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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)
Small pulmonary arterial thromboses can occur following splenectomy of patients with haemoglobin E/beta-thalassaemia (Hb E/beta-thal). We compared plasma markers of coagulation activation in vivo and red blood cell (RBC) markers of procoagulant activity in 15 Hb E/beta-thal patients who were not splenectomized (NS), 15 who had been splenectomized (S), and 15 normal controls (NC). Levels of plasma
thrombin
-antithrombin III complex (TAT) were significantly higher in the S group than in either the NS or the NC groups, and levels of prothrombin fragment 1.2 (F 1.2) were significantly higher in the S than in the NC group. Diluted Russell's viper venom clotting times were significantly shorter when RBCs from group S patients were added to the assay compared with RBCs from the NC group. Phosphatidylserine (PS) expression (% of
annexin V
-positive RBCs) on the outer leaflet of RBC membrane of both 'larger'- and 'smaller'-sized RBCs was significantly higher for the S than the NC group. The RBC PS expression of the S and the NS groups, respectively, accounted for 25 x 3% (P = 0 x 174) and 6.3% (P = 0 x 675) of the variation in plasma TAT levels. Our findings indicated that, when compared with NC, splenectomized patients with Hb E/beta-thal were in a chronic low-grade hypercoagulable state associated with increased numbers of circulating PS exposed RBCs. This condition may have a role in the risk of these patients for pulmonary arterial thromboses.
...
PMID:Relationship between hypercoagulable state and erythrocyte phosphatidylserine exposure in splenectomized haemoglobin E/beta-thalassaemic patients. 1218 Oct 63
The adapter protein SLP-76 is a critical mediator of signal transduction via the platelet collagen receptor glycoprotein VI (GPVI) and its coreceptor FcRgamma. We tested the hypothesis that SLP-76 is required for collagen-induced procoagulant responses in murine platelets. Platelets from SLP-76 null (SLP-76(-/-)) or heterozygous (SLP-76(+/-)) mice were activated with the GPVI agonist convulxin, and surface expression of P-selectin (a marker of granule release) and
annexin V
binding (a marker of procoagulant phospholipid) were determined by flow cytometry. Convulxin induced surface expression of P-selectin in SLP-76(+/-) platelets, but not SLP-76(-/-) platelets (P <.01), and failed to stimulate
annexin V
binding to either SLP-76(+/-) or SLP-76(-/-) platelets. Platelet procoagulant activity was measured in a prothrombinase assay. Convulxin did not stimulate procoagulant activity in either SLP-76(+/-) or SLP-76(-/-) platelets, but fibrillar collagen produced a 1.9-fold increase in procoagulant activity in both SLP-76(+/-) and SLP-76(-/-) platelets (P <.001 versus unstimulated platelets). Similar results were obtained with platelets from FcRgamma null mice, for which collagen, but not convulxin, induced procoagulant activity (P <.01). Costimulation with
thrombin
and collagen produced a further (2.3-fold) increase in procoagulant activity in SLP-76(+/-) platelets (P <.05), but not in SLP-76(-/-) platelets. SLP-76(-/-) platelets also exhibited less
annexin V
binding than SLP-76(+/-) platelets after costimulation with
thrombin
and convulxin (P <.05). These findings demonstrate that an intact GPVI/FcRgamma/SLP-76 signal transduction pathway is not essential for platelet procoagulant activity induced by collagen but is necessary for maximal procoagulant response to costimulation with
thrombin
plus collagen. Thus, both GPVI-dependent and GPVI-independent pathways contribute to collagen-induced platelet procoagulant activity.
...
PMID:Role of the adapter protein SLP-76 in GPVI-dependent platelet procoagulant responses to collagen. 1235 93
Anionic phospholipids are largely absent from the external leaflet of the plasma membrane of mammalian cells under normal conditions. Exposure of phosphatidylserine on the cell surface occurs during apoptosis, necrosis, cell injury, cell activation, and malignant transformation. In the present study, we determined whether anionic phospholipids become exposed on tumor vasculature. A monoclonal antibody, 9D2, which specifically recognizes anionic phospholipids, was injected into mice bearing a variety of orthotopic or ectopic tumors. Other mice received
annexin V
, a natural ligand that binds to anionic phospholipids. Both 9D2 and
annexin V
specifically localized to vascular endothelium in all of the tumors, and also to tumor cells in and around regions of necrosis. Between 15 and 40% of endothelial cells in tumor vessels were stained. No localization was detected on normal endothelium. Various factors and tumor-associated conditions known to be present in the tumor microenvironment were examined for their ability to cause exposure of anionic phospholipids in cultured endothelial cells, as judged by 9D2 and
annexin V
binding. Hypoxia/reoxygenation, acidity,
thrombin
, and inflammatory cytokines all induced exposure of anionic phospholipids. Hydrogen peroxide was also a strong inducer. Combined treatment with inflammatory cytokines and hypoxia/reoxygenation had greater than additive effects. Possibly, injury and activation of tumor endothelium by cytokines and reactive oxygen species induce exposure of anionic phospholipids, most likely phosphatidylserine. Anionic phospholipids on tumor vessels could potentially provide markers for tumor vessel targeting and imaging.
