Berkner Kathleen L
Department of Molecular Cardiology, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine at Case Western Reserve University, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland, Ohio 44195, USA.
Annu Rev Nutr. 2005;25:127-49. doi: 10.1146/annurev.nutr.25.050304.092713.
The vitamin K-dependent (VKD) carboxylase uses the oxygenation of vitamin K to convert glutamyl residues (Glus) to carboxylated Glus (Glas) in VKD proteins, rendering them active in a broad range of physiologies that include hemostasis, apoptosis, bone development, arterial calcification, signal transduction, and growth control. The carboxylase has a high-affinity site that selectively binds VKD proteins, usually through their propeptide, and also has a second low-affinity site of VKD protein interaction. Propeptide binding increases carboxylase affinity for the Glu substrate, and the coordinated binding of the VKD propeptide and Glu substrate increases carboxylase affinity for vitamin K and activity, possibly through a mechanism of substrate-assisted catalysis. Tethering of VKD proteins to the carboxylase allows clusters of Glus to be modified to Glas by a processive mechanism that becomes disrupted during warfarin therapy. Warfarin inhibits a vitamin K oxidoreductase that generates the reduced vitamin K cofactor required for continuous carboxylation and causes decreased carboxylase catalysis and increased dissociation of partially carboxylated, inactive VKD proteins. The availability of reduced vitamin K may also control carboxylation in r-VKD protein-expressing cells, where the amounts of reduced vitamin K are sufficient for full carboxylation of low, but not high, expression levels of VKD proteins, and where carboxylation is not improved by overexpression of r-carboxylase. This review discusses these recent advances in understanding the mechanism of carboxylation. Also covered is the identification of functional carboxylase residues, a brief description of the role of VKD proteins in mammalian and lower organisms, and the potential impact of quality control components on carboxylation, which occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum during the secretion of VKD proteins.
维生素K依赖(VKD)羧化酶利用维生素K的氧化作用,将VKD蛋白中的谷氨酰残基(Glu)转化为羧化的Glu(Gla),使它们在包括止血、细胞凋亡、骨骼发育、动脉钙化、信号转导和生长控制等广泛的生理过程中发挥作用。羧化酶有一个高亲和力位点,通常通过其前肽选择性结合VKD蛋白,还有一个VKD蛋白相互作用的低亲和力位点。前肽结合增加了羧化酶对Glu底物的亲和力,VKD前肽和Glu底物的协同结合增加了羧化酶对维生素K的亲和力和活性,可能是通过底物辅助催化机制。将VKD蛋白与羧化酶连接,可通过一种在华法林治疗期间会被破坏的连续作用机制,将Glu簇修饰为Gla。华法林抑制一种维生素K氧化还原酶,该酶产生连续羧化所需的还原型维生素K辅因子,导致羧化酶催化作用降低,部分羧化的无活性VKD蛋白解离增加。还原型维生素K的可用性也可能控制表达r-VKD蛋白的细胞中的羧化作用,在这些细胞中,还原型维生素K的量足以使低表达水平而非高表达水平的VKD蛋白完全羧化,且r-羧化酶的过表达并不能改善羧化作用。本文综述了这些在理解羧化作用机制方面的最新进展。还涵盖了功能性羧化酶残基的鉴定、VKD蛋白在哺乳动物和低等生物中的作用简述,以及质量控制成分对羧化作用的潜在影响,羧化作用发生在VKD蛋白分泌过程中的内质网中。