Evidence of Abnormal Coagulation: Production of Factor VIII α-Fragment In Vivo.

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1020-1020
Author(s):  
Pierre F. Neuenschwander

Abstract Treatment of thrombosis typically involves the administration of coagulation inhibitors that must be carefully monitored and balanced so as to reduce unwanted coagulation (thrombosis) while maintaining normal or near-normal hemostasis. This balancing is necessary since the anticoagulants used alter enzymatic activities that are involved in both processes. This therapeutic strategy is based entirely on the view that thrombosis occurs by the same general pathways as normal hemostasis. While the enzymatic cascade of blood coagulation is well described and well accepted, numerous other minor reactions have been shown to occur in vitro but have not been examined in great detail due to the belief that they do not occur significantly during normal coagulation in vivo. We postulate that in certain pathological environments some of these minor procoagulant reactions may in fact become significant and lead to thrombogenic situations. If true, this could potentially allow novel targets for anticoagulation to be identified. In addition, the inhibition of these abnormal reactions could attenuate pathological coagulation whilst having limited or no effect on normal hemostatic reactions. One candidate reaction is the proteolysis of factor VIII (fVIII) by the factor VIIa-tissue factor (fVIIa-TF) complex, which results in a mixture of active and inactive fVIII molecules. We have previously shown that this reaction occurs in vitro using purified plasma components and in situ in a plasma-based system. Both of these systems produce a low level of fVIII activation with sustained (albeit low) fVIIIa activity. While it remains possible that this reaction is important in early hemostasis the elevated levels of TF in many pathological situations raises the possibility that this reaction may be more pronounced under certain circumstances in disease states. Examination of the importance of this reaction in vivo is an extremely important issue, but very difficult to address due to the inability to ascertain if fVIII activity or fragments found in vivo derive from fVIIa-TF proteolysis or proteolysis by other enzymes such as thrombin, factor Xa, or activated protein C. With this in mind we have developed an antibody reagent that can specifically detect a fVIII fragment that is a unique product of fVIII proteolysis by the fVIIa-TF complex. This antibody detects only fVIIa-TF proteolyzed fVIII (fVIII cleaved at Arg336) and its major product (α-fragment) on Western blots but not intact (unactivated) fVIII or thrombin-activated fVIII. Using this antibody we screened samples of pulmonary lavage and pleural fluid from normal patients as well as patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome, interstitial lung disease, pneumonia and lung cancer—all of which have associated procoagulant pathologies. Sandwich ELISAs of patient samples showed variably elevated levels of α-fragment (from 100 – 2000 pM) compared to normal controls (~5 pM). Western blots of lavage samples confirmed the presence of α-fragment in samples as well as the elevated levels compared to normals. These data strongly support the notion that alternative “abnormal” coagulation products can be and are generated in vivo in certain pathological settings. The data are also strongly suggestive that the fVIIa-TF complex is the most likely source of fVIII α-fragment. Although it remains unclear if fVIII α-fragment is one of the causative agents in the procoagulant pathologies of these disorders or merely an indicator of the abnormal procoagulant state, its presence in vivo indicates that the role of abnormal coagulation reactions should be further investigated.

1995 ◽  
Vol 74 (02) ◽  
pp. 646-654 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Marie Stassen ◽  
Anne-Marie Lambeir ◽  
Gaston Matthyssens ◽  
William C Ripka ◽  
Åke Nyström ◽  
...  

SummaryPrevious investigations have indicated that interference with the initial level of the blood coagulation may lead to effective antithrombotic therapy. Recently a series of potential coagulation inhibitors derived from bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI, aprotinin) was described. We have determined their inhibition constants, effects on coagulation assays, effects in an in vitro human thrombosis model and pharmacological profiles in hamsters. The aprotinin-derived analogues (4C2,7L22, 5L15, 6L15, 5L84) showed significantly increased inhibitory activity towards factor Xa, factor Vlla-tissue factor (TF) complex, factor XIa and plasma kallikrein or a combination of them, and a significantly decreased plasmin inhibition as compared to aprotinin. In the coagulation assays, 4C2 and 7L22 mainly inhibited factor Xa, 5L15 and 6L15 inhibited factor VIIa-TF complex and 5L84 inhibited factor Xa, factor VIIa-TF complex and the contact activation. In flow chamber experiments with human blood 7L22, 5L15, 6L15, 5L84 and rTAP significantly inhibited fibrin formation and platelet deposition on extracellular matrix from phorbol ester stimulated human endothelial cells both under high and low shear stress and in the presence of low molecular weight heparin. The pharmacological profiles of the aprotinin analogues and rTAP with a mean residence time of 64 to 140 min were not significantly different. Modification of an aprotinin analogue with PEG (5L15-PEG) resulted in a 10-fold decrease of the inhibition constant for the factor VIIa-TF complex and in a significant prolongation of the secondary half-life, while the initial half-life was unchanged.Thus the investigated aprotinin-derived coagulation inhibitors resulted in a series of combined coagulation inhibitors with a pharmacological behaviour, which justifies in vivo testing of their potential antithrombotic action, as reported in the accompanying paper.


