Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.69 (APC)
16,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Plasma from women taking combined oral contraceptives and cold-activated plasma contain proteases which cleave chromogenic substrates in protein C assays in the absence of protein C activators such as Protac. This spontaneous activity makes a background substraction necessary and makes protein C (PC) assays less accurate. We investigated two commonly used substrates < Glu-Pro-Arg-pNA (S-2366) and 2AcOH.H-D-Lys(Cbo)-Pro-Arg-pNA (PC substrate) and found that cold-activated normal and protein C-deficient plasmas gave absorbance values up to 300 times higher than buffer blanks. FXIa cleaves these substrates but activity was not blocked by corn or lima bean trypsin inhibitors, soy bean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI), hirudin or epsilon-amino-n-caproic acid (EACA). Kaolin activation of normal, FXI, FIX, FVIII, FVII and protein C-deficient, but not of FXII or prekallikrein (PKK)-deficient plasmas led to cleavage of chromogenic substrate for protein C. The protein C substrates were cleaved by purified kallikrein and alpha- and beta-FXIIa. Immunoabsorption with alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) antibodies removed 60% of the alpha 2M and 70% of the activity on PC Substrate. Gel filtration of normal plasma on Sephadex G-150 gave a single peak of protein C activity and antigen in the included volume. After cold activation of the fractions, a second protein C-like peak appeared in the void volume, but with no detectable protein C antigen. This peak coincided with alpha 2M (chromogenic and ELISA) and plasma kallikrein (S-2302), but FXII (measured with a substrate insensitive to kallikrein) eluted separately.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Contact factor proteases and the complexes formed with alpha 2-macroglobulin can interfere in protein C assays by cleaving amidolytic substrates. 128 Apr 70

A family with inherited combined deficiency of factor V and von Willebrand factor (vWF) is reported. Hematological examination of 41 year-old female proband and her younger brother revealed prolonged prothrombin time and Kaolin partial thromboplastin time. The level of both factor V activity and factor V antigen markedly decreased, below 15% of normal. The decreased levels of factor VIII activity and vWF activity are also seen. Furthermore, abnormal mobilities were observed in crossed immunoelectrophoresis. The protein C, S antigens and activities, and protein C inhibitor activity were within normal. Four sons have received the 50% levels of factor V from their parents. One of them also showed the 50% of factor VIII and vWF activities. From above results, this family is thought to be a case of inherited deficiency of factor V and vWF, which are transmitted as an autosomal trait apparently.
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PMID:[A family of congenital combined deficiency of factor V and von Willebrand factor]. 236 42

Antiprothrombin and anti-beta2-glycoprotein I (beta2-GPI) antibodies belong to the family of antiphospholipid (APL) antibodies and represent the phospholipid-dependent inhibitors of coagulation. They may be distinguished by analyzing the coagulation profiles generated by the comparison of the ratios of two coagulation tests, the Kaolin Clotting Time (KCT) and the dilute Russell's Viper Venom Time (dRVVT), commonly adopted for their diagnosis. The KCT profile is caused by antiprothrombin antibodies, whereas anti-beta2-GPI antibodies are responsible for the dRVVT coagulation profile. The presence of aPL antibodies is frequently associated with acquired resistance to activated Protein C (APC-R), but limited information is available regarding the role of the different antibodies in its development. We studied the time-course of activated Factor V (FVa) generation and inactivation in the plasma of 42 patients with well-defined phospholipid-dependent inhibitors of coagulation: 24 displayed the dRVVT coagulation profile, whereas the other 18 cases showed the KCT profile. In normal pooled plasma, the peak values of FVa (mean +/- standard deviation, [SD]: 16.307 +/- 4.372 U/mL) were reached in 4 to 5 minutes and an almost complete inactivation (0.088 +/- 0.123 U/mL) was obtained within 20 minutes. At this time point, values of residual FVa exceeding 2 SD the mean of controls (0.344 U/mL) were considered abnormal. Patients belonging to the KCT coagulation profile group reached the maximal amount of FVa in plasma (22.740 +/- 7.693 U/mL, P = not significant v controls) within 4 to 5 minutes; at 20 minutes, the residual amount of FVa in plasma ranged from 0 to 1.09 U/mL (0.293 +/- 0.298; P = .027), but it was found abnormal in only six of the 18 cases. The time-course of FVa in plasma of patients belonging to the dRVVT coagulation profile group differed from that of normal controls in that the peak values (10.955 +/- 5.092 U/mL) were reached at 10 minutes and the amount of residual FVa at 20 minutes ranged from 0.320 to 14.450 U/ml (2.544 +/- 3.580 U/mL; P = .0191 v normal controls and P = . 0114 v KCT group patients). Twenty of the 24 patients belonging to the dRVVT profile group had an abnormal inactivation of FVa (chi2 = 0.001 v KCT group patients). History of venous thrombosis was experienced by 15 patients: an abnormal rate of FVa inactivation was found in 11 of them (73%) versus 15 of the 27 cases without thrombosis (56%) (x2 = 0.2556). The effect of affinity-purified IgG phospholipid-dependent inhibitors of coagulation on the time-course of FVa generation and inactivation in normal plasma was also investigated. Anti-beta2-GPI, but not antiprothrombin antibodies, hampered the inactivation of FVa by endogenous APC, thus reproducing the behavior of the original plasmas. This effect was strictly beta2-GPI-dependent. In conclusion, our findings confirm that anti-beta2-GPI antibodies identify patients with phospholipid-dependent inhibitors of coagulation at increased risk of thrombosis and suggest acquired APC-R as a possible explanation of the pathogenesis of the thromboembolic events.
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PMID:Differential effects of anti-beta2-glycoprotein I and antiprothrombin antibodies on the anticoagulant activity of activated protein C. 976 96

"Antiphospholipid" (aPL) antibodies comprise two main groups of antibodies, lupus anticoagulant (LA) antibodies and "anticardiolipin" (aCL) antibodies which can be separated by certain chromatographic techniques. In this study we analysed the plasma of 10 patients with aPL antibodies, and were able to demonstrate that in four patients with both clotting test reactivities, the dilute Russell's Viper Venom Time (dRVVT) activity can be separated from the dilute Kaolin Clotting Time (dKCT) reactivity by using a polyacrylamide-immobilised phosphatidylserine column but not with phospholipid liposomes. The differential reactivity of the autoantibodies in this patient population is not due to binding to beta2GPI, prothrombin or protein C in solid-phase immunoassays. Hence LA antibodies detected in different phospholipid-dependent clotting tests detect different populations of antibodies in some APS patients and the routine detection of LA antibodies should be performed with at least two clotting tests looking at different coagulation reactions.
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PMID:Heterogeneity of lupus anticoagulant (LA) antibodies: LA activity in dilute Russell's Viper Venom Time and dilute Kaolin Clotting Time detect different populations of antibodies in patients with the "antiphospholipid" syndrome. 971 48