Identification of two distinct heparin cofactors in human plasma: II. Inhibition of thrombin and activated factor X

1974 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 463-477 ◽  
Author(s):  
George F. Briginshaw ◽  
J.N. Shanberge
1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Friberger ◽  
C Lenne

A recently published method for Factor X (FX) assay (1) utilizing Russel's Viper Venom (RVV) and a chromogenic substrate has been further investigated by testing a large number of parameters. This method has been considered as a suitable method for monitoring coumarol treatment (Bergström et al).The conditions for the activation of FX by purified preparations of the RVV have been studied as well as the conditions for FXa determination with a new chromogenic substrate Bz-Ile-Glu(γ-piperidyl)-Gly-Arg-pNA (S-2337). Both purified factors and normal plasma have been used. The effect of plasma inhibitors as well as the selectivity of the method has been studied.The reproducibility and stability of the different reagents and standards have been studied and found to be good.The amount of FXa activity obtained from normal human plasma has been titrated with FXa inhibitors of known purity.1) Aurell L. et al, Thromb. Res., 11, 595 (1977)2) Bergström et al, Thromb. Res., 12, 531 (1978)


1979 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. T. Yin ◽  
W. J. Salsgiver ◽  
O. Tangen

Circumstantial evidence suggested that normal human plasma contained a substance regulating the neutralization of F.Xa by F.Xa inhibitor(XaI), (Yin et.al.,Adv.Exper. Med. & Biol., 52 : 239, 1975, Plenum Press, N.Y.).This plasma component has now been isolated and partially purified in our laboratory, and tentatively designated as “Anti-XaI”.In experiments employing purified components, when Anti-XaI was incubated at 37°C with F.Xa, Xal and heparin for two minutes at pH7.5, the amount of F.Xa inhibited was inversely proportional to the Anti-XaI concentration. But, when the F.Xa was replaced by thrombin in the incubation mixture, the neutralization of thrombin clotting activity was undisturbed.Anti-XaI was found to be neither PF3 nor PF4.These and other data strongly suggest that the “Antithrombin III pathway” is more complex than currently believed to be. In circulating blood an equilibrium state must exist between Anti-XaI and XaI.Under certain conditions when the Anti-XaI activity is predominant the rate of F.Xa neutralization bv XaI then becomes slower than the activation of prothrombin to thrombin by F.Xa.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 2242-2242
Author(s):  
Yang Buyue ◽  
John P. Sheehan

Abstract Abstract 2242 The relevance of factor IXa as a therapeutic target for heparin therapy remains incompletely defined. To evaluate the contribution of factor IXa inhibition, particularly serpin-independent inhibition of the intrinsic tenase complex (factor IXa-factor VIIIa), the ability of heparin preparations to inhibit tissue factor (TF)-triggered thrombin generation was examined in human plasma. Thrombin generation was determined by a fluorogenic substrate assay employing Technothrombin TGA evaluation software to determine lag time, time to thrombin peak, peak thrombin concentration, and velocity index (slope). The inhibitory potency (EC50) of each heparin was determined by plotting concentration versus relative velocity index (ratio of the velocity index in presence and absence of heparin). Inhibition of thrombin generation was initially compared under factor IX-dependent (limiting TF) and independent (excess TF) conditions, respectively, by addition of either 0.2 or 4 pM TF to pooled normal human plasma containing increasing concentrations of low molecular weight heparin (LMWH), super-sulfated LMWH (ssLMWH), Fondaparinux, or unfractionated heparin (UFH). UFH and Fondaparinux demonstrated complete or near complete inhibition with identical EC50 values at both tissue factor concentrations, suggesting that inhibition of intrinsic tenase activity does not significantly contribute to their mechanism of action in plasma. In contrast, LMWH and ssLMWH demonstrated 2.9- and 5.1-fold lower EC50 values, respectively, in the presence of the limiting TF concentration. These results suggest that inhibition of intrinsic tenase activity contributes to the mechanism of action for LMWH in plasma. The effect of heparins on the time course of plasma thrombin generation by Western blotting under similar conditions correlated well with results of the fluorogenic substrate assay. At their EC50 values, LMWH, ssLMWH and Fondaparinux clearly reduced prothrombin/meizothrombin consumption in plasma, while UFH primarily accelerated formation of the thrombin-antithrombin complex. The contribution of antithrombin to inhibition of thrombin generation was determined by comparison of antithrombin- and mock-depleted human plasmas. As expected, antithrombin depletion markedly increased the EC50 values for UFH (62–fold) and Fondaparinux (42-fold) to levels that are ∼3–8 fold higher than their expected therapeutic ranges, confirming an antithrombin-dependent mechanism of action. In contrast, antithrombin depletion increased the EC50 values more modestly for LMWH (9.4-fold) and ssLMWH (2-fold), with the EC50 for LMWH (∼ 0.7 U/ml) remaining within the therapeutic range. In the absence of antithrombin, LMWH demonstrated partial inhibition of plasma thrombin generation with a plateau representing ∼8–10% of the starting activity, remarkably similar to the inhibition of intrinsic tenase activity with purified components. The molecular target for LMWH and ssLMWH was evaluated in dual factor IX/antithrombin-depleted plasma supplemented with 90 nM recombinant factor IX possessing mutations in the heparin-binding exosite. Based on both relative EC50 values for reduction in the velocity index and the maximal degree of inhibition, plasma supplemented with mutant factor IX demonstrated relative resistance to inhibition of thrombin generation by LMWH as follows: R233A > (K126A/R165A/K132A) > R170A > WT. Factor IX R233A demonstrated an 11.4-fold increase in the EC50 for LMWH relative to the wild type protease. The magnitude of differences between mutant factor IX proteins was reduced for ssLMWH relative to LMWH, but the rank order was similar. The effect of these mutations in human plasma recapitulates their effects on in vitro inhibition of intrinsic tenase activity, confirming the factor IXa heparin-binding exosite as the molecular target for antithrombin-independent inhibition of thrombin generation by LMWH and ssLMWH. The ability of therapeutic concentrations of LMWH to directly target factor IXa in antithrombin-depleted plasma suggests that this mechanism may contribute to antithrombotic effects. Furthermore, chemo-enzymatic synthesis of “non-anticoagulant” LMWH preparations acting via this exosite-mediated antithrombotic mechanism may offer advantages in high-risk populations, particularly patients with underlying malignancy. Disclosures: Buyue: Biogen Idec Hemophilia: Employment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (24) ◽  
pp. 13486
Author(s):  
Bianca op den Brouw ◽  
Francisco C. P. Coimbra ◽  
Nicholas R. Casewell ◽  
Syed Abid Ali ◽  
Freek J. Vonk ◽  
...  

