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Query: EC:3.4.21.5 (
thrombin
)
33,306
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous studies demonstrated that tissue plasminogen activator-induced fibrinolysis in vitro is retarded in the presence of prothrombin (II) activation and that the anticoagulant-activated protein C appears profibrinolytic by preventing the formation of
thrombin
(IIa)-like activity during fibrinolysis. To disclose the molecular connection between the generation of IIa and the inhibition of fibrinolysis, a lysis assay that is sensitive to the antifibrinolytic effect of II activation was developed and was used to purify a 60-kDa single-chain protein from human plasma. Because the lysis of a clot, produced from purified components, is retarded when this protein is present and when II activation occurs in situ, the protein was named
TAFI
(thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor).
TAFI
is cleaved by IIa yielding 35-, 25-, and 14-kDa products. Amino-terminal sequence analyses identified
TAFI
as a precursor of a
plasma carboxypeptidase B
(CPB). Formation of the 35-kDa product correlates with both prolongation of lysis time and CPB-like activity. Prolongation of lysis time saturates at about 125 nM
TAFI
. Activated
TAFI
inhibits the activation of Glu-plasminogen but does not prolong the lysis of clots formed in the presence of Lys-plasminogen. 2-Guanidinoethylmercaptosuccinic acid, a competitive inhibitor of CPB, completely inhibits prolongation of lysis by activated
TAFI
in a purified system and the prolongation induced by II activation in barium-adsorbed plasma. This suggests that
TAFI
accounts for the antifibrinolytic effect that accompanies prothrombin activation and that activated protein C appears profibrinolytic by attenuating
TAFI
activation.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of TAFI, a thrombin-activable fibrinolysis inhibitor. 778 9
TAFI
(thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor) is a recently discovered plasma protein that can be activated by
thrombin
-catalyzed proteolysis to a carboxypeptidase B-like enzyme that inhibits fibrinolysis. This work shows that the
thrombin
-thrombomodulin complex, rather than free
thrombin
, is the most likely physiologic activator. Thrombomodulin increases the catalytic efficiency of the reaction by a factor of 1250, an effect expressed almost exclusively through an increase in kcat. The kinetics of the reaction conform to a model whereby
thrombin
can interact with either
TAFI
(Km = 1.0 microM) or thrombomodulin (Kd = 8.6 nM), and either binary complex so formed can then interact with the third component to form the ternary
thrombin
-thrombomodulin-
TAFI
complex from which activated
TAFI
is produced with kcat = 1.2 s-1. This work also shows that activated
TAFI
down-regulates tPA-induced fibrinolysis half-maximally at a concentration of 1.0 nM in a system of purified components. This concentration of
TAFI
is about 2% of the level of the zymogen in plasma, which indicates that ample activated
TAFI
could be generated to very significantly modulate fibrinolysis in vivo. Therefore,
TAFI
in vitro and possibly in vivo defines an explicit molecular connection between the coagulation and fibrinolytic cascades, such that expression of activity in the former down-regulates the activity of the latter.
...
