| Literature DB >> 31068896 |
Nicole Ziliotto1,2, Francesco Bernardi1, Dejan Jakimovski2, Robert Zivadinov2,3.
Abstract
Significant progress has been made in understanding the complex interactions between the coagulation system and inflammation and autoimmunity. Increased blood-brain-barrier (BBB) permeability, a key event in the pathophysiology of multiple sclerosis (MS), leads to the irruption into the central nervous system of blood components that include virtually all coagulation/hemostasis factors. Besides their cytotoxic deposition and role as a possible trigger of the coagulation cascade, hemostasis components cause inflammatory response and immune activation, sustaining neurodegenerative events in MS. Early studies showing the contribution of altered hemostasis in the complex pathophysiology of MS have been strengthened by recent studies using methodologies that permitted deeper investigation. Fibrin(ogen), an abundant protein in plasma, has been identified as a key contributor to neuroinflammation. Perturbed fibrinolysis was found to be a hallmark of progressive MS with abundant cortical fibrin(ogen) deposition. The immune-modulatory function of the intrinsic coagulation pathway still remains to be elucidated in MS. New molecular details in key hemostasis components participating in MS pathophysiology, and particularly involved in inflammatory and immune responses, could favor the development of novel therapeutic targets to ameliorate the evolution of MS. This review article introduces essential information on coagulation factors, inhibitors, and the fibrinolytic pathway, and highlights key aspects of their involvement in the immune system and inflammatory response. It discusses how hemostasis components are (dys)regulated in MS, and summarizes histopathological post-mortem human brain evidence, as well as cerebrospinal fluid, plasma, and serum studies of hemostasis and fibrinolytic pathways in MS. Studies of disease-modifying treatments as potential modifiers of coagulation factor levels, and case reports of autoimmunity affecting hemostasis in MS are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: coagulation; coagulation inhibitors; extrinsic pathway; fibrinolytic pathway; intrinsic pathway; multiple sclerosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31068896 PMCID: PMC6491577 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Change in neurovascular interface is involved in inflammatory, immune and neurodegenerative responses in multiple sclerosis. Disruption or increased permeability of blood-brain barrier cause the leakage of hemostasis components into the brain parenchyma, which triggers the coagulation cascade. In turn, hemostasis components foster the inflammatory response and the immune activation, sustaining neurodegenerative events in MS. NAWM, normal-appearing white matter; ROS, reactive oxygen species.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the coagulation cascade and fibrinolytic pathway after blood-brain barrier damage. The coagulation cascade is activated (1) when the TF binds to its ligand, (activated) factor (F)VII, thus forming, together with membranes, a mature active binary complex (TF:FVIIa). The TF:FVIIa complex allows to cleave and activate on one side FIX and on another FX (2). TF:FVIIa:FXa is able to activate the cofactor FVIII (3) which forms a complex with the FIXa (FIXa:FVIIIa) providing a feedback loop for FX activation. The assembly FXa:FVa, converts prothrombin (FII) into thrombin (FIIa) (4). The initial amount of thrombin exerts its proteolytic action on FXI, FV, FVIII, and other substrates (5). Then the massive thrombin generation reaches a sufficient concentration to convert fibrinogen (FI) into fibrin monomers (6). The organized three-dimensional assembly of monomers in protofibrils and fibrin fibers produces the blood clot. Cross-linking stabilization of fibrin clot requires FXIII activated (FXIIIa) by thrombin activity. Coagulation complexes depend on lipids, exemplified by the platelet membrane. The dissolution of the fibrin fibers is mediated by the fibrinolytic system (7). Tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) converts plasminogen into plasmin which cleaves fibrin to soluble degradation products among those the D-dimers.
Figure 3The eclectic nature of Factor XII: the crossroad between coagulation, inflammation, and immunity. a, activated; BK, bradykinin; F, factor; HK, high molecular weight kininogen; KAL, kallikrein; PK, prekallikrein; uPAR, urokinase plasminogen activator receptor; Th17, T helper 17 lymphocytes.
Figure 4Schematic representation of vWF multimer size regulation by ADAMTS13. von Willebrand Factor (vWF) is stored in the Weibel-Palade bodies of endothelial cells or in the α-granules of platelets and it is released in an ultra-large form, a long multimeric string. The vWF serves as an adhesion surface to which platelets adhere and aggregate, and form a plug. The regulation of platelets adhesion depends upon cleavage of vWF in different size of multimeric string by ADAMTS13.
