Activated platelets but not endothelial cells participate in the initiation of the consolidation phase of blood coagulation. (25/216)

To address the question of whether initiation of the consolidation phase of coagulation occurs on platelets or on endothelium, we have examined the interaction of coagulation factor XI with human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and with platelets. In microtiter wells factor XI binds to more sites in the absence of HUVEC (1.8 x 10(10) sites/well, K(D) = 2.6 nm) than in their presence (1.3 x 10(10) sites/well, K(D) = 12 nm) when high molecular weight kininogen (HK) and zinc are present. Binding was volume-dependent and abrogated by HUVEC or Chinese hamster ovary cells and was a function of nonspecific binding of HK to the artificial plastic surface. Factor XI did not bind to HUVEC or to HEK293 cell monolayers anchored to microcarrier beads. Activation of HUVEC resulted in von Willebrand's factor secretion, but factor XI binding was not observed. Only activated platelets supported factor XI binding in the presence of HK and zinc (K(D) = 8 nm, B(max) = 1319 sites/cell). Activation of factor XI was observed in plasma in the presence of platelets activated by the thrombin receptor activation peptide but not with activated HUVEC. These results support the concept that activated platelets, but not endothelial cells, expose a procoagulant surface for binding and activating factor XI, thereby initiating the consolidation phase of coagulation.  (+info)

Molecular cloning and biochemical characterization of rabbit factor XI. (26/216)

Human factor XI, a plasma glycoprotein required for normal haemostasis, is a homodimer (160 kDa) formed by a single interchain disulphide bond linking the Cys-321 of each Apple 4 domain. Bovine, porcine and murine factor XI are also disulphide-linked homodimers. Rabbit factor XI, however, is an 80 kDa polypeptide on non-reducing SDS/PAGE, suggesting that rabbit factor XI exists and functions physiologically either as a monomer, as does prekallikrein, a structural homologue to factor XI, or as a non-covalent homodimer. We have investigated the structure and function of rabbit factor XI to gain insight into the relation between homodimeric structure and factor XI function. Characterization of the cDNA sequence of rabbit factor XI and its amino acid translation revealed that in the rabbit protein a His residue replaces the Cys-321 that forms the interchain disulphide linkage in human factor XI, explaining why rabbit factor XI is a monomer in non-reducing SDS/PAGE. On size-exclusion chromatography, however, purified plasma rabbit factor XI, like the human protein and unlike prekallikrein, eluted as a dimer, demonstrating that rabbit factor XI circulates as a non-covalent dimer. In functional assays rabbit factor XI and human factor XI behaved similarly. Both monomeric and dimeric factor XI were detected in extracts of cells expressing rabbit factor XI. We conclude that the failure of rabbit factor XI to form a covalent homodimer due to the replacement of Cys-321 with His does not impair its functional activity because it exists in plasma as a non-covalent homodimer and homodimerization is an intracellular process.  (+info)

Hemophilia A and B are associated with abnormal spatial dynamics of clot growth. (27/216)

To gain greater insight into the nature of the bleeding tendency in hemophilia, we compared the spatial dynamics of clotting in platelet-free plasma from healthy donors and from patients with severe hemophilia A or B (factor VIII:C or IX:C<1%). Clotting was initiated via the intrinsic or extrinsic pathway in a thin layer of nonstirred plasma by bringing it in contact with the glass or fibroblast monolayer surface. The results suggest that clot growth is a process consisting of two distinct phases, initiation and elongation. The clotting events on the activator surface and the preceding period free of visible signs of clotting are the initiation phase. In experiments with and without stirring alike, this phase is prolonged in hemophilic plasma activated by the intrinsic, but not the extrinsic pathway. Strikingly, both hemophilia A and B are associated with a significant deterioration in the elongation phase (clot thickening), irrespective of the activation pathway. The rate of clot growth in hemophilic plasma is significantly lower than normal and declines quickly. The resulting clots are thin, which may account for the bleeding disorder.  (+info)

Co-segregation of thrombophilic disorders in factor V Leiden carriers; the contributions of factor VIII, factor XI, thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor and lipoprotein(a) to the absolute risk of venous thromboembolism. (28/216)

