Determining the Kinetics of Covalent Thrombin-Antithrombin Association
Applications | 2013 | Wyatt Technology | WatersInstrumentation
Real-time analysis of serpin–protease interactions is crucial in coagulation research and therapeutic development. Composition Gradient Multi-Angle Light Scattering (CG-MALS) offers a label-free approach to quantify slow, irreversible protein–protein association kinetics under native solution conditions.
This study aimed to determine the second-order rate constant for the covalent association of thrombin-α with antithrombin III using CG-MALS. Multiple protein ratios were tested to obtain kinetic parameters and compare them with values obtained by established methods.
A composition gradient was generated with a Calypso II system, maintaining antithrombin at 60 μg/mL and varying thrombin from 0 to 30 μg/mL. Six injections were delivered sequentially through an online UV/Vis concentration detector and a HELEOS MALS detector. After each injection, flow was halted for 2000 s to allow the covalent reaction to reach completion. Time-dependent weight-averaged molar mass data were recorded and fitted simultaneously to a 1:1 irreversible association model, accounting for fractions of inactive protein.
The following instrumentation and components were employed:
• The second-order rate constant was determined as k = 6.09×10³ M⁻¹ s⁻¹, in close agreement with literature values (e.g., 5.8×10³ M⁻¹ s⁻¹ by fluorescence at 25 °C).
• Analysis revealed ~77 % of thrombin was competent for binding, matching the manufacturer’s reported activity (0.79 mol Thr/mol AT).
• Light scattering traces showed a clear increase in weight-averaged molar mass over 10–20 minutes, confirming covalent complex formation.
CG-MALS provides several advantages for kinetic studies of irreversible interactions:
• Extension of CG-MALS to heparin-enhanced reactions and other serpin–protease systems
• Integration with microfluidic platforms for higher throughput and reduced sample consumption
• Application in inhibitor screening and drug discovery
• Advanced data analysis to resolve complex, multi-step association mechanisms
Time-dependent CG-MALS has been demonstrated as an effective, label-free technique for quantifying covalent association kinetics between thrombin and antithrombin. This method delivers precise rate constants, active protein fractions, and real-time monitoring, supporting its broad utility in analytical biochemistry and pharmaceutical research.
HPLC, GPC/SEC
IndustriesPharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Real-time analysis of serpin–protease interactions is crucial in coagulation research and therapeutic development. Composition Gradient Multi-Angle Light Scattering (CG-MALS) offers a label-free approach to quantify slow, irreversible protein–protein association kinetics under native solution conditions.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study aimed to determine the second-order rate constant for the covalent association of thrombin-α with antithrombin III using CG-MALS. Multiple protein ratios were tested to obtain kinetic parameters and compare them with values obtained by established methods.
Methodology
A composition gradient was generated with a Calypso II system, maintaining antithrombin at 60 μg/mL and varying thrombin from 0 to 30 μg/mL. Six injections were delivered sequentially through an online UV/Vis concentration detector and a HELEOS MALS detector. After each injection, flow was halted for 2000 s to allow the covalent reaction to reach completion. Time-dependent weight-averaged molar mass data were recorded and fitted simultaneously to a 1:1 irreversible association model, accounting for fractions of inactive protein.
Instrumentation
The following instrumentation and components were employed:
- Calypso II composition gradient system for precise mixing and delivery
- Online UV/Vis concentration detector for real-time protein quantification
- DAWN HELEOS multi-angle light scattering detector for molar mass determination
- Anotop 0.02 µm and 0.1 µm filters for solution preparation and sample filtration
Key Results and Discussion
• The second-order rate constant was determined as k = 6.09×10³ M⁻¹ s⁻¹, in close agreement with literature values (e.g., 5.8×10³ M⁻¹ s⁻¹ by fluorescence at 25 °C).
• Analysis revealed ~77 % of thrombin was competent for binding, matching the manufacturer’s reported activity (0.79 mol Thr/mol AT).
• Light scattering traces showed a clear increase in weight-averaged molar mass over 10–20 minutes, confirming covalent complex formation.