1988 ◽  
Vol 60 (02) ◽  
pp. 298-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
C A Mitchell ◽  
S M Kelemen ◽  
H H Salem

SummaryProtein S (PS) is a vitamin K-dependent anticoagulant that acts as a cofactor to activated protein C (APC). To date PS has not been shown to possess anticoagulant activity in the absence of APC.In this study, we have developed monoclonal antibody to protein S and used to purify the protein to homogeneity from plasma. Affinity purified protein S (PSM), although identical to the conventionally purified protein as judged by SDS-PAGE, had significant anticoagulant activity in the absence of APC when measured in a factor Xa recalcification time. Using SDS-PAGE we have demonstrated that prothrombin cleavage by factor X awas inhibited in the presence of PSM. Kinetic analysis of the reaction revealed that PSM competitively inhibited factor X amediated cleavage of prothrombin. PS preincubated with the monoclonal antibody, acquired similar anticoagulant properties. These results suggest that the interaction of the monoclonal antibody with PS results in an alteration in the protein exposing sites that mediate the observed anticoagulant effect. Support that the protein was altered was derived from the observation that PSM was eight fold more sensitive to cleavage by thrombin and human neutrophil elastase than conventionally purified protein S.These observations suggest that PS can be modified in vitro to a protein with APC-independent anticoagulant activity and raise the possibility that a similar alteration could occur in vivo through the binding protein S to a cellular or plasma protein.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randal J Kaufman ◽  
Debra D Pittman ◽  
Louise C Wasley ◽  
W Barry Foster ◽  
Godfrey W Amphlett ◽  
...  

Factor VIII is a high molecular weight plasma glycoprotein that functions in the blood clotting cascade as the cofactor for factor DCa proteolytic activation of factor X. Factor VIII does not function proteolytically in this reaction hut itself can be proteolytically activated by other coagulation enzymes such as factor Xa and thrombin. In the plasma, factor VIII exists as a 200 kDa amino-terminal fragment in a metal ion stabilized complex with a 76 kDa carboxy-terminal fragment. The isolation of the cENA for human factor VIII provided the deduced primary amino acid sequence of factor VIIT and revealed three distinct structural domains: 1) a triplicated A domain of 330 amino acids which has homology to ceruloplasmin, a plasma copper binding protein, 2) a duplicated C domain of 150 amino acids, and 3) a unique B domain of 980 amino acids. These domains are arranged as shown below. We have previously reported the B domain is dispensible far cofactor activity in vitro (Toole et al. 1986 Proc. Natl. Acad 5939). The in vivo efficacy of factor VIII molecules harboring the B domain deletion was tested by purification of the wildtype and modified forms and infusion into factor VIII deficient, hemophilic, dogs. The wildtype and the deleted forms of recombinant derived factor VIII exhibited very similar survival curves (Tl/2 = 13 hrs) and the cuticle bleeding times suggested that both preparations appeared functionally equivalent. Sepharose 4B chromatography indicated that both factor VIII molecules were capable of binding canine plasma vWF.Further studies have addressed what cleavages are necessary for activation of factor VIII. The position of the thrombin, factor Xa, and activated protein C (AFC) cleavage sites within factor VIII are presented below, site-directed ENA medicated mutagenesis has been performed to modify the arginine at the amino side of each cleavagesite to an soleucine. In all cases this modification resulted in molecules that were resistant to cleavage by thrombin at the modified site. Modification of the thrombin cleavage sites at 336 and 740 and modification of the factor Xa cleavage site at 1721 resulted in no loss of cofactor activity. Modification of the thrombin cleavage site at either 372 or 1689 destroyed oofactor activity. Modification of the thrombin cleavage site at 336 resulted in a factor VIII having an increased activity, possibly due to resistance to inactivation. These results suggest the requirement of cleavage at residues 372 and 1689 for cofactor activity.


