Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.6 (thromboplastin)
13,278 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human alpha-thrombin, the thromboplastin activation product of prothrombin with high clotting and esterase activity, was produced from Cohn Fraction III paste. The procedure started with 0.4 to 3.2 kg of frozen paste and was completed in 2 or 3 days. Some 23 g of thrombin were recorded for 65 quantitated preparations made from 11 lots of Fraction III paste. These preparations were obtained at protein concentrations of 3.9 +/- 1.3 mg/ml with a yield of 340 +/- 110 mg/kg of paste, which represented 48 +/- 14% of the clotting potential extracted as prothrombin. They had specific clotting activities of 2.8 +/- 0.4 U.S. (NIH) units/microng of protein and titrated to 88 +/- 8% active with p-nitrophenyl-p'-guanidinobenzoate (NPGB). Those (N - 29) examined by labeling with [14C]diisopropyl phosphorofluoridate (iPr2P-F) and electrophoresing in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels were found to contain only (N = 4) or predominantly alpha-thrombin (97 +/- 3%) and corresponding amounts of ists degradation product, beta-thrombin (2.6 +/- 3.1%). No plasmin(ogen), prothrombin complex factors (II, VII, IX, IXalpha, X, Xalpha), or prothrombin fragments were detected in representative preparations. As produced in 0.75 M NaCl, pH approximately 6, thrombin was stable for approximately 1 week at 4 degrees and for greater than 1 year at less than or equal to 50 degrees; freeze-dried thrombin stored at 4 degrees for greater than 1 year displayed stable clotting activity and no vial to vial variation, permitting its use for reference purposes. Human thrombin generated by Taipan snake venom activation was compared with that produced by rapid thromboplastin activation: after treatment with [14C]iPr2P-F, greater than 95% of the label in both thrombins migrated at the same rate during electrophoresis in SDS; identical pairs of NH2-terminal residues were released in three consecutive Edman degradation cycles.
...
PMID:Human thrombins. Production, evaluation, and properties of alpha-thrombin. 1 8

By devising and applying quantitative methods for the assay of thrombin and autoprothrombin C and by developing techniques for their purification, it was possible to obtain information about the function and properties of antithrombin. The inhibitor is a protein for which the initial purification steps consist of removing fibrinogen from plasma by heating to 56 degrees for 3 min, removing prothrombin complex by absorption on barium carbonate, absorbing the antithrombin on aluminum hydroxide, and eluting with phosphate buffer. Antithrombin is limited in its capacity to neutralize thrombin activity, and, under some conditions, the rate of inhibition was accelerated, but equivocal results were involved. Heparin cofactor was found to be essential for retarding the formation of thrombin, and, by inference, it is essential for retarding the formation of autoprothrombin C. Heparin cofactor and antithrombin III are the same. Thrombin absorbs on fibrin, and this has been referred to as the "antithrombin I effect." Interference with the thrombin-fibrinogen reaction by mixtures of antithrombin III and heparin is called the "antithrombin II henomenon." The acceleration of thrombin inactivation at the time thrombin forms is called the "antithrombin IV effect." It was discovered that antithrombin III neutralizes thrombin, as well as autoprothrombin C. The inhibitor and the enzyme form a mutual depletion system. To assay for antithrombin III, a standard quantity of thrombin (about 1,100U/ml) was reacted with antithrombin III for 2 hr. The percent thrombin inactivated was then measured. In random samples of human blood, a wide range of antithrombin III concentration was found. The inhibitor is relatively stable in plasma and serum. It is not changed in concentration when Dicumarol therapy is instituted. Ether extraction of plasma reduces antithrombin III activity. Seitz filtration of plasma did not remove activity. Under special conditions, antithrombin III enhances esterase activity of thrombin. Under special conditions, thrombin regenerates from the thrombin-antithrombin III complex. Antithrombin III neutralizes the activity of prethrombin-E and thrombin-E; consequently, an active histidine center found in the B1 chain of thrombin is not essential for the binding of antithrombin. Autoprothrombin II-A activity was neutralized by antithrombin III. Autoprothrombin C was found to be neutralized by antithrombin III; the amounts required varied with the molecular forms of autoprothrombin C. Thrombin and autoprothrombin C apparently occupy the same binding sites on antithrombin III. An equation was developed to account for all the known characteristics of antithrombin III functions. The kinetic aspects of thrombin neutralization were found to correspond exactly with those of autoprothrombin C. Antithrombin III is a high-capacity inhibitor of the two most powerful enzymes in blood coagulation.
...
PMID:Antithrombin III: a backward glance o'er travel'd roads. 4 4