PMID:TAFI, or plasma procarboxypeptidase B, couples the coagulation and fibrinolytic cascades through the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex. 866 47
Coagulation is initiated by the binding of factor VIIa to tissue factor, with resultant limited factor IX and X activation and
thrombin
production. Owing to the feedback inhibition of the factor VIIa/tissue factor complex by tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), additional factor X activation and
thrombin
generation must proceed through a pathway involving factors VIII, IX, and XI. Experiments designed to elucidate the requirement for amplified factor Xa and
thrombin
generation in normal hemostasis show that the resistance of plasma clots to tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)- and urokinase-induced fibrinolysis is related to the extent of
thrombin
generation. Inhibition of fibrinolysis is mediated in part by plasma carboxypeptidase-U ([
CPU
] carboxypeptidase-R, procarboxypeptidase-B, thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor), a proenzyme that is proteolytically activated by
thrombin
in a process enhanced dramatically by the cofactor thrombomodulin. A clot induced in factor IX-deficient plasma with limited amounts of tissue factor in the presence of urokinase (100 U/mL) lyses prematurely, and this defect is corrected by supplementation of the deficient plasma with factor IX (5 micrograms/mL) or thrombomodulin (20 ng/mL). These additions enhance the rate and extent of
CPU
activation: in the case of factor IX, presumably by permitting amplified generation of factor Xa and
thrombin
, and in the case of thrombomodulin, presumably by increasing the degree of
CPU
activation produced by the low levels of
thrombin
generated in the absence of factor IX. Pretreatment of the factor IX-deficient plasma with specific anti-
CPU
antibodies prevents the increased resistance to fibrinolysis produced by addition of factor IX and thrombomodulin. Likewise, when coagulation is induced by
thrombin
(2 U/mL) in the presence of tPA (60 U/mL), clots formed from plasmas deficient in factors VIII, IX, X, or XI lyse prematurely unless the missing factor is replaced or thrombomodulin (20 ng/mL) is added.
...
PMID:Coagulation-dependent inhibition of fibrinolysis: role of carboxypeptidase-U and the premature lysis of clots from hemophilic plasma. 891 45
Recombinant human prothrombin (rII) and two mutant forms (R155A, R271A,R284A (rMZ) and R271A,R284A (rMZdesF1)) were expressed in mammalian cells. Following activation and purification, recombinant
thrombin
(rIIa) and stable analogues of meizothrombin (rMZa) and meizothrombin(desF1) (rMZdesF1a) were obtained. Studies of the activation of protein C in the presence of recombinant soluble thrombomodulin (TM) show TM-dependent stimulation of protein C activation by all three enzymes and, in the presence of phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylcholine phospholipid vesicles, rMZa is 6-fold more potent than rIIa. In the presence of TM, rMZa was also shown to be an effective activator of
TAFI
(thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor) (Bajzar, L., Manuel, R., and Nesheim, M. E. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 14477-14484). All three enzymes were capable of inducing platelet aggregation, but 60-fold higher concentrations of rMZa and rMZdesF1a were required to achieve the effects obtained with rIIa. Second order rate constants (M-1.min-1) for inhibition by antithrombin III (AT-III) were 2.44 x 10(5) (rIIa), 6.10 x 10(4) (rMZa), and 1.05 x 10(5) (rMZdesF1a). The inhibition of rMZa and rMZdesF1a by AT-III is not affected by heparin. All three enzymes bound similarly to hirudin. The results of this and previous studies imply that full-length meizothrombin has marginal procoagulant properties compared to
thrombin
. However, meizothrombin has potent anticoagulant properties, expressed through TM-dependent activation of protein C, and can contribute to down-regulation of fibrinolysis through the TM-dependent activation of
TAFI
.
...
PMID:Functional characterization of recombinant human meizothrombin and Meizothrombin(desF1). Thrombomodulin-dependent activation of protein C and thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI), platelet aggregation, antithrombin-III inhibition. 904 33
Recently, it has been shown that Factor XI can be activated by
thrombin
, and that Factor XIa significantly contributes to the generation of
thrombin
via the intrinsic pathway after the clot has been formed. This additional
thrombin
, generated inside the clot, was found to protect the clot from fibrinolysis. A plausible mechanism for this inhibitory effect of
thrombin
involves
TAFI
(thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor, procarboxypeptidase B) which, upon activation, may inhibit fibrinolysis by removing carboxy-terminal lysines from fibrin. We studied the role of Factor XI and
TAFI
in fibrinolysis using a clot lysis assay. The lysis time was decreased twofold when
TAFI
was absent, when
TAFI
activation was inhibited by anti-
TAFI
antibodies, or when activated
TAFI
was inhibited by the competitive inhibitor (2-guanidinoethylmercapto)succinic acid. Inhibition of either
TAFI
activation or Factor XIa exhibited equivalent profibrinolytic effects. In the absence of
TAFI
, no additional effect of anti-Factor XI was observed on the rate of clot lysis. We conclude that the mechanism of Factor XI-dependent inhibition of fibrinolysis is through the generation of
thrombin
via the intrinsic pathway, and is dependent upon
TAFI
. This pathway may play a role in determining the fate of in vivo formed clots.
