scholarly journals A Comparison of Murine and Human Factor XI

Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 1055-1064 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Gailani ◽  
Mao-Fu Sun ◽  
Yuehui Sun

Factor XI is a plasma glycoprotein that is required for contact activation initiated fibrin formation in vitro and for normal hemostasis in vivo. In preparation for developing a mouse model of factor XI deficiency to facilitate investigations into this protease's contributions to coagulation, we cloned the complementary DNA for murine factor XI, expressed the protein in a mammalian expression system, and compared its properties with human recombinant factor XI. The 2.8-kb murine cDNA codes for a protein of 624 amino acids with 78% homology to human factor XI. Both recombinant murine and human factor XI are 160 kD homodimers comprised of two 80 kD polypeptides connected by disulfide bonds. Murine factor XI shortens the clotting time of human factor XI deficient plasma in an activated partial thromboplastin time assay, with a specific activity 50% to 70% that of the human protein. In a purified system, murine factor XI is activated by human factor XIIa and thrombin in the presence of dextran sulfate. Murine factor XI differs from human factor XI in that it undergoes autoactivation slowly in the presence of dextran sulfate. This is due primarily to murine factor XIa preferentially cleaving a site on zymogen factor XI within the light chain, rather than the activation site between Arg371 and Val372. Northern blots of polyadenylated messenger RNA show that murine factor XI message is expressed, as expected, primarily in the liver. In contrast, messenger RNA for human factor XI was identified in liver, pancreas, and kidney. The studies show that murine and human factor XI have similar structural and enzymatic properties. However, there may be variations in tissue specific expression and subtle differences in enzyme activity across species.

Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 1055-1064 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Gailani ◽  
Mao-Fu Sun ◽  
Yuehui Sun

Abstract Factor XI is a plasma glycoprotein that is required for contact activation initiated fibrin formation in vitro and for normal hemostasis in vivo. In preparation for developing a mouse model of factor XI deficiency to facilitate investigations into this protease's contributions to coagulation, we cloned the complementary DNA for murine factor XI, expressed the protein in a mammalian expression system, and compared its properties with human recombinant factor XI. The 2.8-kb murine cDNA codes for a protein of 624 amino acids with 78% homology to human factor XI. Both recombinant murine and human factor XI are 160 kD homodimers comprised of two 80 kD polypeptides connected by disulfide bonds. Murine factor XI shortens the clotting time of human factor XI deficient plasma in an activated partial thromboplastin time assay, with a specific activity 50% to 70% that of the human protein. In a purified system, murine factor XI is activated by human factor XIIa and thrombin in the presence of dextran sulfate. Murine factor XI differs from human factor XI in that it undergoes autoactivation slowly in the presence of dextran sulfate. This is due primarily to murine factor XIa preferentially cleaving a site on zymogen factor XI within the light chain, rather than the activation site between Arg371 and Val372. Northern blots of polyadenylated messenger RNA show that murine factor XI message is expressed, as expected, primarily in the liver. In contrast, messenger RNA for human factor XI was identified in liver, pancreas, and kidney. The studies show that murine and human factor XI have similar structural and enzymatic properties. However, there may be variations in tissue specific expression and subtle differences in enzyme activity across species.


Blood ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Rimon ◽  
S Schiffman ◽  
DI Feinstein ◽  
SI Rapaport

A relatively potent antiserum against highly purified, unactivated human factor XI antigen was raised in a rabbit. This antiserum, after concentration, neutralized 50% of the factor XI clotting activity of a standard normal plasma at an antiserum dilution of 1/900. The antiserum was used in a neutralization-inhibition assay to study the relation between factor XI clotting activity and factor XI antigen in plasma from ten unrelated patients with homozygous factor XI deficiency and from 12 heterozygous family members of these patients. No evidence of factor XI antigen significantly in excess of factor XI activity was found in either group. All data to date have been consistent with the hypothesis that hereditary factor XI deficiency represents a genetic disorder resulting from the absence of factor XI molecule. Severity of bleeding in factor XI deficiency could not be correlated with the level of factor XI activity or factor XI antigen.


Blood ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Rimon ◽  
S Schiffman ◽  
DI Feinstein ◽  
SI Rapaport

Abstract A relatively potent antiserum against highly purified, unactivated human factor XI antigen was raised in a rabbit. This antiserum, after concentration, neutralized 50% of the factor XI clotting activity of a standard normal plasma at an antiserum dilution of 1/900. The antiserum was used in a neutralization-inhibition assay to study the relation between factor XI clotting activity and factor XI antigen in plasma from ten unrelated patients with homozygous factor XI deficiency and from 12 heterozygous family members of these patients. No evidence of factor XI antigen significantly in excess of factor XI activity was found in either group. All data to date have been consistent with the hypothesis that hereditary factor XI deficiency represents a genetic disorder resulting from the absence of factor XI molecule. Severity of bleeding in factor XI deficiency could not be correlated with the level of factor XI activity or factor XI antigen.