Prekallikrein, plasminogen and prothrombin of human blood plasma have been separately activated by caolin streptokinase and thromboplastin. By measuring the TAME-esterase (N-d Tozy-L-arginine methyl ester) activity of each enzyme and its changes in the course of plasma incubation with the activator, it was possible to estimate the values of precursors of kallikrein, plasmin, thrombin and their inhibitors. Evidence is given that under conditions described the activation is specific of each enzyme and does not affect the level of the two other percursors. The method has been developed in two modifications, permitting to obtain the value of seven parameters in 0.4--0.7 ml of blood plasma.
...
PMID:[Method of simultaneous determination of kallikrein, plasmin and thrombin precursors and inhibitors in human blood plasma]. 13 76

Inhibitory activities of alpha2-plasmin inhibitor against various proteases were investigated. The inhibitor promptly inhibited the esterolytic activity of alpha-chymotrypsin and progressively inhibited the esterolytic or amidolytic activities of bovine plasma kallikrein, bovine thrombin and bovine activated factor X. Heparin had no effect on the reaction of the inhibitor with thrombin or activated factor X. However, the inhibitor had no effect on the activities of human C-1-esterase, papain and snake venom kininogenase. On the basis of its rapid inhibition of kallikrein, alpha2-plasmin inhibitor is considered to exert some regulating effect on kallikrein activity in plasma.
...
PMID:Inhibition of proteases in coagulation, kinin-forming and complement systems by alpha2-plasmin inhibitor. 14 28

By means of CM-Sephadex column chromatography, Trimeresurus mucrosquamatus venom was separated into 20 fractions. Fraction XX had the marked anticoagulant action. This fraction was refractionated three times on Sephadex G-75, and a single peak was obtained. The patterns of microzone and disc electrophoresis also showed a single band. A single, symmetrical boundary with a value of 1.61 S was obtained by ultracentrifugation. It was a single peptide chain with a molecular weight of 11 700. The isoelectric point was higher than pH 10. The anticoagulant principle possessed phospholipase A activity and was calcium ion dependent. It did not possess proteolytic, tosyl-L-arginine methyl ester esterase, phosphodiesterase and alkaline phosphomonoesterase activities of the crude venom. The phospholipase A activity was heat-labile at pH 7.4, but was heat-stable at pH 5.6. The anticoagulant activity was more resistant to heat treatment as compared with phospholipase A activity. The anitoagulant action of the purified principle was competitively inhibited by platelet phospholid, tissue thromboplastin and cephalin, and was neutralized by antiserum. The anticoagulant principle inhibited platelet aggregation induced by ADP. It did not destroy fibrinogen, Factor X, prothrombin and thrombin; nor did it induce fibrinolysis nor interfere with the interaction between thrombin and fibrinogen. It is concluded that the anticoagulant action of this phospholipase A was due to the inhibition of the activations of Factors X and II through the inactivation of the procoagulant activity of phospholipids mediated partly by phospholipid-binding activity of this venom enzyme and partly by its enzymatic hydrolysis of phospholipids.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of the anticoagulant principle of Trimeresurus mucrosquamatus venom. 66 29

Products of bovine prothrombin acylation by citraconic anhydride, modified to 20--90% have been obtained. Disc-electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gel in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate has shown that the citraconylation of prothrombin is accompanied with spontaneous activation, resulting in formation of products with molecular weights identical to those of neoprothrombin C, neoprothrombin T, profragment and fragments A and C. Spontaneous activation upon the citraconylation is never completely recovered: the reaction products always contain a fraction, corresponding in molecular weight to prothrombin. Citraconylation products possess neither coagulating, nor esterase activity. Generation of esterase activity requires the presence of an enzyme--factor Xa, which splits the 323-324 peptide bond (Arg-Ile) in the molecules of prothrombin and intermediate products of its activation. The mechanism of activation of citraconylated prothrombin products by factor Xa does not differ from the mechanism of native prothrombin activation by the enzyme. The esterase activity, which is generated after the incubation with factor Xa, is due to the building of citraconylthrombin and partly of the native thrombin; the latter may be formed at the low degree of prothrombin modification.
...
PMID:[Products of bovine prothrombin citraconylation and their activation by factor Xa]. 86 10

