The Hageman Factor System: Mechanism of Contact Activation

Author(s):  
John H. Griffin ◽  
Susan D. Revak ◽  
Charles G. Cochrane
Blood ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 724-735 ◽  
Author(s):  
SANDRA SCHIFFMAN ◽  
SAMUEL I. RAPAPORT ◽  
MARY JANE PATCH

Abstract 1. Plasma clotting factors separate into two groups on starch block electrophoresis. The contact activation factors—Hageman factor, PTA, and activated PTA—remain around the origin, whereas the vitamin K-dependent factors— prothrombin, proconvertin, Stuart factor, and PTC—migrate between the α-globulins and albumin. AHG, proaccelerin, and thrombin are not recovered. 2. The electrophoretic pattern of serum differs from that of plasma mainly in the absence of prothrombin and in the presence of activated PTC (PTC’). 3. The electrophoretic mobility of PTC’ is found to differ from that of native PTC. This difference may be exploited to separate PTC’ from its native form and from Stuart factor.


1978 ◽  
Vol 147 (3) ◽  
pp. 719-729 ◽  
Author(s):  
S D Revak ◽  
C G Cochrane ◽  
B N Bouma ◽  
J H Griffin

The ability of the two forms of activated Hageman factor (HFa) produced during contact activation of plasma to activate prekallikrein and factor XI was studied. alpha-HFa, defined as an 80,000 mol wt two-chain enzyme which remains bound to the surface was capable of cleaving surface-bound prekallikrein and factor XI. beta-HFa, a 28,000 mol wt single chain molecule, released from the surface during contact activation was able to cleave prekallikrein but showed no activity on factor XI. Cleavage of prekallikrein by beta-HFa occurred irrespective of whether the substrate was surface-bound or in solution. Cleavage of factor XI occurred only when it was surface bound and only the alpha-form of HFa was capable of this proteolytic action. Factor XI was found to remain bound to the surface while prekallikrein and kallikrein rapidly dissociated from the surface into the supernate. These findings suggest that the initiation of intrinsic coagulation through the activation factor XI is a localized event occurring at the site of contact activation and is the result of the action of alpha-HFa. By contrast, kinin generation and fibrinolysis resulting from the formation of kallikrein can be initiated either at the site of contact activation, by alpha-HFa action, or throughout the plasma, by beta-HFa; further dissemination of these activities is assured by the rapid dissociation of kallikrein itself from the surface.


Blood ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 1263-1268 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Saito ◽  
T Ishihara ◽  
H Suzuki ◽  
T Watanabe

Abstract A murine hybridoma cell line that produces a monoclonal antibody to human Hageman factor (HF, factor XII) is described. The antibody (P 5–2– 1) consists of mouse IgG2b heavy chains and lambda light chains, selectively neutralizes HF procoagulant activity, and prevents the proteolytic cleavage of HF during contact activation in plasma. When HF is exposed to P 5–2–1 before the absorption of HF to kaolin, HF procoagulant activity is markedly inhibited. In contrast, P 5–2–1 does not interfere with HF activity after the adsorption of HF to kaolin. P 5–2–1 does not inactivate the prekallikrein–activating activity of 28,000–mol wt HF fragments (HFf). P 5–2–1 binds exclusively to the 40,000mol wt portion of a heavy chain of HF and inhibits the adsorption of HF to negatively charged surfaces. P 5–2–1 immobilized on Sepharose can be used to deplete HF from normal human plasma. This immunoaffinity-depleted plasma is indistinguishable from congenital HF- deficient plasma and can be used as the substrate for HF procoagulant activity assay.


