence (DEFGH) and an additional reducing-end disaccharide (DEFGHG'H'). Binding at low ionic strength is unaffected by the disaccharide addition, but at ionic strengths >/=0.2 the mode of heptasaccharide binding changes resulting in a 2-fold increase in affinity due to a decrease in the off-rate caused by a greater nonionic contribution to binding. Molecular modeling of possible binding modes for the heptasaccharide at high ionic strength indicates a possible shift in position of the pentasaccharide domain to occupy the extended heparin-binding site. This conclusion supports the likely presence of a range of sequences that can bind to and activate antithrombin in the natural heparan sulfates that line the vascular endothelium.

15 citations