Histopathological evidence of hemostasis components in multiple sclerosis.
| FXII | Deposition nearby dendritic cells positive for uPAR. | ( |
| Fibrinogen | Presence within demyelinated centers (23 acute MS plaques). | ( |
| Detected in 19 inactive plaques, co-localize with astrocytes (32 inactive plaques). | ( | |
| Perivascular detection in type I, II and V lesions. Leakage within central plaques parenchyma (immunohistochemistry on 155 MS lesions from 13 early cases of MS). | ( | |
| Extravascular staining with perivascular distribution in association with microglial activation (active MS lesions analyzed by confocal microscopy). | ( | |
| Perivascular distribution of leakage and differential degree of deposition in WM. Co-localization with astrocytes. Correlation with the grade of tight junctions' abnormality (2,198 MS and 1,062 control vessels analyzed by confocal microscopy). | ( | |
| Leakage both in active and chronic lesions; reactivity also in NAWM and in WM. Co-localization with astrocytes and neuronal process (postmortem MRI on MS lesions). | ( | |
| Extravasation close to the blood vessels only in chronic active lesions (4 chronic active lesions and 5 chronic inactive lesions from 4 MS brains). | ( | |
| Fibrin(ogen) | Extracellular deposition predominantly located in layers 5 and 6 of the cortex in MS. Intracellular deposition detected in neurons and astrocytes (immunohistochemistry on the cortex of 47 progressive MS and 10 controls). | ( |
| Fibrin | Staining overlap with macrophages and axons, and extended into NAWM (32 inactive plaques). | ( |
| Deposition in areas of activated microglia (immunohistochemistry on 155 MS lesions from 13 early cases of MS). | ( | |
| Deposition occurs in pre-demyelinating areas of activated microglia. | ( | |
| Protein C inhibitor | Detected in chronic active plaques (Mass spectrometry MS plaques). | ( |
| C1INH | Detected in MS plaques. | ( |
C1INH, C1 inhibitor; F, factor; NAWM, normal-appearing white matter; MS, multiple sclerosis; uPAR, urokinase plasminogen activator receptor; WM, white matter.
Histopathological evidence of fibrinolytic pathway components in multiple sclerosis.
| Fibrinolysis | Higher fibrinolytic activity in plaques than adjacent NAWM. | ( |
| tPA | Staining for infiltrated mononuclear cells in MS lesions and WM. Strong positivity of foamy macrophages in areas of demyelination and decline in chronic lesions. | ( |
| Co-localization with non-phosphorylated neurofilament and fibrin deposition in demyelinated axons. | ( | |
| Decreased tPA activity in acute MS lesions. Decreased fibrinolytic activity in demyelinating MS plaques due to tPA/PAI-1 complex. | ( | |
| tPA receptors | Localization on macrophages, astrocytes. Increased in MS lesions compared to NAWM. | ( |
| uPA, uPAR | Detected in acute MS lesions, expressed by mononuclear cells in perivascular cuffs and to macrophages in the lesion parenchyma. uPAR additionally detected in NAWM. | ( |
| D-dimers | Localization on foamy macrophages and demyelinating axons. | ( |
| PAI-1 | Detected in acute MS lesions, expressed by mononuclear cells in perivascular cuffs and to macrophages in the lesion parenchyma. | ( |
| Up-regulation in progressive MS cortex but without an efficient fibrin degradation (immunohistochemistry on the cortex of 47 progressive MS and 10 controls). | ( |
NAWM, normal-appearing white matter; MS, multiple sclerosis; PAI-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1; tPA, tissue-type plasminogen activator; uPAR, urokinase plasminogen activator receptor; WM, white matter.
CSF, plasma, and serum evidence of altered hemostasis components in multiple sclerosis.
