Functional display of platelet-binding VWF fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.

von Willebrand factor (VWF) tethers platelets to sites of vascular injury via interaction with the platelet surface receptor, GPIb. To further define the VWF sequences required for VWF-platelet interaction, a phage library displaying random VWF protein fragments was screened against formalin-fixed p...

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Main Authors: Andrew Yee, Fen-Lai Tan, David Ginsburg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3760814?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-3d59ed0b76504557aa33924a9a615c052020-11-24T20:50:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0189e7351810.1371/journal.pone.0073518Functional display of platelet-binding VWF fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.Andrew YeeFen-Lai TanDavid Ginsburgvon Willebrand factor (VWF) tethers platelets to sites of vascular injury via interaction with the platelet surface receptor, GPIb. To further define the VWF sequences required for VWF-platelet interaction, a phage library displaying random VWF protein fragments was screened against formalin-fixed platelets. After 3 rounds of affinity selection, DNA sequencing of platelet-bound clones identified VWF peptides mapping exclusively to the A1 domain. Aligning these sequences defined a minimal, overlapping segment spanning P1254-A1461, which encompasses the C1272-C1458 cystine loop. Analysis of phage carrying a mutated A1 segment (C1272/1458A) confirmed the requirement of the cystine loop for optimal binding. Four rounds of affinity maturation of a randomly mutagenized A1 phage library identified 10 and 14 unique mutants associated with enhanced platelet binding in the presence and absence of botrocetin, respectively, with 2 mutants (S1370G and I1372V) common to both conditions. These results demonstrate the utility of filamentous phage for studying VWF protein structure-function and identify a minimal, contiguous peptide that bind to formalin-fixed platelets, confirming the importance of the VWF A1 domain with no evidence for another independently platelet-binding segment within VWF. These findings also point to key structural elements within the A1 domain that regulate VWF-platelet adhesion.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3760814?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Yee
Fen-Lai Tan
David Ginsburg
spellingShingle Andrew Yee
Fen-Lai Tan
David Ginsburg
Functional display of platelet-binding VWF fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Andrew Yee
Fen-Lai Tan
David Ginsburg
author_sort Andrew Yee
title Functional display of platelet-binding VWF fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.
title_short Functional display of platelet-binding VWF fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.
title_full Functional display of platelet-binding VWF fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.
title_fullStr Functional display of platelet-binding VWF fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.
title_full_unstemmed Functional display of platelet-binding VWF fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.
title_sort functional display of platelet-binding vwf fragments on filamentous bacteriophage.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description von Willebrand factor (VWF) tethers platelets to sites of vascular injury via interaction with the platelet surface receptor, GPIb. To further define the VWF sequences required for VWF-platelet interaction, a phage library displaying random VWF protein fragments was screened against formalin-fixed platelets. After 3 rounds of affinity selection, DNA sequencing of platelet-bound clones identified VWF peptides mapping exclusively to the A1 domain. Aligning these sequences defined a minimal, overlapping segment spanning P1254-A1461, which encompasses the C1272-C1458 cystine loop. Analysis of phage carrying a mutated A1 segment (C1272/1458A) confirmed the requirement of the cystine loop for optimal binding. Four rounds of affinity maturation of a randomly mutagenized A1 phage library identified 10 and 14 unique mutants associated with enhanced platelet binding in the presence and absence of botrocetin, respectively, with 2 mutants (S1370G and I1372V) common to both conditions. These results demonstrate the utility of filamentous phage for studying VWF protein structure-function and identify a minimal, contiguous peptide that bind to formalin-fixed platelets, confirming the importance of the VWF A1 domain with no evidence for another independently platelet-binding segment within VWF. These findings also point to key structural elements within the A1 domain that regulate VWF-platelet adhesion.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3760814?pdf=render
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