Blood ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 681-687 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Goldberger ◽  
M Kolodziej ◽  
M Poncz ◽  
JS Bennett ◽  
PJ Newman

Abstract The subunits that comprise the platelet-specific integrin alpha IIb beta 3 are polymorphic in nature, with several allelic forms present in the human gene pool. Minor changes in the secondary and tertiary structures of platelet membrane glycoproteins (GP) IIb and IIIa encoded by these alleles can result in an alloimmune reaction after transfusion or during pregnancy. To better understand the molecular structure of the PlA alloantigen system, located on GPIIIa, and the Bak alloantigen on GPIIb, we used a heterologous mammalian expression system to express these integrin subunits in their known polymorphic forms. An expression vector containing the PlA1 form of a GPIIIa cDNA, which encodes a leucine at amino acid 33 (Leu33), was modified to express the PlA2- associated form encoding a proline at amino acid 33 (Pro33). Similarly, a Baka GPIIb cDNA expressing an isoleucine at amino acid 843 (IIe843) was modified to express the Bakb form containing a serine at the same position (Ser843). Transfection of these vectors into COS cells resulted in the synthesis of GPIIb and GPIIIa molecules that were identical in size to those present in platelet lysates. Immunoprecipitation of the GPIIIa-transfected COS lysates with PlA)- specific alloantisera indicated that the Leu33 form was recognized only by anti-PIA1 sera while the Pro33 form was bound only by anti-PlA2 sera, showing that single amino acid polymorphisms are necessary and sufficient to direct the formation of the PlA1 and PlA2 alloepitopes. Similar experiments with Bak allele-specific expression vectors indicated that while the amino acid polymorphism (IIe843 in equilibrium Ser843) was necessary, posttranslational processing of pro-IIb was required for efficient exposure of both the Baka and Bakb alloepitopes.


2018 ◽  
Vol 163 ◽  
pp. 64-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salam Salloum-Asfar ◽  
María E. de la Morena-Barrio ◽  
Julio Esteban ◽  
Antonia Miñano ◽  
Cristina Aroca ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 91 (10) ◽  
pp. 3800-3807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang-jun Hu ◽  
Frank A. Baglia ◽  
David C.B. Mills ◽  
Barbara A. Konkle ◽  
Peter N. Walsh

Abstract Platelet factor XI is an alternatively spliced product of the factor XI gene expressed specifically within megakaryocytes and platelets as an approximately 1.9-kb mRNA transcript (compared with ∼2.1 kb in liver cells) lacking exon V. Flow cytometry with an affinity-purified factor XI antibody, with PAC1 antibody (to the GPIIb/IIIa complex on activated platelets), and with S12 antibody (to P-selectin, an α-granule membrane protein expressed on the platelet surface during secretion) on platelets activated with ADP, thrombin, thrombin receptor peptide (SFLLRN amide), or collagen at various concentrations exposed platelet factor XI and PAC1 antibody binding in parallel. Unactivated platelets expressed approximately 40% of total platelet factor XI but no PAC1 binding sites. Enhanced membrane exposure of platelet factor XI is independent of α-granule secretion, because ADP and collagen exposed platelet factor XI but no S12 binding sites. Platelets from four patients with plasma factor XI deficiency (<0.04 U/mL) had normal constitutive and activation-dependent expression of platelet factor XI. Well-washed platelets from normal and from factor XI-deficient donors incubated with low concentrations of thrombin (0.05 to 0.1 U/mL) corrected the clotting defect observed with factor XI-deficient plasma. Thus, functionally active platelet factor XI is differentially expressed on platelet membranes in a tissue-specific manner both constitutively and in a concentration-dependent fashion by various agonists in the absence of detectable plasma factor XI.