| Fibrinogen | Lower levels in CIS vs. PMS (proteomic profile by mass spectrometer in 24 CIS, 16 RRMS, 11 PMS). | ( |
| TM | Higher levels in OIND vs. SPMS. Ninety percent of TM in CSF is related to intrathecal synthesis (17 relapse, 11 remission, 11 SPMS, 19 OND, 15 OIND). | ( |
| FII, FX, Fibrinogen, PC, FII, FX, FXI | Higher FII:c and FX:c in RRMS and SPMS vs. controls. No differences in activity of Fibrinogen, FXI and PC (PT in citrate plasma: 116 RRMS, 10 PPMS, 73 SPMS, 20 controls). | ( |
| FXII | Higher FXII:c in RRMS and SPMS vs. controls. Higher activity correlates with higher occurrence of relapses and shorter relapse-free period (aPPT in citrate plasma: 138 RRMS, 13 PPMS, 90 SPMS, 19 CIS, 130 controls). | ( |
| Increased of FXII protein concentration levels and reduced function in MS (aPTT and ELISA on citrate plasma: 12 RRMS, 34 SPMS, 28 PPMS, 49 controls). Intrinsic thrombin generation in 10 PMS, 10 controls. | ( | |
| FXII, ADAMTS13, HCII, TFPI, TM | Lower ADAMTS13 levels in MS vs. controls. Higher TFPI levels in PMS vs. RRMS and vs. controls. No differences in FXII and HCII (ELISA on plasma EDTA: 85 RRMS, 53 PMS, 42 controls). | ( |
| FII | Prothrombotic state in RRMS (thrombin generation on citrate plasma: 15 RRMS, 15 PPMS, 19 controls). | ( |
| Fibrinogen | No differences in fibrinogen levels, PT and aPTT times (42 RRMS and 31 controls). | ( |
| High levels, particularly associated with active lesions on MRI (17 out 58: 45 CIS, 12 RRMS, 1 PMS). | ( | |
| vWF, TM | Higher vWF activity in active MS. No differences in TM protein concentration (26 RRMS, 35 controls). | ( |
| AT | No differences in AT:c (37 RRMS, 32 SPMS, 34 controls). | ( |
| EPCR | Trend for higher levels in MS (63 MS, 20 controls). | ( |
| FX, Prothrombin, C1INH, FXIII, Plasminogen | Reduction of FX, prothrombin and C1INH levels in pre- and post-symptomatic MS serum. Reduction in FXIII and plasminogen in post-symptomatic MS (Mass spectrometry (pooled serum of 100 MS vs. pooled serum of 100 controls). | ( |
| TM | Higher levels in MS during exacerbation vs. remission state, OND, and controls (17 acute relapse, 9 PMS, 13 HAM, 10 non-HAM, 10 OND, 20 controls). | ( |
| Higher levels in OIND vs SPMS (17 relapse, 11 remission, 11 SPMS, 19 OND, 15 OIND). | ( | |
| TM, aPC | No differences (100 RRMS, 22 SPMS, 122 controls). | ( |
| vWF | No difference (9 RRMS, 9 SPMS, 10 PPMS). | ( |
ADAMTS13, A disintegrin-like and metalloprotease with thrombospondin type 1 motif 13; AT, antithrombin; aPC, activated protein C; aPTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; C1INH, C1 inhibitor; CIS, clinically isolated syndrome; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; :c, activity; EDTA, ethylenediamine-tetra-acetic acid; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; EPCR, endothelial protein C receptor; F, factor; FII, thrombin; HAM, HTLV-1-associated myelopathy; HCII, heparin cofactor II; OIND, other inflammatory neurological disorders; OND, other neurological diseases; PC, protein C; PMS, progressive multiple sclerosis; PPMS, Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis; PT, prothrombin time; RRMS, relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis; SPMS, secondary progressive multiple sclerosis; TFPI, tissue factor pathway inhibitor; TM, thrombomodulin; vWF, von Willebrand Factor.
CSF, plasma, and serum evidence of fibrinolytic pathway components in multiple sclerosis.
| PAI-1 | Higher levels in MS vs. controls. PAI-1 concentration has a reverse relationship of tPA:c (ELISA in CSF and plasma EDTA of 19 MS, OND, controls). | ( |
| Higher levels in MS vs. controls (ELISA on plasma EDTA: 85 RRMS, 53 PMS, 42 controls). | ( | |
| PAI-1, tPA | High levels of PAI-1 during relapses. No differences for tPA. No correlation between PAI-1 CSF and plasma levels (Plasma of 12 active RRMS, 12 stable RRMS, 10 controls). | ( |
| tPA | Higher activity in MS (CSF of 7 MS, 9 leukemia, 21 encephalitis, 20 controls) | ( |
| PAI-1, tPA, D-dimer | No differences (Plasma of 90 MS, 250 glioma patients 270 controls). | ( |
| D-dimer | Higher levels in MS (ELFA on plasma of 42 RRMS, 31 controls). | ( |
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; :c, activity; EDTA, ethylenediamine-tetra-acetic acid; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; ELFA, Enzyme Linked Fluorescent Assay; OND, other neurological disorders; PAI-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1; PMS, progressive multiple sclerosis; RRMS, relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis; tPA, tissue-type plasminogen activator.