Increased tissue factor-initiated prothrombin activation as a result of the Arg506 --> Gln mutation in factor VLEIDEN

C. van 't Veer, M. Kalafatis, R. M. Bertina, P. Simioni, K. G. Mann

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Abstract

The effect of the Arg506 --> Gln mutation in factor VLEIDEN on thrombin generation was evaluated in a reconstituted system using the purified components of the tissue factor (TF) pathway to thrombin and the components of the protein C pathway. Recombinant full-length tissue factor pathway inhibitor (RTFPI) was included in the system because of a previously observed synergistic inhibitory effect of TFPI and the protein C pathway on TF-initiated thrombin generation. Thrombin generation initiated by 1.25 pM factor VIIa.TF in the absence of the protein C pathway components occurs following an initiation phase, after which prothrombin is quantitatively converted to 1.4 microM thrombin. The factor VLEIDEN mutation did not influence thrombin generation in the reconstituted model in the absence of the protein C pathway. In the presence of 2.5 nM TFPI, 65 nM protein C, and 10 nM recombinant soluble thrombomodulin (Tm), thrombin generation catalyzed by normal factor V was abolished after the initial formation of 25 nM thrombin. In contrast, persistent thrombin generation was observed in the presence of factor VLEIDEN in the same system, although the rate of thrombin generation was slower compared with the reaction without protein C and Tm. The rate of thrombin generation with factor VLEIDEN increased with time and ultimately resulted in quantitative prothrombin activation. When the TFPI concentration was reduced to 1.25 nM, thrombin generation is still curtailed in the presence of normal factor V. In contrast, under similar conditions using factor VLEIDEN, the protein C pathway totally failed to down-regulate thrombin generation. The dramatic effect of a 50% reduction in TFPI concentration on the inhibitory potential of the protein C pathway on thrombin generation catalyzed by factor VLEIDEN suggests that the observed synergy between TFPI and the protein C pathway is directly governed by the TFPI concentration and by cleavage of the factor Va heavy chain at Arg506. This cleavage appears to have a dramatic regulatory effect in the presence of low concentrations of TFPI. Markedly increased thrombin generation in the presence of both 1.25 nM TFPI and factor VLEIDEN was also observed when antithrombin-III was added to the system to complete the natural set of coagulation inhibitors. Protein S (300 nM) had a minimal effect in the model on the inhibition of thrombin generation by protein C, Tm, and TFPI, with either normal factor V or factor VLEIDEN. Protein S also failed to significantly potentiate the action of the protein C pathway in the presence of antithrombin-III in reactions employing normal factor V or factor VLEIDEN. The absence of an effect of protein S in the model, which employs saturating concentrations of phospholipid, suggests that the reported interactions of protein S with coagulation factors are not decisive in the reaction. Altogether the data predict that TFPI levels in the lower range of normal values are a risk factor for thrombosis when combined with the Arg506 --> Gln mutation in factor VLEIDEN
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)20721-20729
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume272
Issue number33
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1997

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