1971 ◽  
Vol 133 (4) ◽  
pp. 696-712 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allen P. Kaplan ◽  
K. Frank Austen

Activation of a plasma fraction containing unactivated Hageman factor and prekallikrein followed by chromatography of this fraction on DEAE-cellulose revealed four peaks having bradykinin-generating activity. Peak 1 contained kallikrein; peaks 2–3, 4, and 5 each contained prekallikrein-activating activity. Elution of peaks 2–3, 4, and 5 from disc gels after electrophoresis at pH 9.3 revealed peaks of prekallikrein-activating activity located at 5–8, 11–12, 15–16, and 20–26 mm, each of which was associated with a peak of clot-promoting activity which specifically corrected Hageman factor deficiency. Conversion of peak 2 to peaks 3, 4, and 5 was associated with a progressive decrease in size, increase in net negative charge, increased prekallikrein-activating activity, and decreased ability to correct Hageman factor deficiency. Plasminogen and plasmin were found on a DEAE-cellulose chromatogram of serum overlapping peaks 2 and 3. Incubation of active Hageman factor with streptokinase-activated plasminogen resulted in enhanced ability of the mixture to activate prekallikrein. Assessment of the products of this reaction by disc gel electrophoresis demonstrated the formation of the prealbumin prekallikrein activator corresponding to the major prekallikrein activator generated by contact activation of human plasma. The conversion of plasminogen to plasmin and the subsequent cleavage of Hageman factor by plasmin to form activators of prekallikrein represents one pathway in which coagulation, fibrinolysis, and inflammation are linked.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
T. I. Borshchikova ◽  
N. N Yepifantseva ◽  
Yu. A. Churlyaev ◽  
N. V., Nikiforova ◽  
Ya. A. Zhukova ◽  
...  

1962 ◽  
Vol 07 (01) ◽  
pp. 048-069 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Jürgens

Summary1. Disintegration of thrombocytes through contact with wettable surfaces — precipitated in the glass rotator in the form of platelet agglomeration — demands the presence of the Hageman-factor, prothrombin and the fibrinogen on the surface of the thrombocytes.2. For the precipitation of platelet-agglomeration and -disintegration through contact with glass, activation of the complete preliminary phase of blood coagulation is not essential. The process also takes place in the absence of factors V, VIII, IX and X and possibly also without the influence of PTA.3. On the basis of the present results it can therefore be assumed that disintegration of the thrombocytes through wettable surfaces is brought about by activation of the Hageman-factor on wettable surfaces alone. The activated Hageman-factor probably reacts directly with prothrombin, which leads to sufficient activation of thrombin to cause an increase in adhesiveness and agglomeration of the thrombocytes.4. This especial thrombocyte disintegration sequence may proceed directly or indirectly. Calcium ions are not essential to either form. Herein lies the fundamental difference to the activation of factor IX through glass contact. Here the direct mechanism does not require calcium ions, whereas these are indispensable for indirect activation.5. For the activation of the intrinsic system of the plasma, PTA as an intermediary product is most probably indispensable, whereas this is not the case for the precipitation of platelet disintegration through glass contact.6. The reason why factor IX is not essential to the precipitation of platelet disintegration may be either that the process requires only traces of thrombin, or that disintegration of the platelets is induced already by intermediary products. The precipitation of this sequence through slightest traces of thrombin could be explained by the fact that the lack of antithrombin on the surface of the thrombocytes and the presence of platelet factors 2 and 4 exert a thrombin protecting and thrombin potentiating effect.The observation that platelet disintegration through contact activation with glass surfaces takes place even in the presence of heparin does not contradict the assumption that this process is brought about via thrombin. Although complete activation of the preliminary phase is prevented, the Hageman-principle is nevertheless activated through surface contact and the larger distance between activated surface and intact platelets is bridged over by the fact that the activated principle is not influenced through the heparin milieu. As soon as it reaches the platelet surface, it can, on account of the thrombin protecting effect, react directly with prothrombin.8. The results of our investigations suggest that, in extremely severe cases of hepatic cirrhosis, the case of the regularly observed disturbance in platelet function (agglomeration, adhesion, retraction of the thrombocytes and rotation thrombelastography) are due, or partly due, to a significant deficiency of the Hageman-factor.We wish to express our thanks to the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Bad Godesberg, for their support in our investigations.


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