...
PMID:Thrombin-mediated activation of factor XI results in a thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor-dependent inhibition of fibrinolysis. 915 72
The precursor of
plasma carboxypeptidase B
(
pCPB
) also known as thrombin-activable fibrinolysis inhibitor can be converted by
thrombin
to an active enzyme capable of eliminating C-terminal Lys- and Arg-residues from proteins. The activation is about 1000-fold more efficient in the presence of thrombomodulin (TM). We investigated the antifibrinolytic potency of maximally activated
pCPB
in plasma and explored the antifibrinolytic mechanism of
pCPB
. During clotting of plasma in the presence of 3.3 NIH units/ml
thrombin
and 1 microg/ml soluble TM, more than 80% pro-
pCPB
was converted into the active form causing an increase of plasma carboxypeptidase activity from 100 units/liter (constitutive activity ascribed to plasma carboxypeptidase N) to 430 units/liter as measured with furoylacroleyl-alanyl-arginine substrate. Under these conditions, lysis of a plasma clot induced by a range of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) concentrations (0.2-2 microg/ml) was retarded more than 4-fold. A considerable retardation of fibrinolysis was observed upon addition of as little as 12 ng/ml soluble TM, a concentration comparable with physiological concentrations of soluble TM in human plasma. The presence of Ca2+ appeared to be a critical requirement for effective activation of pro-
pCPB
by
thrombin
-TM in plasma. Plasminogen-binding sites (C-terminal lysines) on the surface of a plasmin-treated fibrin clot were eliminated within 1-3 min by plasma with maximally activated
pCPB
, as studied in a recently described model involving fluorescence microscopy. Confocal fluorescence microscopy showed that in the absence of TM plasminogen strongly accumulated on fibrin fibers during t-PA-induced lysis of a plasma clot. In the presence of TM (and a concomitant pro-
pCPB
activation), lysis was slow and was not accompanied by accumulation of plasminogen on the fibers. In conclusion, generation of active
pCPB
during clotting of plasma in the presence of Ca2+ and TM leads to a retardation of plasma clot lysis in a wide range of t-PA concentrations, from low to therapeutic, and to a fast elimination of plasminogen-binding sites on partially degraded fibrin. This is a likely mechanism for the antifibrinolytic effect of active
pCPB
.
...
PMID:On the mechanism of the antifibrinolytic activity of plasma carboxypeptidase B. 916 90
The
thrombin
thrombomodulin dependent activation of the plasma protein
TAFI
(Thrombin Activatable Fibrinolysis Inhibitor) and Subsequent Inhibition of Fibrinolysis by the TAFIa is described. Work to date indicates that TAFIa is a carboxypeptidase B enzyme that suppress fibrinolysis most likely by down regulating the cofactor functions of partially degraded fibrin. The existence of
TAFI
provides the explanation for the apparent profibrinolytic effect of activated protein C. and implies the existence of an explicit molecular connection between the blood coagulation of fibrinolytic cascades that is expressed through the
thrombin
thrombomodulin dependent activation of
TAFI
. Thus,
thrombin
generation can, in principle, result in the suppression of fibrinolysis.
...