The ability of thrombin, immobilized on BrCN-activated Sepharose 4B, to split prothrombin, was studied. Immobilized thrombin retained up to 70% of its esterase activity and about 5% of its coagulating activity; it was also found to induce partial proteolysis of prothrombin. Two products of prothrombin degradation isolated, i.e. P1 (m. w. 50.000-52.000) and P2 (m. w. 22.000-24.000), did not show either the thrombin or the prothrombin activities. P1 was converted into thrombin under the action of tripsin or Factor Xa. The rate of conversion was considerably increased after addition of Factor V, thromboplastin and Ca2+ ions. Intravenous administration of P1 to rats resulted in changes in the coagulating system of blood, which may be probably indicative of the stimulation of the anticoagulating system. P2 possessed no thrombogenic activity.
...
PMID:[Prothrombin activation by immobilized thrombin]. 102 90

Most of the linkage of atherosclerosis and thrombosis with estrogens is epidemiologic in origin. Although the effects of estrogens on the mechanisms of hemostasis are wide ranging, many are benign; only a few may account for thrombus formation. Platelet function tests have provided extensive but contradictory data, and interpretation is limited because it is uncertain whether a rise in one or more of these parameters is a primary or secondary effect. The most consistent effects of estrogens on coagulation proteins are elevations of fibrinogen; factors II, VII, IX, X, and XII; protein C; and plasminogen. Although these elevations have been attributed to the estrogenic component in oral contraceptives, the progestogen concentration may also influence these increases. Among other coagulation proteins studied, the following are unaffected by oral contraceptive use: factors V, VIII, and XI; prekallikrein; and high-molecular-weight kininogen. In contrast, protein S values are decreased. The plasma concentration of plasmin inhibitor is unchanged, whereas both proteinase inhibitor and macroglobulin are significantly increased by oral contraceptive use. Cl esterase inhibitor is decreased in women taking oral contraceptives and correlates with the increase in Hageman factor. Antithrombin III is one plasma inhibitor for which a decrease in quantity and activity have been associated with a thrombotic tendency in humans. Although data on estrogen-associated changes in the quantity of antithrombin III have been conflicting, the ability of plasma to inhibit factor Xa is significantly reduced in a dose-dependent manner among pre- and postmenopausal estrogen users.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Estrogen-associated thromboembolism. 134 94

A heritable elevation in alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) was identified in a 9-year-old girl with a severe bleeding tendency and activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) prolonged to 49.1 sec (normal 27-38) as well as recalcification time prolonged to 438 sec (less than 180). The addition of her plasma to normal plasma made APTT prolong from 26.8 to 38.3 sec. The plasma alpha 2M levels in her relatives were checked, i.e., proband, her sister, mother, maternal grandmother, father, and paternal grandmother: Their levels were 406, 380, 352, 339, 166 and 236 mg/100 ml (140-285), respectively. Thus the patient's condition was thought to be an autosomal dominant disease, though her other relatives displayed no apparent clinical symptoms. Of significance was that a possible causal association between her elevated alpha 2M and her prolonged APTT was indicated. The activity of the alpha 2M, determined as trypsin-protein esterase, was 351 mg/100 ml (197%). The alpha 2M also demonstrated normal horizontal mobility to anti-alpha 2M plasma with a high precipitin arc (showing the difference of the protein concentration) by crossed immunoelectrophoresis, and a normal horizontal mobility of immunofixation electrophoresis. In addition, after analysis of testing done by SDS-polyacrylamide-gel-electrophoresis, we found no qualitative abnormality in the alpha 2M of the patient.
...
PMID:A new bleeding tendency due to hereditary hyper alpha 2-macroglobulinemia. 246 Sep 68

Disturbances of blood coagulation were studied in 32 consecutive patients with typhoid fever on their admission to hospital. Estimations of prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, fibrinogen, fibrin degradation products (FDPs), factors VII, VIII and XII, alpha I antitrypsin, plasminogen, CI esterase inhibitor, and platelet counts were performed as well as liver function tests and blood counts. Five patients had laboratory evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and two had a generalised bleeding disorder which in the other three was inapparent. The platelet count in the group as a whole was low (P less than 0.05) and the FDPs in most cases were mildly elevated. The pre-kallikrein values were depressed in three of the five with DIC, whereas factor XII was not reduced. These results indicate that bleeding disorders in typhoid fever are uncommon. The depression of pre-kallikrein indicates that the DIC is probably triggered by activation of the intrinsic coagulation pathway. Most patients had lymphopenia and monocytopenia but only two had neutropenia.
...
PMID:Disturbances of blood coagulation associated with Salmonella typhi infections. 335 16


1 2 3 4 Next >>