scholarly journals Low factor V level ameliorates bleeding diathesis in patients with combined deficiency of factor V and factor VIII

Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (20) ◽  
pp. 1745-1754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanyan Shao ◽  
Wenman Wu ◽  
Guanqun Xu ◽  
Xuefeng Wang ◽  
Qiulan Ding

Combined factor V and factor VIII deficiency is a rare disorder associated with relatively mild bleeding diathesis. Shao and colleagues elucidate the double role of factor V as both a pro- and anticoagulant protein, demonstrating that decreased factor V may ameliorate factor VIII deficiency through decreasing the level of tissue factor pathway inhibitor.

1996 ◽  
Vol 75 (05) ◽  
pp. 796-800 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanne Valentin ◽  
Inger Schousboe

SummaryIn the present study, the interaction between tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) and phospholipids has been characterized using a microtitre plate assay. TFPI was shown to bind calcium-independently to an acidic phospholipid surface composed of phosphatidylserine, but not a surface composed of the neutral phosphatidylcholine. The interaction was demonstrated to be dependent on the presence of the TFPI C-terminus. The presence of heparin (1 U/ml, unfractionated) was able to significantly reduce the binding of TFPI to phospholipid. The interaction of TFPI with phosphatidylserine was significantly decreased in the presence of calcium, but this was counteracted, and even enhanced, following complex formation of TFPI with factor Xa prior to incubation with the phospholipid surface. Moreover, a TFPI variant, not containing the third Kunitz domain and the C-terminus, was unable to bind to phospholipid. However, following the formation of a TFPI/factor Xa-complex this TFPI variant was capable of interacting with the phospholipid surface. This indicates that the role of factor Xa as a TFPI cofactor, at least in part, is to mediate the binding of TFPI to the phospholipid surface.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 391-398
Author(s):  
Dino Mehic ◽  
Alexander Tolios ◽  
Stefanie Hofer ◽  
Cihan Ay ◽  
Helmuth Haslacher ◽  
...  

Abstract High levels of tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), caused by a longer TFPIα half-life after binding to a factor V splice variant and variants in the F5 gene, were recently identified in 2 families with an as-yet-unexplained bleeding tendency. This study aimed to investigate free TFPIα in a well-characterized cohort of 620 patients with mild to moderate bleeding tendencies and its association to genetic alterations in the F5 gene. TFPIα levels were higher in patients with bleeding compared with healthy controls (median [interquartile range], 8.2 [5.5-11.7] vs 7.8 [4.3-11.1]; P = .026). A higher proportion of patients had free TFPIα levels more than or equal to the 95th percentile compared with healthy controls (odds ratio [OR] [95% confidence interval (CI)], 2.82 [0.98-8.13]). This was pronounced in the subgroup of patients in whom no bleeding disorder could be identified (bleeding of unknown cause [BUC; n = 420]; OR [95% CI], 3.03 [1.02-8.98]) and in platelet function defects (PFDs) (n = 121; OR [95% CI], 3.47 [1.09-11.08]). An increase in free TFPIα was associated with a mild delay in thrombin generation (prolonged lag time and time to peak), but not with alterations in routinely used global clotting tests. We could neither identify new or known genetic variations in the F5 gene that are associated with free TFPIα levels, nor an influence of the single-nucleotide variant rs10800453 on free TFPIα levels in our patient cohort. An imbalance of natural coagulation inhibitors such as TFPIα could be an underlying cause or contributor for unexplained bleeding, which is most probably multifactorial in a majority of patients.


Haemophilia ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. e160-e163 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. De Maertelaere ◽  
E. Castoldi ◽  
I. Van haute ◽  
D. Deeren ◽  
K. M. Devreese

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.


2001 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 203-211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Madhu S. Bajaj ◽  
Darren R. Tyson ◽  
Sarah A. Steer ◽  
Mohan N. Kuppuswamy

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