Benefits and Practical Applications
CG-MALS provides several advantages for kinetic studies of irreversible interactions:
- Label-free measurement in native solution without surface immobilization
- Quantification of active fractions in heterogeneous protein samples
- Applicability to coagulation research, biopharmaceutical development, and quality control workflows
Future Trends and Opportunities
• Extension of CG-MALS to heparin-enhanced reactions and other serpin–protease systems
• Integration with microfluidic platforms for higher throughput and reduced sample consumption
• Application in inhibitor screening and drug discovery
• Advanced data analysis to resolve complex, multi-step association mechanisms
Conclusion
Time-dependent CG-MALS has been demonstrated as an effective, label-free technique for quantifying covalent association kinetics between thrombin and antithrombin. This method delivers precise rate constants, active protein fractions, and real-time monitoring, supporting its broad utility in analytical biochemistry and pharmaceutical research.
References
- Some, D. and Kenrick, S. (2012). Characterization of Protein-Protein Interactions via Static and Dynamic Light Scattering. In Protein Interactions, Cai, J. and Wang, R.E. (Eds.), InTech, DOI: 10.5772/37240.
- Izaguirre, G. et al. J. Biol. Chem. 2007, 282, 33609.
- Rosenberg, R. D. and Rosenberg, J. S. J. Clin. Invest. 1984, 74, 1.
- Bernocco, S. et al. Biophys. J. 2000, 79, 561.
- Rocco, M. et al. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 2001, 936, 167.
- Wei, G. J. et al. Biochemistry 1982, 21, 1949.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Does Antithrombin III Block the Action of a Monoclonal Anti-Thrombin Antibody?
2013|Waters|Applications
Light Scattering for the Masses ® Does Antithrombin III Block the Action of a Monoclonal Anti-Thrombin Antibody? Summary Multi-angle light scattering (MALS) is a powerful tool for quantifying multiple types of protein-protein interactions. In a previous application note, we described…
Key words
antithrombin, antithrombinthrombin, thrombinscattering, scatteringantibody, antibodymals, malslight, lightiii, iiianti, antiaction, actionmonoclonal, monoclonalblock, blockmasses, massesdoes, doesbinding, bindingthr
Measuring the Interaction Between Thrombin-α and an Anti-Thrombin Antibody
2023|Waters|Applications
Light Scattering for the Masses ® Measuring the Interaction Between Thrombin-α and an Anti-Thrombin Antibody Summary Antibody-antigen binding, hormone-receptor interactions, and many other common biomolecular interactions occur at stoichiometries other than 1:1. The Wyatt Calypso system utilizes composition-gradient multi-angle light…
Key words
thrombin, thrombinscattering, scatteringanti, antiinteraction, interactionlight, lightantibody, antibodymasses, massesstoichiometry, stoichiometrythr, thrmeasuring, measuringmals, malsbetween, betweenequilibrium, equilibriumassociation, associationcalypso
Characterizing Protein–Protein Interactions Via Static Light Scattering: Inhibition Kinetics and Dissociation
2010|Waters|Technical notes
Volume 28, Number 1 Technical Article by Dan Some and Amy Hanlon Characterizing Protein–Protein Interactions Via Static Light Scattering: Inhibition Kinetics and Dissociation Q uantification of the kinetic rates of protein association, dissociation, and aggregation is an essential factor in…
Key words
scattering, scatteringmals, malslight, lightprotein, proteinchymotrypsin, chymotrypsinkinetics, kineticsstatic, staticequilibrium, equilibriummolar, molarinhibitor, inhibitorcontinued, continuedmay, maydecay, decayconstants, constantssolution
SEC-MALS and CG-MALS: Complementary Techniques to Characterize Protein-DNA Complexes
|Waters|Technical notes
W H I T E PA P E R WP3001: SEC-MALS and CG-MALS: Complementary Techniques to Characterize Protein-DNA Complexes Sophia Kenrick, Ph.D., Waters | Wyatt Technology Summary Interactions between proteins and nucleic acids often result in binding stoichiometries greater than…
Key words
mals, malscre, creloxp, loxpstoichiometry, stoichiometryprotein, proteinsec, secequilibrium, equilibriummolar, molarconjugate, conjugatedri, dridna, dnaintasome, intasomeaffinity, affinitylight, lightpfv