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<scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_3/4'>Text To Be Displayed</scene>{{Template:CH462_Biochemistry_II_2022}}<!-- PLEASE ADD YOUR CONTENT BELOW HERE -->
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{{Template:CH462_Biochemistry_II_2022}}<!-- PLEASE ADD YOUR CONTENT BELOW HERE -->
==Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase==
==Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase==
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<StructureSection load='1stp' size='340' side='right' caption='Caption for this structure' scene=''>
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<StructureSection load='1stp' size='340' side='right' caption='Overall Structure of Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase' scene='90/904329/Vkoroverallblue/6'>
== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==
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Vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKOR) is the enzyme responsible for regenerating vitamin K from vitamin K epoxide to support blood coagulation.
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Vitamin K epoxide reductase (VKOR) is the enzyme responsible for regenerating vitamin K from vitamin K epoxide to support blood coagulation.
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[[Image:Vitamin_K_Cycle_IJEV.jpg|300 px|left|thumb|Figure 1. Vitamin K Cycle]]
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[[Image:Vitamin_K_Cycle_IJEV.jpg|300 px|left|thumb|'''Figure 1. Vitamin K Cycle''' λ-glutamyl carboxylase uses Vitamin KH2 to carboxylate blood clotting cofactors, converting KH2 to KO in the process. Prothrombin is shown as an example of a blood clotting cofactor that later enters the coagulation cascade. VKOR converts KO back to KH2 via two steps with Vitamin K as an intermediate. ]]
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[[Image:barrel_domain_smaller.jpg|200 px|right|thumb|Figure 2. VKOR with Barrel Domain]]
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=== Vitamin K Cycle ===
=== Vitamin K Cycle ===
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Vitamin K is essential for blood clotting in the body. The fully reduced form, KH2, allows the gamma carboxylation of blood clotting cofactors and is turned into the epoxide form in the process. Vitamin K epoxide reductase turns the epoxide back to the fully reduced form so the reduced form can be used again. This transformation happens in two steps including converting the epoxide to partially oxidized Vitamin K then converting the partially oxidized Vitamin K to the fully reduced hydroquinone. <ref name="Stafford">PMID:16102054</ref>
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[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_K Vitamin K] is essential for [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coagulation#Coagulation_cascade blood clotting] in the body<ref name="Stafford">PMID:16102054</ref>. The fully reduced form, KH2, is used by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma-glutamyl_carboxylase#:~:text=Gamma-glutamyl%20carboxylase%20is%20an%20enzyme%20that%20catalyzes%20the,of%20the%20encoded%20enzyme%20is%20essential%20for%20hemostasis gamma-glutamyl carboxylase] to carboxylate protein-bound glutamate residues in blood clotting cofactor precursors <ref name="Blanchard">PMID:6165889</ref>. After carboxylation, the clotting cofactors (such as [https://proteopedia.org/wiki/index.php/Thrombin prothrombin]) can bind to calcium and can proceed to the coagulation cascade <ref name="Swanson">PMID:6758841</ref>. During this process, KH2 becomes oxidized to Vitamin K epoxide, or KO <ref name="Blanchard">PMID:6165889</ref>. VKOR turns the epoxide back to the fully reduced form so the reduced form can be used again. This transformation happens in two steps: 1) converting the epoxide to the partially oxidized Vitamin K quinone and 2) converting the quinone to the fully reduced hydroquinone (KH2) (Figure 1) <ref name="Stafford">PMID:16102054</ref>.
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[[Image:vkor_crop.png|200 px|right|thumb|'''Figure 2. VKOR in Membrane''' The teal helices are the transmembrane helices. The tan sections are the beta loop and cap loop. The light blue section is the cap helix, and the dark blue section is the anchor. The cap loop, cap helix, and anchor make up the cap domain.]]
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=== Structural Overview ===
=== Structural Overview ===
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VKOR consists of four <scene name='90/904330/Transmembrane_helices/1'>transmembrane helices</scene> embedded in the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. The files on the RCSB Protein Data Bank include a barrel domain that is not pertinent to the function of VKOR. The images presented here have been edited to remove the barrel domain and renumbered to correspond with the article by Liu. <ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. The original image with the barrel domain in context is shown in Figure 2. Helices one and two are connected by the beta hairpin region which contains two of the active cysteines, C43 and C51. VKOR also has a cap domain covering the active site, made up of an anchor, loop, and helix.
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VKOR consists of four <scene name='90/904330/Transmembranehelices1/1'>transmembrane helices</scene> embedded in the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. The barrel domain was used experimentally to stabilize VKOR for structure determination (Figure 2)<ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. For this page, the barrel domain has been removed and structures renumbered to correspond with the article by Liu. <ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. Helices one and two are connected by the <scene name='90/904330/Betahairpin2/1'>beta hairpin</scene> region which contains two of the active cysteines, C43 and C51; these cysteines, along with C132 and C135, are essential for reduction and structural changes discussed in the next section<ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. VKOR also has a <scene name='90/904330/Capdomain/1'>cap domain</scene> covering the active site, made up of an <scene name='90/904330/Capanchor/1'>anchor</scene>, <scene name='90/904330/Caploop/1'>loop</scene>, and <scene name='90/904330/Caphelix/1'>helix</scene>. The anchor serves to attach the cap domain to the ER membrane for stabilization<ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. The loop helps stabilize one of the catalytic amino acids, Asn80<ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. The helix is involved in stabilization of certain disulfide bonds and structural changes as part of the catalytic cycle discussed below<ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>.
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=== Function ===
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=== Active Site ===
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VKOR uses two substrate binding amino acids, <scene name='90/904329/Kohhbond/4'>Tyr139 and Asn80</scene> to stabilize vitamin K in the binding pocket. Tyr139 and Asn80 hydrogen bond to carbonyl groups on vitamin K and stabilizes it within the binding pocket <ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. Vitamin K is also bound via hydrophobic interactions within the binding pocket of VKOR. Hydrophobic residues of VKOR such as <scene name='90/904329/Kohydroaa/5'>Phe83, Phe87, Tyr88</scene>, form a hydrophobic tunnel within the binding pocket <ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>.
== Catalytic Cycle ==
== Catalytic Cycle ==
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===Overview===
 
