Anzeige

New insights into the structural elements involved in the skin haemorrhage induced by snake venom metalloproteinases

Journal:Thrombosis and Haemostasis
ISSN:0340-6245
DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH09-12-0855
Issue:2010: 104/3 (Sep) pp. 421–653
Pages:485-497

New insights into the structural elements involved in the skin haemorrhage induced by snake venom metalloproteinases

A. K. Oliveira (1), A. F. Paes Leme (1), A. F. Asega (1), A. C. M. Camargo (1), J. W. Fox (2), S. M. T. Serrano (1)

(1) Laboratório Especial de Toxinologia Aplicada/CAT-CEPID, Instituto Butantan, São Paulo, Brazil; (2) Department of Microbiology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA

Summary

Haemorrhage induced by snake venom metalloproteinases (SVMPs) is a complex phenomenon resulting in capillary disruption and extravasation. This study analysed structural elements important for the interaction of four Bothrops jararaca SVMPs of different domain organisation and glycosylation levels with plasma and extracellular matrix proteins: HF3 (P-III class) is highly glycosylated and ~80 times more haemorrhagic than bothropasin (P-III class), which has a minor carbohydrate moiety; BJ-PI (P-I class) is not haemorrhagic and the DC protein is composed of disintegrin-like/cysteine-rich domains of bothropasin. HF3, bothropasin and BJ-PI showed different degradation profiles of fibrinogen, fibronectin, vitronectin, von Willebrand factor, collagens IV and VI, laminin and Matrigel™; however, only bothropasin degraded collagen I. In solid-phase binding assays HF3 and bothropasin interacted with fibrinogen, fibronectin, laminin, collagens I and VI; the DC protein bound only to collagens I and VI; however, no binding of BJ-PI to these proteins was detected. N-deglycosylation caused loss of structural stability of bothropasin and BJ-PI but HF3 remained intact, although its haemorrhagic and fibrinogenolytic activities were partially impaired. Nevertheless, N-deglycosylated HF3 bound with higher affinity to collagens I and VI, although its proteolytic activity upon these collagens was not enhanced. This study demonstrates that features of carbohydrate moieties of haemorrhagic SVMPs may play a role in their interaction with substrates of the extracellular matrix, and the ability of SVMPs to degrade proteins in vitro does not correlate to their ability to cause haemorrhage, suggesting that novel, systemic approaches are necessary for understanding the mechanism of haemorrhage generation by SVMPs.

Keywords

proteolysis, haemorrhage, extracellular matrix, snake venom, metalloproteinase

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH09-12-0855

You may also be interested in...

1.

Carolyn M. Millar1, Anne F. Riddell1, Simon A. Brown1, Richard Starke2, Ian Mackie2, Derrick J. Bowen3, P. Vincent Jenkins1, Jan A. van Mourik4

Thrombosis and Haemostasis 2008 99 5: 916-924

http://dx.doi.org/10.1160/TH07-09-0565

2.

P. Innerhofer

Hämostaseologie 2006 26 6: 3-14

3.

P. Innerhofer

Hämostaseologie 2006 26 6: 3-14



Articles

You've 104 Article(s) in your Basket.

TH107.2

With the expiry or pending expiry of originator low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) patents,...

TH 107.1

T&H has a new type of article! Read the first T&H Insights article by Lutgens et al. in the...

TH 106.6

Read the important position document from the European Heart Rhythm Association [EHRA] and the...