[Frontiers in Bioscience 16, 3156-3163, June 1, 2011]

Allosteric activation of coagulation factor VIIa

Egon Persson, Ole Hvilsted Olsen

Haemostasis Biochemistry, Novo Nordisk A/S, Novo Nordisk Park, DK-2760 Maaloev, Denmark

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Abstract
2. Introduction
3. Allosteric activation of FVIIa by TF
3.1. Structural contributions to our understanding of the allostery
3.2. Functional contributions to our understanding of the allostery 3.2.1. Path I
3.2.2. Path II
4. Perspective
5. References

1. ABSTRACT

Coagulation factor VIIa (FVIIa) is present at subnanomolar concentration and represents a small percentage of the total amount of FVII in the circulation. FVIIa is poised to initiate blood clotting when it encounters its pivotal cofactor tissue factor (TF) which becomes exposed to blood upon vascular rupture. The requirement for complex formation with TF in order for FVIIa to express procoagulant activity ensures thrombin and fibrin generation at the right time and place. Thus TF acts as a guardian of safety of paramount importance to blood coagulation by providing localization to the site of injury and at the same time inducing maturation of zymogen-like free FVIIa to the active cofactor-bound enzyme. This review gives an account of the accumulated knowledge about the structure, function and TF dependence of FVIIa to arrive at a plausible allosteric mechanism by which TF induces maturation of the active conformation of FVIIa.