1tpm
SOLUTION STRUCTURE OF THE FIBRIN BINDING FINGER DOMAIN OF TISSUE-TYPE PLASMINOGEN ACTIVATOR DETERMINED BY 1H NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCESOLUTION STRUCTURE OF THE FIBRIN BINDING FINGER DOMAIN OF TISSUE-TYPE PLASMINOGEN ACTIVATOR DETERMINED BY 1H NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE
Structural highlights
DiseaseTPA_HUMAN Note=Increased activity of TPA results in increased fibrinolysis of fibrin blood clots that is associated with excessive bleeding. Defective release of TPA results in hypofibrinolysis that can lead to thrombosis or embolism. FunctionTPA_HUMAN Converts the abundant, but inactive, zymogen plasminogen to plasmin by hydrolyzing a single Arg-Val bond in plasminogen. By controlling plasmin-mediated proteolysis, it plays an important role in tissue remodeling and degradation, in cell migration and many other physiopathological events. Plays a direct role in facilitating neuronal migration. Evolutionary ConservationCheck, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf. Publication Abstract from PubMedThe amino acid sequence of the first domain of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) includes eight residues that are highly conserved in the type 1 finger domains found in human fibronectin. A construct comprising 50 residues from this finger domain of t-PA has been expressed and its solution structure has been determined by two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. A total of 782 experimental restraints consisting of 723 interproton distances derived from nuclear Overhauser effect measurements, 43 torsion angles, and 16 hydrogen bond restraints were used as the input for dynamical simulated annealing structure calculations. Twenty-eight structures were obtained that satisfied the experimental data with no single distance violation greater than 0.3 A. The average atomic root-mean-square distribution for the backbone atoms of the final structures was 0.41 (+/- 0.13) A for the well defined part of the structure (residues 4 to 47). The overall fold of the t-PA finger domain shows a striking similarity to that of the seventh type 1 repeat of human fibronectin with the side-chains of conserved residues lying in similar conformations. One significant difference between the two molecules is that hydrophobic residues cover the exposed surface of the principal beta-sheet region in the t-PA finger domain. It is suggested that one face of this region may interact with parts of the complete t-PA protein. Solution structure of the fibrin binding finger domain of tissue-type plasminogen activator determined by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance.,Downing AK, Driscoll PC, Harvey TS, Dudgeon TJ, Smith BO, Baron M, Campbell ID J Mol Biol. 1992 Jun 5;225(3):821-33. PMID:1602484[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. See AlsoReferences |
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