...
PMID:Increased exposure of anionic phospholipids on the surface of tumor blood vessels. 1241 38
Interaction of platelets with collagen under conditions of blood flow is a multi-step process with tethering via glycoprotein IbIXV (GPIbIXV) over von Willebrand factor, adhesion by direct interaction with the integrin GPIaIIa, and signaling via GPVI. GPVI can be specifically agonized by cross-linked collagen-related peptide (CRP-XL), which results in a signaling cascade very similar to that evoked by native collagen. The GPVI gene has 2 common alleles that differ by 3 replacements in the glycosylated stem and 2 in the cytoplasmic domain. We used CRP-XL to elucidate the variation in responses observed in platelet function in different individuals. We observed a 3-fold difference in the response to CRP-XL in platelet aggregation when comparing platelets from 10 high-frequency allele homozygotes with 8 low-frequency ones (2-way analysis of variance [ANOVA], P <.0001). The difference in functional responses was reflected in fibrinogen binding and in downstream signaling events as measured by tyrosine phosphorylation, the expression of P-selectin, and the binding of
annexin V
and the generation of
thrombin
on the platelet surface (2-way ANOVA, P <.001). Platelets homozygous for the low-frequency allele tended to be less able to form a thrombus on a collagen surface in flowing whole blood or in the platelet function analyzer-100 (t test, P =.065 and P =.061, respectively). The functional difference was correlated to a difference in total and membrane-expressed GPVI measured by monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies. This study demonstrates for the first time that platelet function may be altered by allelic differences in GPVI.
...
PMID:The low-frequency allele of the platelet collagen signaling receptor glycoprotein VI is associated with reduced functional responses and expression. 1256 Feb 30
Disruption of the mouse gene encoding the
blood coagulation inhibitor
thrombomodulin (Thbd) leads to embryonic lethality caused by an unknown defect in the placenta. We show that the abortion of thrombomodulin-deficient embryos is caused by tissue factor-initiated activation of the blood coagulation cascade at the feto-maternal interface. Activated coagulation factors induce cell death and growth inhibition of placental trophoblast cells by two distinct mechanisms. The death of giant trophoblast cells is caused by conversion of the
thrombin
substrate fibrinogen to fibrin and subsequent formation of fibrin degradation products. In contrast, the growth arrest of trophoblast cells is not mediated by fibrin, but is a likely result of engagement of protease-activated receptors (PAR)-2 and PAR-4 by coagulation factors. These findings show a new function for the thrombomodulin-protein C system in controlling the growth and survival of trophoblast cells in the placenta. This function is essential for the maintenance of pregnancy.
...
PMID:The thrombomodulin-protein C system is essential for the maintenance of pregnancy. 1261 68
Plasma-reduced platelet concentrates are commonly administered to prevent febrile transfusion reactions and to avoid fluid overload in neonates. Because little is known about the influence of centrifugation and resuspension on functional aspects of platelets, we examined the effects of plasma-reduction on platelet aggregation and platelet-dependent
thrombin
generation. Our results show that plasma reduction and resuspension of the platelet pellet in saline or plasma results in a significant reduction in platelet aggregation to a combination of the platelet agonists adenosine diphosphate and epinephrine (p < 0.001). In contrast, when a combination of the more potent agonists collagen and
thrombin
was used, platelet aggregation was maintained. Likewise, no decline was observed in platelet-dependent
thrombin
generation as measured by the functional prothrombinase assay or
Annexin V
binding. We conclude that centrifugation and resuspension of platelets to render the concentrate plasma-free, as a routine procedure in blood banking, variably affects in vitro platelet aggregability but does not significantly affect platelet-dependent
thrombin
generation.
...