The snake genus Daboia (Viperidae: Viperinae; Oppel, 1811) contains five species: D. deserti, D. mauritanica, and D. palaestinae, found in Afro-Arabia, and the Russell’s vipers D. russelii and D. siamensis, found in Asia. Russell’s vipers are responsible for a major proportion of the medically important snakebites that occur in the regions they inhabit, and their venoms are notorious for their coagulopathic effects. While widely documented, the extent of venom variation within the Russell’s vipers is poorly characterised, as is the venom activity of other species within the genus. In this study we investigated variation in the haemotoxic activity of Daboia using twelve venoms from all five species, including multiple variants of D. russelii, D. siamensis, and D. palaestinae. We tested the venoms on human plasma using thromboelastography, dose-response coagulometry analyses, and calibrated automated thrombography, and on human fibrinogen by thromboelastography and fibrinogen gels. We assessed activation of blood factors X and prothrombin by the venoms using fluorometry. Variation in venom activity was evident in all experiments. The Asian species D. russelii and D. siamensis and the African species D. mauritanica possessed procoagulant venom, while D. deserti and D. palaestinae were net-anticoagulant. Of the Russell’s vipers, the venom of D. siamensis from Myanmar was most toxic and D. russelli of Sri Lanka the least. Activation of both factor X and prothrombin was evident by all venoms, though at differential levels. Fibrinogenolytic activity varied extensively throughout the genus and followed no phylogenetic trends. This venom variability underpins one of the many challenges facing treatment of Daboia snakebite envenoming. Comprehensive analyses of available antivenoms in neutralising these variable venom activities are therefore of utmost importance.


1976 ◽  
Vol 35 (02) ◽  
pp. 314-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.W.E Denson

SummaryThe clotting of C. V. Helleri plasma is not accelerated by the factor X activator or throm-bin-like enzymes from its own venom. Clotting of the plasma is accelerated by the factor X activator from Russell’s viper venom, but not by the thrombin-like enzyme from Agkistrodon Rhodostoma venom (“Arvin”).The prothrombin activator from the Taipan venom clots C. V. Helleri plasma equally well as human plasma, but the thrombin which is produced has a marked specificity for its own fibrinogen, and clots bovine fibrinogen more slowly.C. V. Helleri plasma contains an inhibitor which progressively inactivates bovine factor Xa and thrombin, but the inhibitor is not potentiated by heparin. The slow, protracted clotting of the snake plasma either alone or when mixed with human plasma or bovine fibrinogen suggests that this inhibitor may interfere with the polymerisation of fibrin monomer.


1962 ◽  
Vol 08 (02) ◽  
pp. 286-296
Author(s):  
P Fantl ◽  
E. C Osborn

Summary1. A mixture of human serum or plasma and bovine plasma free of factors VII and X gave, with human brain extract, identical clotting times.2. An assay of factor VII in materials low in prothrombin using human plasma euglobulin was devised.3. Factor VII isolated from human plasma or serum gave similar activity with human brain extract.4. From a preparation containing factors VII and X which was added to human brain extract in the average 31% factor VII and 25% factor X was recovered. This was not dependent on the activity of factors VII and X in the original preparation. This indicates that factors VII and X are in equilibrium with tissue thromboplastin.5. Factors VII and X are not species specific but a higher concentration of these factors is required for prothrombin conversion in a heterologous reaction mixture.6. Factor VII activity is identical in silicone-coated or uncoated glass surfaces.


1975 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.-O. Andersson ◽  
H. Sandberg

Lipoprotein fractions from human plasma was prepared by ultracentrifugal flotation. Additions of those fractions to plasma containing various amounts of platelets showed that in platelet-poor and platelet-free plasma there was a clear clot-promoting effect of the additions. In platelet-rich plasma, this effect was negligible. Measurements on the thrombo-plastine and Stypven clotting times showed that the high density lipoprotein fraction affected both the prothrombin and the Factor X activation steps whereas the low density lipoproteins only influenced the prothrombin activation step. Addition of antibodies against high density lipoproteins to platelet-free plasma caused a prolongation of the thromboplastin time.The relation between lipoprotein structure, phospholipid content and thromboplastic effects is dicussed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 24 (10) ◽  
pp. 1640-1648 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guillaume Chevreux ◽  
Nolwenn Tilly ◽  
Valegh Faid ◽  
Nicolas Bihoreau

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