Blood ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 150-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
GJ Jr Broze ◽  
JP Miletich

Tissue factor (TF) is a lipoprotein cofactor that markedly enhances the proteolytic activation of factors IX and X by factor VIIa. The functional activity of TF is inhibited by serum in a time- and temperature-dependent fashion. The inhibitory effect is also dependent on the presence of calcium ions and can be reversed by calcium chelation (EDTA) and dilution, thus excluding direct proteolytic destruction of TF as the mechanism for inhibition. Using crude TF, serum immunodepleted of factor VII, and serum depleted of the vitamin K- dependent coagulation factors by BaSO4 absorption, it is shown that TF factor inhibition requires the presence of VII(a), X(a), and an additional moiety contained in barium-absorbed serum. When each of the other required components were at saturating concentrations, half- maximal inhibition of TF occurred in reaction mixtures containing 2% (vol/vol) of TF at a factor VII(a) concentration of 4 ng/mL (80 pmol/L), a factor X concentration of 50 ng/mL (850 pmol/L), and a concentration of barium-absorbed serum of 2.5% (vol/vol). Catalytically active factor Xa appeared to be required for the generation of optimal TF inhibition. The results are consistent with the conclusions of Hjort that barium-absorbed serum contains a moiety that inhibits the VIIa- Ca2+-TF complex. The role of factor X(a) in the generation of the inhibitory phenomenon remains to be elucidated. The inhibitor present in serum (plasma) may in part be produced by the liver in vivo since cultured human hepatoma cells (HepG2) secrete this inhibitory activity in vitro.


Haematologica ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 105 (9) ◽  
pp. 2335-2340
Author(s):  
Toufik Abache ◽  
Alexandre Fontayne ◽  
Dominique Grenier ◽  
Emilie Jacque ◽  
Alain Longue ◽  
...  

Rendering coagulation factor X sensitive to thrombin was proposed as a strategy that can bypass the need for factor VIII. In this paper, this non-replacement strategy was evaluated in vitro and in vivo in its ability to correct factor VIII but also factor IX, X and XI deficiencies. A novel modified factor X, named Actiten, was generated and produced in the HEK293F cell line. The molecule possesses the required post-translational modifications, partially keeps its ability to be activated by RVV-X, factor VIIa/tissue factor, factor VIIIa/factor IXa and acquires the ability to be activated by thrombin. The potency of the molecule was evaluated in respective deficient plasmas or hemophilia A plasmas, for some with inhibitors. Actiten corrects dose dependently all the assayed deficient plasmas. It is able to normalize the thrombin generation at 20 μg/mL showing however an increased lagtime. It was then assayed in a rabbit antibody-induced model of hemophilia A where, in contrast to recombinant factor X wild-type, it normalized the bleeding time and the loss of hemoglobin. No sign of thrombogenicity was observed and the generation of activated factor X was controlled by the anticoagulation pathway in all performed coagulation assays. This data indicates that Actiten may be considered as a possible non replacement factor to treat hemophilia's with the advantage of being a zymogen correcting bleedings only when needed.


Blood ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 77 (10) ◽  
pp. 2174-2184 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Jr Berger ◽  
CG Kirstein ◽  
CL Orthner

Abstract Protein C is a vitamin K-dependent zymogen of the serine protease, activated protein C (APC), an important regulatory enzyme in hemostasis. In view of the potential of human APC as an anticoagulant and profibrinolytic agent, the pharmacokinetics and tissue distribution of APC were studied in guinea pigs. The plasma elimination of a trace dose of 125I-APC was biphasic following an initial rapid elimination of approximately 15% of the injected dose within 1 to 2 minutes. This rapid removal of 125I-APC from the circulation was found to be a result of an association with the liver regardless of the route of injection. Essentially identical results were obtained with active site-blocked forms of APC generated with either diisopropylfluorophosphate or D- phenylalanyl-L-prolyl-L-arginine chloromethyl ketone, which indicates that the active site was not essential for the liver association. Accumulation of all three forms of APC in the liver peaked at 30 minutes and then declined as increasing amounts of degraded radiolabeled material appeared in the gastrointestinal tract and urine. Removal of the gamma-carboxyglutamic acid (gla) domain of diisopropylphosphoryl-APC resulted in a 50% reduction in the association with liver and an accumulation in the kidneys. Protein C and protein S were cleared from the circulation at rates approximately one-half and one-fourth, respectively, that of APC. Both in vitro and in vivo, APC was found to form complexes with protease inhibitors present in guinea pig plasma. Complex formation resulted in a more rapid disappearance of the enzymatic activity of APC than elimination of the protein moiety. These findings indicate two distinct mechanisms for the elimination of APC. One mechanism involves reaction with plasma protease inhibitors and subsequent elimination by specific hepatic receptors. The other mechanism involves the direct catabolism of APC by the liver via a pathway that is nonsaturable over a substantial dose range and independent of the active site. This pattern of elimination is distinctly different from that observed with the homologous coagulation enzymes thrombin, factor IXa, and factor Xa.


