scholarly journals The Effect of Trace Amounts of Tissue Factor on Thrombin Generation in Platelet Rich Plasma, its Inhibition by Heparin

1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (01) ◽  
pp. 025-029 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Béguin ◽  
T Lindhout ◽  
H C Hemker

SummaryAmounts of human brain thromboplastin that do not stimulate thrombin generation in platelet poor plasma, were shown to advance by about 4 min an explosive formation of thrombin that occurs after recalcification in the presence of blood platelets. This synergistic effect is inhibited by the specific thrombin inhibitor hirudin and mimicked by adding low concentrations (< 5 nM) of thrombin to platelet rich plasma. It is our conclusion that, small amounts of thrombin, generated under the influence of thromboplastin induced procoagulant activity in the blood platelets. This activity is most likely mainly due to procoagulant phospholipids. Heparin inhibits this effect and retards the explosive thrombin formation. It does not, however, diminish the peak amount of thrombin eventually formed, because heparin neutralizing material released from the activated platelets quenches the heparin effect.

2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (06) ◽  
pp. 1060-1065 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irene Keularts ◽  
Ariella Zivelin ◽  
Uri Seligsohn ◽  
H. Coenraad Hemker ◽  
Suzette Béguin

SummaryThrombin generation has been studied in the plasma of severely factor XI deficient patients under conditions in which contact activation did not play a role. In platelet-rich as well as platelet-poor plasma, thrombin generation was dependent upon the presence of factor XI at tissue factor concentrations of between 1 and 20 pg/ml i.e. ~ 0.01 to 0.20% of the concentration normally present in the thromboplastin time determination. The requirement for factor XI is low; significant thrombin generation was seen at 1% factor XI; at 10%, thrombin formation was nearly normalised. A suspension of normal platelets in severely factor XI deficient plasma did not increase thrombin generation. This implies that there is no significant factor XI activity carried by normal platelets, although the presence of factor XI and factor XI inhibitors in platelets cannot be ruled out.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1141-1141
Author(s):  
Saartje Bloemen ◽  
Bas De Laat ◽  
H. Coenraad Hemker ◽  
Raed Al Dieri

Abstract Introduction Thrombin generation testing is becoming an increasingly important tool to measure the variables of the clotting system. Under normal conditions the curve is bell-shaped, yet after addition of direct, reversible factor Xa (FXa) inhibitors, the shape of the curve changes. Direct FXa inhibitors cause a strong inhibition (in vitro and ex vivo) on the peak, whereas the ETP is affected to a smaller extent, due to a protraction of the thrombin generation process. This leads to a long plateau or a ‘double peak’. Aim To investigate the mechanism behind the protraction of the thrombin generation curve. Materials & Methods Thrombin generation (TG) was determined by using Calibrated Automated Thrombinography (CAT) in platelet poor plasma (PPP), platelet rich plasma and whole blood. The effect of direct FXa inhibitors was investigated with both a parenteral (otamixaban) and an oral agent (rivaroxaban). The two inhibitors were tested at different concentrations, including the plasma concentrations that would be found after therapeutic dosing (otamixaban: 100, 250 and 400 nM and rivaroxaban: 200, 400 and 800 nM). Thrombin generation was performed in control plasma, factor VII (FVII), FVIII, FIX, FXI and TFPI (tissue factor pathway inhibitor) deficient plasmas, activated with tissue factor (TF), FIXa or kaolin. Results Thrombin generation curves in PPP in the presence of direct FXa inhibitors display a protracted shape with a strong inhibition of the peak. When the intrinsic pathway is bypassed (e.g. in FVIII or FIX deficient plasma), the first part of the peak is no longer present. When the extrinsic pathway is evaded (e.g. by activating with FIXa), the second part of the peak disappears. This leads us to believe that when a direct FXa inhibitor is present, the first part of thrombin generation is due to the intrinsic tenase complex and the second part can be attributed to the extrinsic tenase (prothrombinase). When TFPI deficient plasma is activated with TF, the curve returns to its normal bell-shape. So, TFPI is an important contributor to the second peak. When TG was activated with kaolin, we could not distinguish an effect. In platelet rich plasma and whole blood, a stronger effect on peak height than on ETP is found, however the distinct shape that can be discerned in platelet poor plasma is not seen. Conclusions Addition of direct FXa inhibitors to PPP results in a protracted TG curve, which could also be described as a double peak. The first peak can be attributed to the actions of the intrinsic pathway (FVIII and FIX), the second part of the peak is due to mechanisms in the extrinsic pathway. The protraction of the peak can also be restored by activating TFPI deficient plasma with TF, so this also contributes to the effect of the extrinsic pathway. The inhibition of the negative feedback on the TF-FVIIa complex by the TFPI-FXa complex will prevent the shutting off of the extrinsic pathway. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (05) ◽  
pp. 713-721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachana Kumar ◽  
Suzette Béguin ◽  
H Coenraad Hemker

