Vitamin K antagonists are widely used anticoagulants that target vitamin K epoxide reductases (VKOR), a family of integral membrane enzymes. To elucidate their catalytic cycle and inhibitory mechanism, we report 11 x-ray crystal structures of human VKOR and pufferfish VKOR-like, with substrates and antagonists in different redox states. Substrates entering the active site in a partially oxidized state form cysteine adducts that induce an open-to-closed conformational change, triggering reduction. Binding and catalysis are facilitated by hydrogen-bonding interactions in a hydrophobic pocket. The antagonists bind specifically to the same hydrogen-bonding residues and induce a similar closed conformation. Thus, vitamin K antagonists act through mimicking the key interactions and conformational changes required for the VKOR catalytic cycle.
Structural basis of antagonizing the vitamin K catalytic cycle for anticoagulation.
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作者:Liu Shixuan, Li Shuang, Shen Guomin, Sukumar Narayanasami, Krezel Andrzej M, Li Weikai
| 期刊: | Science | 影响因子: | 45.800 |
| 时间: | 2021 | 起止号: | 2021 Jan 1; 371(6524):eabc5667 |
| doi: | 10.1126/science.abc5667 | ||
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