| Literature DB >> 28729433 |
Yuichi Kamikubo1,2, G Loredana Mendolicchio3, Antonella Zampolli1,2, Patrizia Marchese1,2, Andrea S Rothmeier4, Jennifer Nagrampa Orje1,2, Andrew J Gale1, Sriram Krishnaswamy5, András Gruber6, Henrik Østergaard7, Lars C Petersen7, Wolfram Ruf4,8, Zaverio M Ruggeri1,2.
Abstract
Safe and effective antithrombotic therapy requires understanding of mechanisms that contribute to pathological thrombosis but have a lesser impact on hemostasis. We found that the extrinsic tissue factor (TF) coagulation initiation complex can selectively activate the antihemophilic cofactor, FVIII, triggering the hemostatic intrinsic coagulation pathway independently of thrombin feedback loops. In a mouse model with a relatively mild thrombogenic lesion, TF-dependent FVIII activation sets the threshold for thrombus formation through contact phase-generated FIXa. In vitro, FXa stably associated with TF-FVIIa activates FVIII, but not FV. Moreover, nascent FXa product of TF-FVIIa can transiently escape the slow kinetics of Kunitz-type inhibition by TF pathway inhibitor and preferentially activates FVIII over FV. Thus, TF synergistically primes FIXa-dependent thrombin generation independently of cofactor activation by thrombin. Accordingly, FVIIa mutants deficient in direct TF-dependent thrombin generation, but preserving FVIIIa generation by nascent FXa, can support intrinsic pathway coagulation. In ex vivo flowing blood, a TF-FVIIa mutant complex with impaired free FXa generation but activating both FVIII and FIX supports efficient FVIII-dependent thrombus formation. Thus, a previously unrecognized TF-initiated pathway directly yielding FVIIIa-FIXa intrinsic tenase complex may be prohemostatic before further coagulation amplification by thrombin-dependent feedback loops enhances the risk of thrombosis.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28729433 PMCID: PMC5630012 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2017-02-767079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113