SummaryIn plasma the bulk of thrombin generation takes place after a clot has formed. We therefore investigated in what way the clot influences thrombin generation in plasma. The forming clot withdraws thrombin from free solution. Consequently less thrombin activity is found and less thrombin-inhibitor complexes are formed. The thrombin that is adsorbed to the clot reduces the lag time before thrombin generation in intrinsically or extrinsically triggered platelet poor plasma as well as in platelet rich plasma. We investigated the mechanism of this activation.Clots were obtained by recalcification of plasma or by the addition of thrombin-like enzymes (Reptilase, Agihal) from snake venoms. They were thoroughly washed until the washing fluid was devoid of any detectable clotting enzyme activity. In platelet poor plasma (PPP), thrombin-induced clots shorten the factor Va-dependent lag-time of thrombin generation in the extrinsic system as well as the factor VUIa-dependent thrombin generation in the intrinsic system. Factor V or factor VII preparations that in itself hardly influence thrombin generation patterns aquire the capacity to shorten these lag-times when incubated with clot. The last washing fluid of the clot is inactive. Snake venom induced clots are not active either. Clots that are incubated in heparinised plasma for 1 h or more are as active as clots from normal plasma are. A role of factor Xa can not be excluded but must be minor because a clot made by addition of thrombin to plasma from which the factors II, VII, IX and X have been removed is as active as a clot from normal plasma is.When added to recalcified platelet rich plasma (PRP), in which the lag-time of thrombin formation is dependent upon activation of platelet procoagulant phospholipid activity, any type of clot shortens the lagtime before the burst of thrombin generation. Clots that are obtained by snake venom enzymes are also active in this system. This indicates that fibrin alone is capable to induce the procoagulant phospholipid activity in platelets.We conclude that three known thrombin-dependent feedback activations in the clotting system (factor V, factor VIII and platelets) are efficiently supported by thrombin bound to the fibrin clot and that there is an additional activating effect of fibrin on the procoagulant action of platelets.


1974 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 325-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjorie B. Zucker ◽  
Walter Troll ◽  
Sidney Belman

The phorbol ester 12-0-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate, a potent tumor-promoting agent, caused irreversible platelet aggregation when more than 0.02 µM was stirred with human citrated or heparinized platelet-rich plasma (PRP). With washed platelets, 1 nM was effective. The alcohol phorbol, which has little tumor-promoting activity, failed to cause platelet aggregation. With all but low concentrations of phorbol ester, aggregation was succeeded by a rapid phase. The latter was prevented or reduced by enzymes which destroy ADP and by aspirin, was associated with a change in platelet shape, and was presumably due to released ADP. At higher concentrations, only a rapid phase was seen, and these inhibitors were not effective. Low concentrations did not aggregate platelets in PRP containing sufficient EDTA or EGTA to chelate ionized calcium or in PRP from thrombasthenic patients; higher concentrations caused slight aggregation. Both the primary, non-ADP-dependent aggregation and the rapid ADP-dependent aggregation were markedly inhibited by substances which increase cyclic AMP, metabolic inhibitors, and the sulfhydryl inhibitor N-ethylmaleimide. Phorbol ester reduced platelet cyclic AMP only when it had been previously elevated by prostaglandin E1. 1 µM did not release ß-glucuronidase, lactic dehydrogenase, or inflammatory material from platelets in 4–5 min despite marked aggregation, but liberated all three in 30 min. The possibility is discussed that low phorbol ester concentrations cause primary aggregation by a direct action on platelet actomyosin.