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The clinical expression of factor V Leiden varies widely within and between families and only a minority of carriers will ever develop venous thromboembolism. Co-segregation of thrombophilic disorders is a possible explanation. Our aim was to assess the contributions of high levels of factor VIII:C, factor XI:C, thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) and lipoprotein (a) (Lp(a)) to the risk of venous thromboembolism in factor V Leiden carriers. DESIGN AND METHODS: Levels of the four proteins were measured, in addition to tests of deficiencies for antithrombin, protein C and protein S, and the prothrombin G20210A mutation, in 153 factor V Leiden carriers, derived from a family cohort study. The (adjusted) relative risk and absolute risk of venous thromboembolism for high levels of each protein were calculated. RESULTS: Of carriers, 60% had one or more concomitant thrombophilic disorders. Crude odds ratios (95% CI) of venous thromboembolism for high protein levels were: 3.2 (1.1-9.3) (factor VIII:C); 1.7 (0.6-4.9) (factor XI:C); 3.0 (1.1-8.2) (TAFI); and 1.9 (0.7-5.7) (Lp(a)). Adjusted for age, sex, other concomitant thrombophilic disorders and exogenous risk factors, the odds ratio for venous thromboembolism were 2.7 (0.8-8.7) for high factor VIII:C levels and 1.8 (0.6-5.3) for high TAFI levels. Annual incidences in subgroups of carriers were 0.35% (0.09-0.89), 0.44% (0.05-1.57) and 0.94% (0.35-2.05) for concomitance of high levels of factor VIII:C, TAFI and both, respectively, as compared to 0.09% (0.00-0.48) in single factor V Leiden carriers and 1.11% (0.30-2.82) for other concomitant disorders. INTERPRETATION AND CONCLUSIONS: High levels of factor VIII:C and TAFI, in contrast with factor XI:C and Lp(a), are mild risk factors for venous thromboembolism, and substantially contribute to the risk of venous thromboembolism in factor V Leiden carriers. Our data support the hypothesis that the clinical expression of factor V Leiden depends on co-segregation of thrombophilic disorders.  (+info)

The glycoprotein Ib-IX-V complex mediates localization of factor XI to lipid rafts on the platelet membrane. (29/216)

Factor XI binds to activated platelets where it is efficiently activated by thrombin. The factor XI receptor is the platelet membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX-V complex (Baglia, F. A., Badellino, K. O., Li, C. Q., Lopez, J. A., and Walsh, P. N. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 1662-1668), a significant fraction of which exists within lipid rafts on stimulated platelets (Shrimpton, C. N., Borthakur, G., Larrucea, S., Cruz, M. A., Dong, J. F., and Lopez, J. A. (2002) J. Exp. Med. 196, 1057-1066). Lipid rafts are membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids implicated in localizing membrane ligands and in cellular signaling. We now show that factor XI was localized to lipid rafts in activated platelets ( approximately 8% of total bound) but not in resting platelets. Optimal binding of factor XI to membrane rafts required prothrombin (and Ca2+) or high molecular weight kininogen (and Zn2+), which are required for factor XI binding to platelets. An antibody to GPIb (SZ-2) that disrupts factor XI binding to the GPIb-IX-V complex also disrupted factor XI-raft association. The isolated recombinant Apple 3 domain of factor XI, which mediates factor XI binding to platelets, also completely displaces factor XI from membrane rafts. To investigate the physiological relevance of the factor XI-raft association, the structural integrity of lipid rafts was disrupted by cholesterol depletion utilizing methyl-beta-cyclodextrin. Cholesterol depletion completely prevented FXI binding to lipid rafts, and initial rates of factor XI activation by thrombin on activated platelets were inhibited >85%. We conclude that factor XI is localized to GPIb in membrane rafts and that this association is important for promoting the activation of factor XI by thrombin on the platelet surface.  (+info)

Prevalence, causes, and characterization of factor XI inhibitors in patients with inherited factor XI deficiency. (30/216)