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The catalytic cycle shows how vitamin K epoxide reductase structurally transforms from an open wild type conformation to having several different types of substrates within its binding pocket. The first step of the catalytic cycle of shown to the right is the <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_i/1'>wild type open conformation</scene>, labeled I. This step is characterized by an open cap domain with a disulfide bond (43-51) and a second disulfide bond (132-135) in the alpha helices. As shown this step can be characterized as closed when warfarin sits within the binding pocket without the disulfide bonds changing so that the cap domain does not actually close. This step is considered closed because vitamin K would not be able to enter the binding pocket in any of its forms. The second step of the catalytic cycle is a <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_2/1'>closed conformation</scene> labeled II. This step is characterized by a disulfide bond between the cap domain and alpha helices (51 and 132), with both containing an SH group. Warfarin can sit within this structure without disrupting and of these sulfur groups. The next step of the cycle, labeled <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_3/4'>III</scene>, is slightly different because KOH or KH (depending on the step of the vitamin K cycle) binds to the cysteine 135 within the alpha helices. This is also a closed structure. Lastly, structure IV of the catalytic cycle is also a closed structure. The major difference is the orientation of the disulfide and cysteine interactions.
 
===Catalytic Cysteines===
===Catalytic Cysteines===
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The catalytic cycle of VKOR includes transitions from open to closed conformations by means of disulfide bridge-induced conformational changes (Figure 3). Open conformations (I & II) of VKOR exist when there is no ligand within the binding pocket. Closed conformations (III & IV) exist when some substrate exists within the binding pocket of VKOR. The substituent cysteines (I) act as reducing agents for the substrate, which can be either Vitamin K epoxide (KO) or partially reduced Vitamin K.
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There are 4 catalytic cysteines that are important to VKOR, 43, 51, 132, and 135. To explain how this works, it is easiest to start with the second state. In the second state, an oxidized or partially oxidized Vitamin K has entered the active site. The stabilizing 51-132 disulfide bond is shown. Then in the third state, 43 has attacked the disulfide bond and made its own bond with 51. You can see 132 has an oxygen. That is because the researchers made a mutation from S to O to force the reaction to stop at that step so the structure could be deduced. In the natural VKOR, that would be a sulfur. The next state, the open state, results from 132 forming a bridge with 135. This allows release of the reduced or partially reduced Vitamin K. All of this disulfide rearranging was working to reduce the Vitamin K, particularly in the 135 position. If we go back to State 2, when Vitamin K first binds, you can see that 135 is not tied up in a disulfide bond. It is available to help the Vitamin K bond. So, it makes sense that once 135 gets forced to bond, the now reduced Vitamin K is released. State 5 is interesting because the disulfide bonds are similar to the open state, but warfarin is actually bound. This represents the binding of warfarin to the fully oxidized VKOR at the end of its cycle. Going back to State 1, the researchers used a mutation at 43 to mimic VKOR’s partially oxidized state. Warfarin can also bind to this state and notice that the disulfide bonds are the same as State 2. Also it is worth pointing out how the disulfide bonds contribute to conformational changes and are affected by conformational changes, which affects their proximity to each other and the active site.
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[[Image:VKOR_Catalytic_cycle.jpg|300 px|right|thumb|'''Figure 3. Catalytic Cycle of VKOR''' VKOR's luminal domain is represented by a the pink semicircle and the transmembrane domain is represented by the gray cylinder. Step I and II represent open conformations of VKOR and steps III and IV represent closed conformations.]]