Blood ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-443
Author(s):  
S Schiffman ◽  
R Margalit ◽  
M Rosove ◽  
D Feinstein

Recently we have described a normal plasma activity that modulates contact activation by inhibiting adsorption of factor XI to activating surfaces. Here we report the first identified case in which a patient has abnormal clotting tests due to an excess of a similar activity. The patient's plasma had a prolonged partial thromboplastin time and low apparent factor XI assay. His plasma prolonged the partial thromboplastin time of normal plasma and partially neutralized normal factor XI activity in vivo and in vitro. Analysis in dilute plasma revealed normal amounts of factor XI activity and antigen. Factor XI adsorption from plasma to activating surfaces was tested by adding a small amount of 125I-labeled purified factor XI to plasma, exposing the mixture to a glass tube or kaolin, and determining the amount of factor XI adsorbed to the surface. Whereas normal plasma and plasmas deficient in factor XII, factor XI, or Fletcher factor yielded about 4% adsorption to glass, factor XI adsorption from patient's plasma was less than 1%, indicating the presence of an adsorption inhibitor. This inhibitor did not affect factor XI activation or the activity of preformed factor XIa. It was not adsorbed by AI(OH)3 and was present in serum and the macroglobulin peak on gel filtration of the plasma through Sephadex G-200. The patient's history does not allow a definitive conclusion as to whether this inhibitor was associated with abnormal bleeding.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 201-201
Author(s):  
Charles E. Bane ◽  
Kelli L. Boyd ◽  
Erik I. Tucker ◽  
Stephen T. Smiley ◽  
Andras Gruber ◽  
...  

Abstract Sepsis is a systemic host inflammatory response to entry and dissemination of an infectious agent. Interconnected pathways including inflammation, coagulation, and complement that serve protective functions when activated locally, contribute to morbidity and mortality when activated systemically during sepsis. Factor XIa (fXIa), the active form of the zymogen factor XI (fXI), contributes to thrombin generation in response to tissue injury. Prior work using a model of polymicrobial sepsis induced by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) in mice suggests that fXI contributes to the pathology of sepsis by promoting disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and inflammation (Tucker et al. J Infect Dis 2008;198:271 and Blood 2012;119:4762). We investigated the role of fXI in the CLP model, concentrating on the first 24 hours post-injury, using a high-level ligation that affects ≥75% of the length of the cecum. This level of injury causes near-100% mortality in wild type (WT) C57Bl/6 mice (median survival 42 hrs). Survival 7 days post-CLP was significantly greater for fXI-deficient (fXI-/-, 30% p=0.002) and partially deficient (fXI+/-, 17% p=0.003) mice compared to WT littermates (3%). For animals dying after CLP, median time to death was similar in the three groups. Four hours post-CLP, there were peaks in TNFα and IL-10 plasma levels in WT mice that were significantly smaller in fXI-/- mice (TNFα 76 ± 44 and 24 ± 22 pg/mL [p=0.009]; IL-10 10,000 ± 11,000 and 1,000 ± 900 pg/mL [p=0.0003], respectively), with levels also higher in WT mice 24 hrs post-CLP. There was significant white blood cell accumulation in the peritoneum 24 hrs post-CLP in WT and fXI-/- mice, with the lymphocyte fraction significantly elevated only in WT mice (p=0.008). The major rodent acute phase protein serum amyloid P was 5-fold higher in WT mice than in sham-treated mice, while levels in fXI-/-mice were indistinguishable from shams, 24 hrs post-CLP. In contrast to the indicators of inflammation, evidence for DIC was not strong for either genotype 24 hours post-CLP. Platelet counts were reduced similarly in both groups from a baseline mean of ∼600,000/μL, but mean counts remained above 300,000/μL. In both groups, plasma thrombin-antithrombin complex levels did not increase above baseline over the first 24 hrs post-CLP, and fibrinogen levels, which often decrease during DIC, increased modestly. No evidence of gross hemorrhage was noted at necropsy 4, 8, or 24 hrs post-CLP, and there was no histologic evidence of microvascular thrombosis (considered a “gold standard” for diagnosing DIC in laboratory animals) in kidney, liver or brain. The contact system zymogens factor XII (fXII) and prekallikrein (PK) are activated on bacterial surfaces during infection, resulting in cleavage of high molecular weight kininogen (HK) to produce antimicrobial peptides and the pro-inflammatory peptide bradykinin. We measured plasma fXII, PK, and fXI using western blots and densitometry. FXI decreased by ∼30% on average 24 hrs post-CLP in WT mice, consistent with protease activation. PK levels decreased by ∼50% in WT mice 24 hrs post-CLP (p 0.007), but were unchanged in fXI-/- mice. FXII levels decreased slightly in WT mice post-CLP, but increased in fXI-/-mice 4 hrs after CLP, returning to baseline 8 hrs post-CLP. FXI, PK and fXII levels were unchanged in sham-treated animals. The data suggest that fXI contributes to contact activation after CLP, and its absence leads to reduced PK and fXII activation. Previously, we reported that fXI deficiency reduced mortality after CLP (Tucker et al. J Infect Dis 2008;198:271) and infection with the gram-positive organism Listeria monocytogenes (Luo et al., Infect Immun. 2012;80:91), and proposed that this was in part related to down-regulation of coagulation, mitigating consumptive coagulopathy. The data presented here suggest that the high-level injury employed in the CLP-model produces an intense early systemic inflammatory response that leads to early death, before changes characteristic of DIC become obvious. The survival benefit conferred by fXI deficiency in this model then, may be primarily due to early modulation of inflammation, perhaps by altering contact activation, rather than to a prominent antithrombotic effect. Given the relatively mild bleeding diathesis associated with fXI deficiency, pharmacologic inhibition of fXIa may be a safe option for reducing the inflammatory response in septic patients. Disclosures: Tucker: Aoronora, Inc.: Employment. Gruber:Aronora, Inc.: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees. Gailani:Aronora, Inc.: Membership on an entity’s Board of Directors or advisory committees; Merck: Consultancy; Bayer Pharma: Consultancy; Novartis: Consultancy.


