Protein Z is a member of the
coagulation cascade, the group of blood proteins that leads to the formation of
blood clots. It is
vitamin K-dependent, and its functionality is therefore impaired in
warfarin therapy. It is a
glycoprotein.
Physiology
Although it is not enzymatically active, it is structurally related to several
serine proteases of the coagulation cascade:
factors VII,
IX,
X and
protein C. The carboxyglutamate residues (which require vitamin K) bind protein Z to
phospholipid surfaces.
The main role of protein Z appears to be the degradation of factor Xa. This is done by protein Z-related protease inhibitor (ZPI), but the reaction is accelerated 1000-fold by the presence of protein Z. Oddly, ZPI also degrades factor XI, but this reaction does not require the presence of protein Z.
In some studies, deficiency states have been associated with a propensity to thrombosis. Others, however, link it to bleeding tendency; there is no clear explanation for this, as it acts physiologically as an inhibitor, and deficiency would logically have led to a predisposition for thrombosis.
Genetics
It is 62
kDa large and 396
amino acids long. The
PROZ gene has been linked to the thirteenth
chromosome (13q34).
It has four domains: a gla-rich region, two EGF-like domains and a trypsin-like domain. It lacks the serine residue that would make it catalytically active as a serine protease.
History
Protein Z was first isolated in
cattle blood by Prowse and Esnouf in 1977, and Broze & Miletich determined it in human plasma in 1984.
References
External links