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The first step <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_i/7'>(step I)</scene> of the catalytic cycle (Figure 3) is the wild type open conformation. This step is characterized by an open cap domain with disulfide bonds between cysteines 43 and 51 and between cysteines 132 and 135 <ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. The second step <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_2/8'>(step II)</scene> of the catalytic cycle is a partially oxidized open conformation. This step is characterized by a disulfide bond between the luminal and transmembrane domain (Fig 3, step II). The transmembrane domain contains a free Cys135 and the luminal domain contains a free Cys43 <ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. Step II is labeled as open because no ligand exists within its binding pocket despite the disulfide bridge that connects the luminal and transmembrane domains. The next step of the cycle <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_3/8'>(step III)</scene> is a closed structure with an intact disulfide bond between Cys51 and Cys132. Cys135 is not involved in a disulfide bridge and instead reacts with substrate by forming a stable adduct with KOH or K. This binding induces the closed conformation and uses Cys43 in the luminal membrane for electron transfer <ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>. The final step <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_4/4'>(step IV)</scene> of the catalytic cycle is the last closed conformation. The Cys51-Cys132 bond is broken as Cys43 bonds with Cys51, recreating the disulfide bridge pattern of the open state. Cys132 is then free to bond with Cys135, releasing the product that was bound to the Cys135. Overall the catalytic cycle of VKOR is dependent on open and closed conformational changes of the protein and ultimately is used to generate vitamin K from vitamin K epoxide <ref name="Liu">PMID:33154105</ref>.
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== Medical Relevance ==
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===Catalytic Amino Acids===
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===Warfarin===
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VKOR uses two catalytic amino acids, tyrosine 139 and asparagine 80, to stabilize <scene name='90/904329/Kohhbond/1'>vitamin K</scene> in all forms and <scene name='90/904329/Warfarinhbond/2'>vitamin K antagonists</scene>, such as warfarin, in the binding pocket. Tyr139 and Asn80 hydrogen bond to carbonyl groups on both structures and stabilizes them within the binding pocket.
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[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warfarin Warfarin] is the most widely prescribed oral anticoagulant and targets blood clotting via inhibition of VKOR. The FDA approved uses for cardiac conditions (myocardial infarction, atrial fibrillation) as well as for deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism. Due to the inhibition of the normal blood clotting cycle, patients taking warfarin are at risk for hemorrhage which can occur anywhere in the body. <ref name="Patel">PMID:29261922</ref>
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===Hydrophobic Interactions===
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Warfarin is a <scene name='90/904330/Bothsubstratevkor/2'>structural mimic</scene> of Vitamin K that occupies the VKOR binding site, acting as a competitive inhibitor. Warfarin mimics vitamin K by binding to the same <scene name='90/904329/Warfarinhbond/7'>substrate binding residues</scene>(Asn80 and Tyr139) in the active site. Warfarin also shares the same <scene name='90/904329/Warfarinhydroaa/2'>hydrophobic interactions</scene> within the binding site that KOH experiences (Phe83, Phe87, and Tyr88). Warfarin binding also depends on the VKOR catalytic cysteines. Warfarin is able to bind to the fully oxidized open form of VKOR as shown in <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_step1_warf/3'>step I</scene> of the catalytic cycle. Once Warfarin binds, VKOR is considered to be in a closed conformation since the substrate cannot enter, despite the lack of disulfide bridge changes. Warfarin can also bind to the partially oxidized form of VKOR as shown in <scene name='90/904329/Cat_cycle_step2_warf/2'>step II</scene> of the catalytic cycle.
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Other than the two previously mentioned hydrogen bonds (Tyr139 and Asn80), vitamin K and antagonists are bound in via hydrophobic interactions within the binding pocket of VKOR. Hydrophobic residues of VKOR such as Phe80, Phe87, and Tyr88, form a hydrophobic tunnel within the binding pocket.
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There are around 30 known missense mutations that lead to warfarin resistance in patients, but these mutations do not affect Vitamin K binding for reasons which are not yet fully understood. Such patients require higher doses of warfarin to reach therapeutic level or require a different anticoagulant drug. <ref name="Wu">PMID:29743176</ref>
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== Medical Relevance ==
 