PMID:The effect of plasma depletion of platelet concentrates on platelet aggregation and phosphatidylserine expression. 1264 22
Prothrombinase activity was tested on
thrombin
- and SFLLRN-activated platelets treated with RO318220, a potent inhibitor of protein kinase C. RO318220 completely inhibited platelet dense and alpha-granule secretion at a concentration of 20 microM but had no effect on prothrombinase activity in the presence of excess factor Va (20 nM). This indicates that protein kinase C activity and agonist-initiated secretion are not necessary for the development of a procoagulant surface. Treatment with 75 to 150 microM RO318220 potentiated platelet-supported
thrombin
generation up to 280% of control platelets with no change in Kd appFXa. Treated with increasing concentrations of RO318220, an increasing proportion of
thrombin
-stimulated platelets bound
annexin V
with decreasing binding sites per platelet. A lower mean forward scatter (FSC-H) of platelets treated with RO318220 suggested platelet vesiculation as a result of RO318220 treatment; however, 100 microM calpeptin pretreatment eliminated the decrease in FSC-H without affecting either the increase in platelets positive for
annexin V
binding, the decrease in binding sites per platelet, or the 3-fold increase in prothrombinase activity. Thus, RO318220 appears to increase prothrombinase activity by increasing platelet responsiveness to
thrombin
rather than by inducing platelet vesiculation. This suggests that RO318220 inhibits a signaling molecule within a negative regulatory pathway that governs platelet procoagulant surface changes.
...
PMID:The protein kinase C inhibitor RO318220 potentiates thrombin-stimulated platelet-supported prothrombinase activity. 1280 57
von Willebrand Factor (VWF) is important in platelet adhesion and shear-dependent platelet activation. We performed flow cytometric analyses of VWF binding to and activation of platelets from healthy neonates, children, and adults. Platelets from cord blood (n = 38; gestational age: 36-42 wk; birth weight: 2.4-5.1 kg), neonatal venous blood (n = 19; d 2-3 of life), children (n = 15; age: 1.5-16.3 y), and adults (n = 22; age: 18-55 y) were studied. Binding of VWF was assessed using an antihuman VWF polyclonal antibody and a FITC-conjugated secondary antibody. Platelet activation was determined by the expression of CD62P, CD63, CD41, CD42b, activated GPIIb/IIIa (PAC-1), procoagulant surface (as reflected by
annexin V
binding), and microparticle formation. Although the mean percentage of VWF-positive platelets was not significantly higher in unstimulated platelets from 2- to 3-d-old neonates, their platelets were more activated than those from adults, and there was a positive correlation of VWF binding with platelet activation (CD62P: r = 0.74, p < 0.001;
annexin V
: r = 0.46, p < 0.05). In adults, after in vitro activation of platelets with
thrombin
and ADP, VWF binding to platelets increased and correlated significantly with CD62P expression (r = 0.71, p < 0.001). VWF binding to unstimulated neonatal platelets was, however, higher than that to in vitro-stimulated platelets from adults at the same level of expression of platelet activation markers. Further studies are required to assess the mechanism and significance of VWF binding to activated platelets in the neonatal period.
...
PMID:The relationship of von Willebrand factor binding to activated platelets from healthy neonates and adults. 1281 11
A cationic steroid with a hydrogen-bonding pocket that has an affinity for anionic phospholipid headgroups was synthesized and shown to strongly promote the translocation or flip-flop of a fluorescent, C(6)NBD-labeled phosphatidylserine probe (C(6)NBD-PS) across vesicle membranes. In addition, the synthetic PS scramblase increases the levels of endogenous PS on the surface of erythrocytes as monitored by flow cytometry analysis of
annexin V
-FITC binding. The PS scrambling effect is enhanced when the cells are pretreated with N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), an inhibitor of the endogenous aminophospholipid flippase. The combination of NEM and synthetic PS scramblase enhances the ability of erythrocytes to promote the conversion of prothrombin to
thrombin
by a factor of 4. An analogous cationic steroid with a smaller binding pocket has no measurable PS translocation activity, a result that is attributed to its inability to sufficiently diminish the hydrophilicity of the multiply charged PS headgroup.
...
PMID:Facilitated phosphatidylserine (PS) flip-flop and thrombin activation using a synthetic PS scramblase. 1283 89
Transmittance waveforms are generated during clot formation on photo-optical coagulation analyzers. We previously showed that 61.5% of patients with antiphospholipid antibodies (APLA) exhibited a negative deflection in the pre-coagulation phase of the prothrombin time (PT slope 1). The current studies investigated the 'molecular basis' of this abnormal parameter. We found that the negative PT slope 1 is IgG-mediated and is not dependent on the presence of fibrinogen or
thrombin
activity. We also found that IgG from most of the patients required a specific thromboplastin and the presence of prothrombin or beta(2)-glycoprotein I beta(2) GPI) to produce an abnormal IgG wave-form assay. In addition, the abnormal IgG waveform required cofactor binding to phospholipids when beta(2) GPI was the cofactor, and
annexin V
could partially block this interaction. In conclusion, these results showed that the interactions of IgG with phospholipids via beta(2) GPI or prothrombin constitute the core mechanisms of the abnormal waveforms.
...
PMID:Prothrombin and beta 2-glycoprotein I frequently contribute to antiphospholipid antibody interactions with phospholipids and the generation of abnormal waveform profiles in coagulation assays. 1288 68
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