2016 ◽  
Vol 36 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy P Wood ◽  
Lisa M Baumann Kreuziger ◽  
Susan A Maroney ◽  
Rodney M Camire ◽  
Alan E Mast

Factor V (FV) assembles with factor Xa (FXa) into prothrombinase, the enzymatic complex that converts prothrombin to thrombin. Tissue factor pathway inhibitor α (TFPIα) inhibits prothrombinase by high affinity interactions with FXa-activated FV and the FXa active site, thereby blocking the initiation of coagulation. FV Leiden (FVL) is strongly linked to venous thrombosis through its resistance to degradation by activated protein C (aPC), which enhances the propagation of coagulation. FVL combined with a 50% reduction in TFPI causes severe thrombosis and perinatal lethality in mice, suggesting that FVL also promotes the initiation of coagulation. To examine this possibility, thrombin generation assays initiated with limiting FXa were performed with control or FVL plasma and platelet-rich plasma (PRP). The activation threshold for thrombin generation was 10 to 20 pM FXa in 10 control plasmas, but was 5 pM in 4 of 10 homozygous FVL plasmas. FVL PRP had a similar decrease in the activation threshold. The differences in activation threshold were totally normalized by an anti-TFPI antibody, while exogenous TFPIα and a FV-binding peptide that mimics TFPIα had reduced anticoagulant activity in FVL plasma, revealing that the procoagulant effects of FVL in these assays rely on TFPIα. Next, FVL plasmas were studied in fibrin clot formation assays, as they are sensitive to small amounts of thrombin. In reactions activated with 0.5 pM FXa, 1 of 8 control plasmas, compared to 7 of 8 homozygous FVL plasmas, clotted within 60 minutes, with differences again normalized by the anti-TFPI antibody. In prothrombinase activity assays using purified proteins, TFPIα was a 1.7-fold weaker inhibitor of prothrombinase assembled with FVL compared to FV. Thus, in addition to its aPC-mediated effect on the propagation of coagulation, FVL is resistant to TFPIα inhibition, exerting a procoagulant effect on coagulation initiation. This is evident in responses to small stimuli, where TFPIα blocks clotting in plasmas with FV but not FVL. The TFPIα-mediated modulation of the procoagulant threshold may explain the severe perinatal thrombosis in FVL mice with decreased TFPI and be clinically relevant in the clotting associated with oral contraceptives, which cause acquired TFPI deficiency.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 1462-1462
Author(s):  
Viktoria Kaufmann ◽  
Jutta Mager ◽  
Sabine Eichinger ◽  
Bernd R. Binder

