Rhomb-I, a P–I metalloproteinase from Lachesis muta rhombeata venom degrades vessel extra cellular matrix components and impairs platelet aggregation

Rhomb-I, a 23-kDa metalloproteinase was isolated from L. m. rhombeata venom. Its dimethylcasein proteolysis was abolished by metal chelators, and slightly enhanced by Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions, but inhibited by Co2+, Zn2+ and α2-macroglobulin. In aqueous solution, rhomb-I autoproteolyzed to a 20- and 11-kD...

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Veröffentlicht in:Toxicon (Oxford) 2023-06, Vol.228, p.107097-107097, Article 107097
Hauptverfasser: de Alvarenga, Valéria Gonçalves, Oliveira, Luciana S., Santos, Gustavo O., Vivas-Ruiz, Dan E., Borges, Márcia Helena, de Souza, Rodrigo C.G., Eble, Johannes A., Moura-da-Silva, Ana Maria, Sanchez, Eladio F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rhomb-I, a 23-kDa metalloproteinase was isolated from L. m. rhombeata venom. Its dimethylcasein proteolysis was abolished by metal chelators, and slightly enhanced by Ca2+ and Mg2+ ions, but inhibited by Co2+, Zn2+ and α2-macroglobulin. In aqueous solution, rhomb-I autoproteolyzed to a 20- and 11-kDa fragments at 37 °C. The amino acid sequence showed high homology with other snake venom metalloproteinases. Rhomb-I causes hemorrhage that may be ascribed to hydrolysis of essential basement membrane, extracellular matrix and plasma proteins. It preferentially cleaves the α-chains of fibrin (ogen). Rhomb-I inhibited convulxin- and von Willebrand factor (vWF)-induced aggregation on human platelets without significant effect on collagen-stimulated aggregation or other effectors. It digests vWF into a low-molecular-mass multimers of vWF and a rvWF-A1 domain to a 27-kDa fragment as revealed by western blotting with mouse anti-rvWF A1-domain IgG. Incubation of platelets with rhomb-I resulted in adhesion to and cleavage of platelet receptors glycoprotein (GP)Ibα and GPVI to release a 55-kDa soluble form. Both membrane glycoproteins GPIbα that binds vWF, together with GPVI which binds collagen, play a key role in mediating platelet adhesion/activation and can initiate (patho)physiological thrombus formation. Conclusions: rhomb-I is implicated in the pathophysiology of Lachesis envenoming by disrupting vasculature, hemostasis and platelet aggregation through impairing vWF-GPIb axis and blocking GPVI-collagen binding. [Display omitted] •Rhomb-I is implicated in the pathophysiology of Lachesis envenoming by disrupting vasculature and hemostasis.•It strongly interferes with the von Willebrand factor.•Rhomb-I binds to and cleaves the platelet receptors GPIbα and GPVI.
ISSN:0041-0101
1879-3150
DOI:10.1016/j.toxicon.2023.107097