2008 Annual Meeting
(618b) Shear-Induced Structural Changes in Blood Proteins
Authors
We examine the biophysical and biological features regulating the structure and the size of VWF in solution, both at static (no fluid flow) and under fluid shear conditions by employing small angle neutron scattering (SANS) and fluorescence methods. Here, we focus on shear-dependent conformational changes of VWF ascertained by the fluorescent probe 4,4'-dianilino-1,1'-binaphthyl-5,5'-disulfonic acid dipotassium salt (bis-ANS) that partitions into the protein hydrophobic domains. The fluorescence intensity due to probe-VWF interaction increased, suggesting that new hydrophobic domains were exposed upon fluid shear application at shear rates greater than 2300-6000/s and at shear times greater than 1min. SANS studies at higher resolution revealed structural changes in VWF commencing at shear rates below 3000/s and at length scales less than 10nm. Such fluid shear-induced conformational changes are specific to VWF on the basis of control experiments on bovine serum albumin. Relaxation of the VWF structure was observed over the course of minutes following cessation of shear, giving lower signal due to bis-ANS binding to VWF. Taken together, our data suggest that changes in VWF conformation, at small-length scales and physiological shear stresses, likely precede protein unfolding and enhanced bis-ANS binding at higher shear rates. Changes in structure at high shear rates are partially reversible. The structural changes in VWF conformation reported here likely regulate protein function in response to fluid shear application. The findings emerging from this work may be applicable to other blood proteins also. Further, these shear-mediated features may regulate the cascade of events that contribute to arterial thrombosis and other blood coagulation processes.