Abstract We have recently shown that a thrombin generation assay using low concentrations of phospholipids (3,2 mM; 20% PS) can discriminate patients with an increased risk for recurrent venous thromboembolism after cessation of anticoagulant therapy from those with a lower risk (Hron et al JAMA 2006). Patients with peak thrombin of ≥400nM had a ~3-fold higher relative risk of recurrence than those with peak thrombin <400nM. This difference was not explained by a larger proportion of patients with clotting factor abnormalities among those with high peak thrombin. We therefore investigated which other factors might influence peak thrombin generation. For this purpose 35 healthy male plasma donors were analyzed. Thrombin generation was measured in standard platelet poor plasma and in plasma made microparticle (MP) free by centrifugation for 120 minutes at 35,250 x g using low (3,2μM) and high (32μM ) phospholipids concentrations at the same tissue factor concentration (71,6 pM). For control purposes, peak thrombin was measured under similar conditions in 12 individuals each having either heterozygous FVLeiden mutation, being on vitamin K-antagonist therapy (VKA; mean INR=3.2) or having a lupus anticoagulant. In healthy plasma donors peak thrombin as generated by tissue factor and low phospholipids (RCL) in platelet poor plasma was 110±40 nM and increased to 306±99 nM in the presence of high phospholipids (RCH). When MP free plasma was used, however, peak thrombin dropped to 23±13 nM (RCL) and 109±43 nM thrombin (RCH), respectively. When MPs were re-added to MP-free plasma samples, a dose dependent increase in peak thrombin was found both for RCL and RCH reagents. At a MP concentration of 25,000 added per 1 ml MP free plasma, peak thrombin was 381±24 nM for RCL and 399±63 nM for RCH. The effects of MPs on peak thrombin using RCL were much more pronounced than the differences in peak thrombin seen between plasmas from individuals with FVLeiden, during anticoagulant therapy or with lupus anticoagulant as compared to controls (FVLeiden : 161±50 nM; VKA: 50±12 nM; lupus: 37±23 nM; controls: 110±40 nM). These results indicate that MPs contained in platelet poor plasma are a major determinant of peak thrombin in thrombin generation assays when low phospholipids are used and might cause increased peak thrombin levels found in patients with recurrent venous thromboembolism.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2212-2212
Author(s):  
Ivan Stevic ◽  
Howard H.W. Chan ◽  
Ankush Chander ◽  
Leslie R. Berry ◽  
Anthony K.C. Chan

Abstract Abstract 2212 Introduction: Factor Xa is protected within the prothrombinase complex from inhibition by heparin. We have developed a covalent antithrombin-heparin complex (ATH) with enhanced anticoagulant activity. Previously, we have shown that ATH is able to inhibit coagulation enzymes much more efficiently than regular antithrombin+heparin (AT+UFH). For example, ATH inhibited TF/VIIa ∼30-fold faster compared to AT+UFH. Furthermore, we have also demonstrated that ATH is capable of inhibiting Xa within a prothrombinase complex assembled on synthetic phospholipid vesicles better than AT+UFH. However, ATH's effect on prothrombinase when the complex is formed on a more native system such as platelets has never been explored. Thus, the objective of the present study is to determine the ability of ATH vs AT+UFH to inhibit Xa within the prothrombinase complex when the enzyme complex is assembled on the platelet system. Methods: Discontinuous second order rate constant assays were performed to obtain