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===Warfarin===
 
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Warfarin is a structural mimic of Vitamin K that is used clinically as an anticoagulant.
 
===Superwarfarins===
===Superwarfarins===
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[[Image:VKOR_Substrates.jpg|300 px|left|thumb|'''Figure 4. Vitamin K, Warfarin, and Brodifacoum''' Above is a comparison of the 2D structures of VKOR's natural substrate, the blood thinner warfarin, and the superwarfarin brodifacoum.]]
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More potent warfarin derivatives, called [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superwarfarin superwarfarins], are used as rodenticides. Superwarfarins have bulkier side chains that allow them to stay bound to VKOR for long periods of time, causing prolonged and uncontrolled bleeding<ref name="Chong">PMID:31857739</ref>. The enhanced binding is due to interactions between the bulky side chains and the hydrophobic residues of VKOR's binding pocket. The duration of one superwarfarin, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brodifacoum brodifacoum], has been reported as 15-30 days <ref name="Chong">PMID:31857739</ref> vs. the clinical warfarin duration of 2-5 days<ref name="Patel">PMID:29261922</ref>.
</StructureSection>
</StructureSection>

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This Sandbox is Reserved from February 28 through September 1, 2022 for use in the course CH462 Biochemistry II taught by R. Jeremy Johnson at the Butler University, Indianapolis, USA. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 1700 through Sandbox Reserved 1729.
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Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase

Overall Structure of Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase

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References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Stafford DW. The vitamin K cycle. J Thromb Haemost. 2005 Aug;3(8):1873-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1538-7836.2005.01419.x. PMID:16102054 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1538-7836.2005.01419.x
  2. 2.0 2.1 Blanchard RA, Furie BC, Jorgensen M, Kruger SF, Furie B. Acquired vitamin K-dependent carboxylation deficiency in liver disease. N Engl J Med. 1981 Jul 30;305(5):242-8. doi: 10.1056/NEJM198107303050502. PMID:6165889 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1056/NEJM198107303050502
  3. Swanson JC, Suttie JW. Vitamin K dependent in vitro production of prothrombin. Biochemistry. 1982 Nov 9;21(23):6011-8. doi: 10.1021/bi00266a044. PMID:6758841 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi00266a044
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 Liu S, Li S, Shen G, Sukumar N, Krezel AM, Li W. Structural basis of antagonizing the vitamin K catalytic cycle for anticoagulation. Science. 2020 Nov 5. pii: science.abc5667. doi: 10.1126/science.abc5667. PMID:33154105 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.abc5667
  5. 5.0 5.1 Patel S, Singh R, Preuss CV, Patel N. Warfarin PMID:29261922
  6. Wu S, Chen X, Jin DY, Stafford DW, Pedersen LG, Tie JK. Warfarin and vitamin K epoxide reductase: a molecular accounting for observed inhibition. Blood. 2018 Aug 9;132(6):647-657. doi: 10.1182/blood-2018-01-830901. Epub 2018, May 9. PMID:29743176 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2018-01-830901
  7. 7.0 7.1 Chong YK, Mak TW. Superwarfarin (Long-Acting Anticoagulant Rodenticides) Poisoning: from Pathophysiology to Laboratory-Guided Clinical Management. Clin Biochem Rev. 2019 Nov;40(4):175-185. doi: 10.33176/AACB-19-00029. PMID:31857739 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.33176/AACB-19-00029

Student Contributors

Izabella Jordan, Emma Varness

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