Engineering Ultrapotent Trivalent Anticoagulants Through Hybridisation of Salivary Peptides from Multiple Haematophagous Organisms

Abstract

Haematophagous organisms are a rich source of salivary anticoagulant polypeptides that exert their activity by blocking the catalytic site and one of two positively charged exosites on the host protease thrombin. Here, we describe a molecular engineering approach to hybridise post-translationally sulfated polypeptides from different blood-feeding organisms to enhance anticoagulant activity. This led to the discovery of a triply sulfated hybrid anticoagulant, XChimera, possessing fragments from flea, leech, and fly salivary polypeptides that exhibits femtomolar inhibitory activity against thrombin. The crystallographic structure of a complex of XChimera with thrombin shows that it displays a trivalent binding mode in which it simultaneously blocks three functional sites of the protease, the active site and exosites I and II. This trivalent chimera exhibited ultrapotent anticoagulant activity in a suite of in vitro clotting assays and was also shown to possess potent in vivo antithrombotic activity in a murine model of thrombosis.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
26 Jun 2025
Accepted
29 Aug 2025
First published
01 Sep 2025
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Engineering Ultrapotent Trivalent Anticoagulants Through Hybridisation of Salivary Peptides from Multiple Haematophagous Organisms

J. W. C. Maxwell, J. Ripoll-Rozada, A. S. Mackay, I. Alwis, D. J. Ford, C. B. J. Trought, J. A. Santos, R. E. Smythe, J. S.T. Liu, Z. Zuccolotto, S. M. Schoenwaelder, S. P. Jackson, P. J. B. Pereira and R. J. Payne, Chem. Sci., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5SC04734J

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