Factor XI deficiency, an injury-related bleeding disorder, is rare worldwide but common in Jews in whom 2 mutations, Glu117Stop (type II) and Phe283Leu (type III), prevail. Mean factor XI activities in homozygotes for Glu117Stop and for Phe283Leu are 1 and 10 U/dL, respectively. Inhibitors to factor XI in patients with severe factor XI deficiency have been reported in a small number of instances. This study was undertaken to determine the prevalence of acquired inhibitors against factor XI in patients with severe factor XI deficiency, discern whether these inhibitors are related to specific mutations, and characterize their activity. Clinical information was obtained from unrelated patients with severe factor XI deficiency, and blood was analyzed for factor XI activity, inhibitor to factor XI, and causative mutations. Immunoglobulin G purified from patients with an inhibitory activity was tested for binding to factor XI, effects on activation of factor XI by factor XIIa and thrombin, and activation of factor IX by exogenous factor XIa. Of 118 Israeli patients, 7 had an inhibitor; all belonged to a subgroup of 21 homozygotes for Glu117Stop who had a history of plasma replacement therapy. Three additional patients with inhibitors from the United Kingdom and the United States also had this genotype and were exposed to plasma. The inhibitors affected factor XI activation by thrombin or factor XIIa, and activation of factor IX by factor XIa. The results imply that patients with a very low factor XI level are susceptible to development of an inhibitor following plasma replacement.  (+info)

Factor XI, but not prekallikrein, blocks high molecular weight kininogen binding to human umbilical vein endothelial cells. (31/216)

Previous studies on the interaction of high molecular weight kininogen (HK) with endothelial cells have reported a large number of binding sites (106-107 sites/cell) with differing relative affinities (KD = 7-130 nm) and have implicated various receptors or receptor complexes. In this study, we examined the binding of HK to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) with a novel assay system utilizing HUVEC immobilized on microcarrier beads, which eliminates the detection of the high affinity binding sites found nonspecifically in conventional microtiter well assays. We report that HK binds to 8.5 x 104 high affinity (KD = 21 nm) sites per HUVEC, i.e. 10-100-fold fewer than previously reported. Although HK binding is unaffected by the presence of a physiological concentration of prekallikrein, factor XI abrogates HK binding to HUVEC in a concentration-dependent manner. Disruption of the naturally occurring complex between factor XI and HK by the addition of a 31-amino acid peptide mimicking the factor XI-binding site on HK restored HK binding to HUVEC. Furthermore, HK inhibited thrombin-stimulated von Willebrand factor release by HUVEC but not thrombin receptor activation peptide (SFLLRN-amide)-stimulated von Willebrand factor release. Factor XI restored the ability of thrombin to stimulate von Willebrand factor release in the presence of low HK concentrations. These results suggest that free HK, or HK in complex with prekallikrein but not in complex with factor XI, interacts with the endothelium and can maintain endothelial cell quiescence by preventing endothelial stimulation by thrombin.  (+info)

Factor XI-dependence of surface- and tissue factor-initiated thrombus propagation in primates. (32/216)

Thrombin, generated through activation of factor XI (FXI) and/or tissue factor (TF)-factor VIIa, is essential for thrombosis and hemostasis. We investigated the role of FXI-dependent thrombus propagation under arterial flow conditions producing rapid thrombus growth that, after the initiation phase, could limit the availability of TF at the blood/thrombus interface. Thrombosis was initiated by knitted dacron or TF-presenting teflon grafts deployed into arteriovenous shunts in baboons treated with antihuman FXI antibody (aFXI). Although aFXI did not prevent thrombus initiation, it markedly reduced intraluminal thrombus growth on both surfaces. The antithrombotic effect of aFXI was comparable with that of heparin at doses that significantly prolonged the partial thromboplastin time (APTT), prothrombin time (PT), and bleeding time (BT). aFXI also prolonged the APTT, but the PT and BT were unaffected. Thus, antithrombotic targeting of FXI might inhibit thrombosis with relatively modest hemostatic impairment versus strategies targeting other coagulation factors.  (+info)