PMID:Thrombin, thrombomodulin and TAFI in the molecular link between coagulation and fibrinolysis. 919 84
TAFI
(thrombin-activable fibrinolysis inhibitor) is a recently described plasma zymogen that, when exposed to the
thrombin
-thrombomodulin complex, is converted by proteolysis at Arg92 to a basic carboxypeptidase that inhibits fibrinolysis (TAFIa). The studies described here were undertaken to elucidate the molecular basis for the inhibition of fibrinolysis. When TAFIa is included in a clot undergoing fibrinolysis induced by tissue plasminogen activator and plasminogen, the time to achieve lysis is prolonged, and free arginine and lysine are released over time. In addition, TAFIa prevents a 2.5-fold increase in the rate constant for plasminogen activation which occurs when fibrin is modified by plasmin in the early course of fibrin degradation. The effect is specific for the Glu- form of plasminogen. TAFIa prevents or at least attenuates positive feedback expressed through Lys-plasminogen formation during the process of fibrinolysis initiated by tissue plasminogen activator and plasminogen. TAFIa also inhibits plasmin activity in a clot and prolongs fibrinolysis initiated with plasmin. We conclude that TAFIa suppresses fibrinolysis by removing COOH-terminal lysine and arginine residues from fibrin, thereby reducing its cofactor functions in both plasminogen activation and the positive feedback conversion of Glu-plasminogen to Lys-plasminogen. At relatively elevated concentrations, it also directly inhibits plasmin.
...
PMID:A study of the mechanism of inhibition of fibrinolysis by activated thrombin-activable fibrinolysis inhibitor. 976 37
Plasma carboxypeptidase B
(
PCB
) is an exopeptidase that exerts an antifibrinolytic effect by releasing C-terminal Lys and Arg residues from partially degraded fibrin.
PCB
is produced in plasma via limited proteolysis of the zymogen, pro-
PCB
. In this report, we show that the K(m) (55 nM) for plasmin-catalyzed activation of pro-
PCB
is similar to the plasma concentration of pro-
PCB
(50-70 nM), whereas the K(m) for the
thrombin
- or
thrombin
:thrombomodulin-catalyzed reaction is 10-40-fold higher than the pro-
PCB
level in plasma. Additionally, tissue-type plasminogen activator triggers activation of pro-
PCB
in blood plasma in a reaction that is stimulated by a neutralizing antibody versus alpha(2)-antiplasmin. Together, these results show that plasmin-mediated activation of pro-
PCB
can occur in blood plasma. Heparin (UH) and other anionic glycosaminoglycans stimulate pro-
PCB
activation by plasmin but not by
thrombin
or
thrombin
:thrombomodulin. Pro-
PCB
is a more favorable substrate for plasmin in the presence of UH (16-fold increase in k(cat)/K(m)). UH also stabilizes
PCB
against spontaneous inactivation. The presence of UH in clots prepared with prothrombin-deficient plasma delays tissue-type plasminogen activator-triggered lysis; this effect of UH on clot lysis is blocked by a
PCB
inhibitor from potato tubers. These results show that UH accelerates plasmin-catalyzed activation of pro-
PCB
in plasma and
PCB
, in turn, stabilizes fibrin against fibrinolysis. We propose that glycosaminoglycans in the subendothelial extracellular matrix serve to augment the levels of
PCB
activity thereby stabilizing blood clots at sites where there is a breach in the integrity of the vasculature.
...
PMID:Characterization of plasmin-mediated activation of plasma procarboxypeptidase B. Modulation by glycosaminoglycans. 1057 83
Blood coagulation is an amplification system consisting of reactions between enzymes and zymogens. It has been illustrated as a cascade model. However, the exact mechanism by which haemostasis is achieved under physiological conditions remains to be clarified. The solving of structure-function relation of each coagulation factor, analysis of the enzymological characteristics of each reaction, analysis of the regulation mechanism of the reactions and identification of novel factors involved in coagulation reactions contribute to the understanding of this complex system. Based on these findings, some new conceptions of blood coagulation are proposed. In the model introduced in this review, the extrinsic pathway and the intrinsic pathway of the 'classical' cascade model of the blood coagulation system could not be separated, and the suppression of fibrinolysis by
TAFI
(
thrombin
activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor) during coagulation reactions is thought to be a critical process for effective haemostasis.
...
PMID:[Progress in research of the blood coagulation system]. 1058 63
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