Blood ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 91 (10) ◽  
pp. 3800-3807
Author(s):  
Chang-jun Hu ◽  
Frank A. Baglia ◽  
David C.B. Mills ◽  
Barbara A. Konkle ◽  
Peter N. Walsh

Platelet factor XI is an alternatively spliced product of the factor XI gene expressed specifically within megakaryocytes and platelets as an approximately 1.9-kb mRNA transcript (compared with ∼2.1 kb in liver cells) lacking exon V. Flow cytometry with an affinity-purified factor XI antibody, with PAC1 antibody (to the GPIIb/IIIa complex on activated platelets), and with S12 antibody (to P-selectin, an α-granule membrane protein expressed on the platelet surface during secretion) on platelets activated with ADP, thrombin, thrombin receptor peptide (SFLLRN amide), or collagen at various concentrations exposed platelet factor XI and PAC1 antibody binding in parallel. Unactivated platelets expressed approximately 40% of total platelet factor XI but no PAC1 binding sites. Enhanced membrane exposure of platelet factor XI is independent of α-granule secretion, because ADP and collagen exposed platelet factor XI but no S12 binding sites. Platelets from four patients with plasma factor XI deficiency (<0.04 U/mL) had normal constitutive and activation-dependent expression of platelet factor XI. Well-washed platelets from normal and from factor XI-deficient donors incubated with low concentrations of thrombin (0.05 to 0.1 U/mL) corrected the clotting defect observed with factor XI-deficient plasma. Thus, functionally active platelet factor XI is differentially expressed on platelet membranes in a tissue-specific manner both constitutively and in a concentration-dependent fashion by various agonists in the absence of detectable plasma factor XI.


Blood ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 681-687 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Goldberger ◽  
M Kolodziej ◽  
M Poncz ◽  
JS Bennett ◽  
PJ Newman

The subunits that comprise the platelet-specific integrin alpha IIb beta 3 are polymorphic in nature, with several allelic forms present in the human gene pool. Minor changes in the secondary and tertiary structures of platelet membrane glycoproteins (GP) IIb and IIIa encoded by these alleles can result in an alloimmune reaction after transfusion or during pregnancy. To better understand the molecular structure of the PlA alloantigen system, located on GPIIIa, and the Bak alloantigen on GPIIb, we used a heterologous mammalian expression system to express these integrin subunits in their known polymorphic forms. An expression vector containing the PlA1 form of a GPIIIa cDNA, which encodes a leucine at amino acid 33 (Leu33), was modified to express the PlA2- associated form encoding a proline at amino acid 33 (Pro33). Similarly, a Baka GPIIb cDNA expressing an isoleucine at amino acid 843 (IIe843) was modified to express the Bakb form containing a serine at the same position (Ser843). Transfection of these vectors into COS cells resulted in the synthesis of GPIIb and GPIIIa molecules that were identical in size to those present in platelet lysates. Immunoprecipitation of the GPIIIa-transfected COS lysates with PlA)- specific alloantisera indicated that the Leu33 form was recognized only by anti-PIA1 sera while the Pro33 form was bound only by anti-PlA2 sera, showing that single amino acid polymorphisms are necessary and sufficient to direct the formation of the PlA1 and PlA2 alloepitopes. Similar experiments with Bak allele-specific expression vectors indicated that while the amino acid polymorphism (IIe843 in equilibrium Ser843) was necessary, posttranslational processing of pro-IIb was required for efficient exposure of both the Baka and Bakb alloepitopes.


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