1999 ◽  
Vol 81 (01) ◽  
pp. 87-95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erica Oort ◽  
Ton Lisman ◽  
Joost Meijers ◽  
Ronald Derksen ◽  
Philip de Groot ◽  
...  

Summaryβ2-glycoprotein I (β2GPI) is a plasma glycoprotein with unknown physiological function(s). In in vitro experiments it has been demonstrated that β2GPI has both anticoagulant properties, such as the inhibition of factor X and prothrombin activation and procoagulant properties, such as the inhibition of the anticoagulant activity of activated protein C. Besides this, β2GPI bound to cardiolipin is recognized by anti-phospholipid antibodies (aPL).In this study we demonstrate that β2GPI is very sensitive for cleavage between Lys317 and Thr318 by plasmin, resulting in two immunologically different cleaved forms. In vitro experiments show that these plasmin cleaved forms of β2GPI bind to negatively charged phospho-lipids with much lower affinity compared to intact β2GPI. Similar to plasmin, trypsin and elastase can also induce this proteolytical cleavage in β2GPI, whereas thrombin and factor Xa do not cleave β2GPI. The in vivo occurrence of the proteolytical cleavage was demonstrated by the finding that in plasmas of patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation(DIC) and in plasmas of patients treated with streptokinase, significant amounts of cleaved β2GPI (up to 12 μg/ml) are present.During the development of DIC, the increase in levels of cleaved β2GPI is accompanied by a 70% decrease in the levels of intact β2GPI, whereas in streptokinase treated patients levels of intact β2GPI stay within the normal range.This study demonstrates for the first time that during in vivo activation of fibrinolysis β2GPI is cleaved, which results in the formation of a form of β2GPI with much lower affinity for negatively charged phospholipids. Plasmin is most likely responsible for this modification.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 135 (9) ◽  
pp. 689-699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik I. Tucker ◽  
Norah G. Verbout ◽  
Brandon D. Markway ◽  
Michael Wallisch ◽  
Christina U. Lorentz ◽  
...  

Abstract Although thrombin is a key enzyme in the coagulation cascade and is required for both normal hemostasis and pathologic thrombogenesis, it also participates in its own negative feedback via activation of protein C, which downregulates thrombin generation by enzymatically inactivating factors Va and VIIIa. Our group and others have previously shown that thrombin’s procoagulant and anticoagulant activities can be effectively disassociated to varying extents through site-directed mutagenesis. The thrombin mutant W215A/E217A (WE thrombin) has been one of the best characterized constructs with selective activity toward protein C. Although animal studies have demonstrated that WE thrombin acts as an anticoagulant through activated protein C (APC) generation, the observed limited systemic anticoagulation does not fully explain the antithrombotic potency of this or other thrombin mutants. AB002 (E-WE thrombin) is an investigational protein C activator thrombin analog in phase 2 clinical development (clinicaltrials.gov NCT03963895). Here, we demonstrate that this molecule is a potent enzyme that is able to rapidly interrupt arterial-type thrombus propagation at exceedingly low doses (<2 µg/kg, IV), yet without substantial systemic anticoagulation in baboons. We demonstrate that AB002 produces APC on platelet aggregates and competitively inhibits thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (carboxypeptidase B2) activation in vitro, which may contribute to the observed in vivo efficacy. We also describe its safety and activity in a phase 1 first-in-human clinical trial. Together, these results support further clinical evaluation of AB002 as a potentially safe and effective new approach for treating or preventing acute thrombotic and thromboembolic conditions. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT03453060.


