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=== Inhibition ===
=== Inhibition ===
[[Image:Warfarin.png |400 px| right| thumb | Figure 4. Structure of Warfarin.]]
[[Image:Warfarin.png |400 px| right| thumb | Figure 4. Structure of Warfarin.]]
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The most inexpensive and common way to treat blood clotting is through the VKOR inhibitor, <scene name='90/906893/Vkor_with_warfarin_bound/2'>Warfarin</scene>. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warfarin Warfarin] is able to do so by outcompeting KO, such that Vitamin K cannot be activated to promote coagulation in the blood. Warfarin will enter the binding pocket of VKOR, creating strong hydrogen bonds with the active site. Warfarin resistance may also occur due to mutations of VKOR, decreasing the effective anticoagulation some drugs may be attempting to promote. The degree of resistance is important to determine so that warfarin may be an effective anticoagulant without being detrimentally effective in blood flow.
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The most common way to treat blood clotting is using the VKOR inhibitor, <scene name='90/904314/Vkor_with_warfarin_bound/1'>warfarin</scene>. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warfarin Warfarin] outcompetes KO, such that Vitamin K cannot be activated to promote coagulation in the blood. Warfarin will enter the binding pocket of VKOR, creating strong <scene name='90/904314/Vkor_with_warfarin_bound/2'>hydrogen bonds</scene> with the active site. Mutations of VKOR can lead to warfarin resistance which decreases its anticoagulation effects. Different mutations introduce varying degrees of resistance. These mutations are important to recognize as super-warfarin's can be overly effective in anticoagulation and become detrimental to blood flow.
=== Mutations ===
=== Mutations ===
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Some key <scene name='90/906893/Active_site_mutations/2'>mutations</scene> that can be detrimental to the VKOR structure are mutations of the <scene name='90/906893/Active_site/4'>active site</scene>. The two main residues, N80 and Y139, can be mutated to A80 and F139 creating a decrease in recognition and stabilization.
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Some key <scene name='90/906893/Active_site_mutations/2'>mutations</scene> that can be detrimental to the VKOR structure are mutations of the <scene name='90/906893/Active_site/4'>binding pocket</scene>. The two main residues, N80 and Y139, can be mutated to A80 and F139 creating a decrease in recognition and stabilization.

Revision as of 03:20, 18 April 2022

Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase

VKOR with KO bound.

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate


References

1. DJin, Da-Yun, Tie, Jian-Ke, and Stafford, Darrel W. "The Conversion of Vitamin K Epoxide to Vitamin K Quinone and Vitamin K Quinone to Vitamin K Hydroquinone Uses the Same Active Site Cysteines." Biochemistry 2007 46 (24), 7279-7283 [1].

2. Elshaikh, A. O., Shah, L., Joy Mathew, C., Lee, R., Jose, M. T., & Cancarevic, I. "Influence of Vitamin K on Bone Mineral Density and Osteoporosis" (2020) Cureus, 12(10), e10816. [2]

3. Guomin Shen, Weidong Cui, Qing Cao, Meng Gao, Hongli Liu, Gaigai Su, Michael L. Gross, Weikai Li. The catalytic mechanism of vitamin K epoxide reduction in a cellular environment. (2021) Journal of Biological Chemistry, Volume 296,100145. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA120.015401.

4. Li, Weikai et al. “Structure of a bacterial homologue of vitamin K epoxide reductase.” Nature vol. 463,7280 (2010): 507-12. doi:10.1038/nature08720.

5. Liu S, Li S, Shen G, Sukumar N, Krezel AM, Li W. Structural basis of antagonizing the vitamin K catalytic cycle for anticoagulation. Science. 2021 Jan 1;371(6524):eabc5667. doi: 10.1126/science.abc5667. Epub 2020 Nov 5. PMID: 33154105; PMCID: PMC7946407.

6. Yang W., et. al. “VKORC1 Haplotypes Are Associated With Arterial Vascular Diseases (Stroke, Coronary Heart Disease, and Aortic Dissection)” (2006) Circulation. ;113:1615–1621 [3]


  1. Unknown PubmedID 10.1126
  2. Unknown PubmedID 10.1021
  3. Unknown PubmedID 10.1126
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