k2-values for inhibition of free or prothrombinase-bound Xa by AT+UFH or ATH. Freshly prepared resting platelets were subjected to inhibition analysis by first incubating them with Xa, Va, Ca2+ and pefabloc®-TH (thrombin inhibitor) in different wells of a 96-well plate for 3 min at 37 °C. Prothrombin was then simultaneously added to all wells to initiate thrombin generation, followed by addition of AT+UFH or ATH inhibitors to each well at specific time intervals. Reactions were neutralized by simultaneous addition of polybrene, Na2EDTA and Xa-specific substrate S-2222™ in buffer. The remaining Xa enzyme activity was obtained and final k2-values calculated. For experiments requiring activated platelets, freshly isolated platelets were activated with 5 μM calcium ionophore A23187 + 4 mM CaCl2 for 15 min at room temperature. The activated platelets were then tested in inhibition assays as described above. To investigate the roles of individual components of the prothrombinase complex on the anticoagulant effects of AT+UFH and ATH, additional experiments were performed where components of the complex (prothrombin, activated platelets or Va) were omitted prior to reaction with inhibitors. Thrombin generation was used to assess functionality of the activated platelet-prothrombinase system in the presence of inhibitors using a thrombin-specific substrate S-2238™. Results: The k2-values (×108M−1min−1) for inhibition of free Xa or resting platelet-prothrombinase were similar for both inhibitors, although the overall inhibition rates achieved by the ATH were 2-fold faster than AT+UFH (p<0.001). Since activated platelets are required for enhanced prothrombinase function, we then compared inhibition of free vs activated platelet-prothrombinase by the two inhibitors (platelet activation was confirmed with flow cytometry using an anti CD-41 antibody). No differences were observed in the k2-values between free Xa (3.96±0.23) and activated platelet prothrombinase (3.83±0.39) for ATH reactions. However, the k2-values for inhibition of free Xa by AT+UFH was 2.37±0.32, and assembly of Xa within the activated platelet-prothrombinase resulted in a reduction in the k2-values to 0.99±0.22 (p<0.001), thus confirming a moderate 60% protection of Xa by the prothrombinase components. However, omitting the components (prothrombin, activated platelets or Va) from the complex resulted in higher k2-values (1.76±0.37, 2.29±0.26 and 2.52±0.32, respectively p<0.01) for AT+UFH, and as expected, no net effect was observed for ATH. Thrombin generation was inhibited significantly by both AT+UFH and ATH compared to the control (p<0.001), but further analysis of thrombin potential yielded greater inhibition by ATH compared to AT+UFH (p<0.05). Conclusion: In this study, we report inhibition of the prothrombinase complex on the surface of resting and activated platelets. Consistent with previous investigations, a moderate protection of Xa was observed when the activated platelet-prothrombinase was inhibited by AT+UFH. ATH on the other hand, targets and inhibits prothrombinase complexed-Xa as fast as free Xa, and at inhibition rates that were significantly faster than AT+UFH. Thus, overall the covalent conjugate enhances anticoagulation of surface-bound enzymes and offers advantages over conventional heparin for the treatment of cell-based coagulation in vivo. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (2) ◽  
pp. 452-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitri V. Kravtsov ◽  
Anton Matafonov ◽  
Erik I. Tucker ◽  
Mao-fu Sun ◽  
Peter N. Walsh ◽  
...  