Blood ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 150-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
GJ Jr Broze ◽  
JP Miletich

Abstract Tissue factor (TF) is a lipoprotein cofactor that markedly enhances the proteolytic activation of factors IX and X by factor VIIa. The functional activity of TF is inhibited by serum in a time- and temperature-dependent fashion. The inhibitory effect is also dependent on the presence of calcium ions and can be reversed by calcium chelation (EDTA) and dilution, thus excluding direct proteolytic destruction of TF as the mechanism for inhibition. Using crude TF, serum immunodepleted of factor VII, and serum depleted of the vitamin K- dependent coagulation factors by BaSO4 absorption, it is shown that TF factor inhibition requires the presence of VII(a), X(a), and an additional moiety contained in barium-absorbed serum. When each of the other required components were at saturating concentrations, half- maximal inhibition of TF occurred in reaction mixtures containing 2% (vol/vol) of TF at a factor VII(a) concentration of 4 ng/mL (80 pmol/L), a factor X concentration of 50 ng/mL (850 pmol/L), and a concentration of barium-absorbed serum of 2.5% (vol/vol). Catalytically active factor Xa appeared to be required for the generation of optimal TF inhibition. The results are consistent with the conclusions of Hjort that barium-absorbed serum contains a moiety that inhibits the VIIa- Ca2+-TF complex. The role of factor X(a) in the generation of the inhibitory phenomenon remains to be elucidated. The inhibitor present in serum (plasma) may in part be produced by the liver in vivo since cultured human hepatoma cells (HepG2) secrete this inhibitory activity in vitro.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 204-204
Author(s):  
Ed L.G. Pryzdial ◽  
Kimberley Talbot ◽  
Scott C. Meixner ◽  
Louise J. Eltringham-Smith ◽  
William P Sheffield

Abstract The key “clot-busting” enzyme, tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), functions to activate plasminogen (Pg) to plasmin, which directly cleaves and solubilizes the clot. tPA requires a cofactor for physiologically significant plasmin generation. Fibrin is thought to be the only essential tPA cofactor and consequently localizes fibrinolysis. Limited proteolysis of fibrin enhances this tPA cofactor function by exposing C-terminal lysines that are integral to new Pg and tPA binding sites. Our recent work has suggested that the initiating steps of fibrinolysis are accelerated not just by fibrin, but also by localized auxiliary cofactors. These proteins can be cleaved by plasmin more efficiently than fibrin to reveal C-terminal lysine. Our focus has been clotting factor Xa (FXa), whose sequential plasmin-mediated derivatives FXaβ and Xa33/13 acquire C-terminal lysines that facilitate Pg binding and tPA-cofactor function. We now report that in plasma Xa33/13 is rapidly degraded, and hypothesize that preventing formation of Xa33/13 will prolong the fibrinolytic cofactor activity of FXaβ in plasma. To impair the production of Xa33/13 and stabilize the FXaβ activity, an ∼25 angstrom tetraethylene glycol (TEG) steric group was linked to the active site. A C-terminal lysine was tethered to the TEG to further enhance the activity (Xa-K). Treatment with purified plasmin showed that Xa-K was converted to the β-form without further proteolysis to the Xa33/13 analogue. Using conventional turbidity assays, the time for thrombin (3 nM)-induced plasma clots to reach 50% fibrinolysis (25 pM tPA) was shortened ∼8-fold by 1 nM Xa-K, whereas unmodified FXa at 200-fold higher concentration was insignificant. Identically modified trypsin-K had no effect on fibrinolysis. Using Doppler ultrasound to follow blood flow in surgically exposed mouse carotid arteries, the effect of Xa-K on shortening the time to reperfusion was evaluated after complete occlusion was induced by ferric chloride. The tPA variant Tenecteplase (TNKase) injected into the tail vein (17 µg/g) completely restored blood flow by ∼30 min, which was reduced to ∼14 min in the presence of Xa-K (0.5 µg/g, n=10). At a sub-therapeutic dose (9 µg/g, n=4) TNKase did not restore blood flow by the experimental end-point (60 minutes). However, complete reperfusion was observed by ∼20 min when combined with Xa-K (0.5 µg/g, n=8), showing that adjunctive Xa-K can reduce the required amount of TNKase. In the absence of TNKase, a dose-dependent effect on reperfusion was observed when Xa-K was injected alone (0.5 and 1.1 µg/g n=5), indicating an effect on endogenous tPA. Western blots of plasma from mice achieving complete reperfusion showed animals administered Xa-K alone, but not TNKase alone, had no systemic plasminogen or fibrinogen fragmentation. Furthermore, XaK appears to have significantly attenuated the systemic effect of TNKase during adjunctive treatment, possibly due to localization by Xa-K to the site of the clot. These results support a role for auxiliary cofactors in fibrinolysis and suggest that Xa-K may have novel thrombolytic applications. Disclosures: Pryzdial: Canadian Blood Services: Employment, Inventor, Inventor Patents & Royalties.


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