Abstract During surface-initiated blood coagulation in vitro, activated factor XII (fXIIa) converts factor XI (fXI) to fXIa. Whereas fXI deficiency is associated with a hemorrhagic disorder, factor XII deficiency is not, suggesting that fXI can be activated by other mechanisms in vivo. Thrombin activates fXI, and several studies suggest that fXI promotes coagulation independent of fXII. However, a recent study failed to find evidence for fXII-independent activation of fXI in plasma. Using plasma in which fXII is either inhibited or absent, we show that fXI contributes to plasma thrombin generation when coagulation is initiated with low concentrations of tissue factor, factor Xa, or α-thrombin. The results could not be accounted for by fXIa contamination of the plasma systems. Replacing fXI with recombinant fXI that activates factor IX poorly, or fXI that is activated poorly by thrombin, reduced thrombin generation. An antibody that blocks fXIa activation of factor IX reduced thrombin generation; however, an antibody that specifically interferes with fXI activation by fXIIa did not. The results support a model in which fXI is activated by thrombin or another protease generated early in coagulation, with the resulting fXIa contributing to sustained thrombin generation through activation of factor IX.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3967-3967
Author(s):  
Bernd Engelmann

Abstract Bernd Engelmann Vascular Biology and Hemostasis, Inst. of Clinical Chemistry, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich, Germany Following addition of fibrillar collagen to whole blood in order to mimick the starting process of hemostasis, we unexpectedly observed that tissue factor (TF), the central initiator of coagulation, was exposed within 3–5 min in association with CD15 and CD14 positive blood cells. A series of experiments revealed that the TF presentation was restricted to conjugates of neutrophils (and monocytes) with platelets. To verify the source of the TF, isolated neutrophils and platelets were evaluated for the presence of TF. Using a double sandwich Elisa, the washed platelets were found to contain TF. Conversely, TF was undetectable in the neutrophils. When searching for the intraplatelet location of TF by immunoelectron microscopy (IEM), TF was observed to reside in the alpha-granules and in the surface connected system. No TF was present in the cytoplasma and the dense granules. In response to activation, platelet TF was translocated to the cell surface by fusion of the alpha-granules with the plasma membrane. The externalized TF was found to cluster on platelet filopodia. Inspection of rapidly isolated buffy coat preparations confirmed the absence of TF from the neutrophils. Stimulation of TF-dependent factor Xa formation by the activated platelets was markedly amplified by the isolated neutrophils. This required neutrophil-platelet conjugate formation, as evident from inhibition by antibodies targeting PSGL-1 and CD18. To assess whether the TF triggered coagulation was connected to the platelet recruitment, we evaluated the participation of the ADP system. Disrupting the interaction of ADP with its platelet receptors P2Y12 and P2Y1 suppressed the TF activity in the neutrophil-platelet conjugates. Since the TF exposing filopodia represent preferential sites for the formation of microparticles (MP), we isolated the total pool of circulating MP from whole blood, known to be mainly derived from the platelets. Then, the MP were separated by cell sorting. In MP positive for the platelet specific CD42b, TF could be detected and quantified by western blotting and Elisa. Moderate increases in MP number excessively stimulated blood based TF activity in the presence of platelets and in whole blood. Since activated platelets are known to secrete tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), an anti-TFPI antibody targeting the Kunitz-2 domain of TFPI was included into the suspensions of the activated platelets. Thereby the TF activity of the isolated platelets was enforced, while the activity in the presence of the neutrophils remained unaffected, suggesting that TFPI partially masks the functional competence of the platelet TF. The potential contribution of platelet-collagen interactions for the activation of coagulation in vivo was analyzed by injecting collagen into the venous blood of mice. Local fibrin formation was documented in pulmonary vessels by EM, and systemic thrombin generation was revealed by increased thrombin-antithrombin complexes. In mice deficient for the P2Y1 ADP receptor, the thrombin generation was markedly reduced, indicating a basic role for the platelet-triggered coagulation during thrombus growth. In conclusion, the intravascular tissue factor enables the entire coagulation system to proceed on the plasma membrane of a single blood component, the surface of the activated platelets. Consequently the coagulation start can be regulated within the platelet aggregate, allowing fibrin formation to be flexibly adjusted to the size of the thrombus and the duration of its development.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3992-3992
Author(s):  
Grigoris T. Gerotziafas ◽  
Ismail Elalamy ◽  
Marie-Paule Roman ◽  
Claudine Prengel ◽  
Elisabeth Verdy ◽  
...  

Abstract Tissue factor (TF) expressed by some cancer cells is implicated in metastasis and angiogenesis. The influence of cancer cells on blood coagulation has not been adequately studied. We evaluated the procoagulant potential of pancreatic and breast cancer cells (BXPC3 and MCF7 cell lines respectively) when they are in contact with human platelet-poor plasma (PPP). At 40% and 90% confluence, adhesive cultures of BXPC3 and MCF7 cells were treated with trypsine according to standardized procedure and cancer cells were suspended in normal human platelet poor plasma (PPP) at increasing concentrations. Coagulation was triggered by CaCl2 addition and thrombin generation (TG) was monitored using the Calibrated Automated Thrombogram-Thrombinoscope® (Biodis-France). In some experiments, cancer cells were incubated for 30 min with a polyclonal specific anti-TF antibody (American Diagnostics). Cancer cells accelerated TG by decreasing significantly lag-time, and time to Peak of thrombin (ttPeak) but they did not significantly influence the endogenous thrombin potential. BXPC3 had significantly more potent procoagulant activity compared to MCF7 cells. Incubation of cancer cells with anti-TF antibody resulted in a concentration dependent inhibition of their procoagulant effect. The IC50 of the anti-TF antibody for TG induced by BXPC3 was about 10-fold higher to that for MCF7. Pancreatic cancer cells (BXPC3) and breast cancer cells (MCF7) accelerate thrombin generation of human plasma in a TF-dependent manner. BXPC3 have more potent procoagulant activity than MCF7 probably due to increased TF expression.


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