scholarly journals Identification of a Unique Glomerular Factor X Activator in Murine Lupus Nephritis

1999 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 2332-2341
Author(s):  
SUBODINI PERAMPALAM ◽  
LUOQUAN WANG ◽  
NANCY MYERS-MASON ◽  
JEN NEI YEOW ◽  
NIR STANIETSKY ◽  
...  

Abstract. The role of glomerular procoagulant activity (PCA) was studied in mice (MRL/lpr, NZBxWF1, and BXSB) that are known to develop lupus nephritis. In young mice (6 to 8 wk) without renal disease, there was no increase in spontaneous glomerular PCA. In contrast, older (5 to 8 mo) autoimmune mice had significant augmentation in glomerular PCA, coinciding with the histologic appearance of severe glomerulonephritis and renal fibrin deposition. The PCA was characterized as a serine protease that directly activated factor X. This factor X activator is not tissue factor because (1) expression of PCA was not dependent on factor VII; (2) a monoclonal antibody against the factor X activator inhibited glomerular PCA, but not tissue factor; (3) the molecular weight (66 kD) of the activator was different from that of tissue factor; and (4) concanavalin A inhibited tissue factor but not glomerular PCA. Immunohistochemical studies localized the factor X activator to the glomerular mesangium and capillary wall of 4- to 6-moold diseased MRL/lpr mice. Immunogold-labeled antibody bound to the dense deposits, macrophages, and endothelial cells of diseased glomeruli. These studies define the role of a unique glomerular factor X activator in murine lupus nephritis.

Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (4) ◽  
pp. 968-975
Author(s):  
HJ Weiss ◽  
VT Turitto ◽  
HR Baumgartner ◽  
Y Nemerson ◽  
T Hoffmann

By a variety of methods, tissue factor activity was demonstrated in the subendothelium of rabbit aorta and human umbilical artery. In one method, everted segments of de-endothelialized vessels were mounted in an annular perfusion chamber and the subendothelial surface was exposed to nonanticoagulated human blood under controlled flow. Procoagulant activity was assessed by measuring fibrin deposition on subendothelium and fibrinopeptide A (FPA) levels in post chamber blood. Both fibrin deposition and FPA were decreased with rabbit vessel segments exposed (at a shear rate of 650 seconds-1) to blood from patients with factor VII deficiency and with umbilical artery segments (at shear rates of 90 to 180 seconds-1) that had been pretreated with a monoclonal antibody to human tissue factor. In a second method, everted umbilical artery segments were mounted on a stir bar and the subendothelial surface was exposed, with stirring, to plasma or purified coagulation factors. The capacity of the surface to clot plasma on addition of calcium was inhibited by the antibody to tissue factor. The surface also activated purified 3H-factor X in the presence of factor VIIa, but not in its absence, and this surface property was almost entirely eliminated by pretreating the vessel segments with antitissue factor. Tissue factor activity in subendothelium could play a role in both the arrest of bleeding and in promoting the formation of thrombi at sites of vascular injury.


Blood ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 73 (4) ◽  
pp. 968-975 ◽  
Author(s):  
HJ Weiss ◽  
VT Turitto ◽  
HR Baumgartner ◽  
Y Nemerson ◽  
T Hoffmann

Abstract By a variety of methods, tissue factor activity was demonstrated in the subendothelium of rabbit aorta and human umbilical artery. In one method, everted segments of de-endothelialized vessels were mounted in an annular perfusion chamber and the subendothelial surface was exposed to nonanticoagulated human blood under controlled flow. Procoagulant activity was assessed by measuring fibrin deposition on subendothelium and fibrinopeptide A (FPA) levels in post chamber blood. Both fibrin deposition and FPA were decreased with rabbit vessel segments exposed (at a shear rate of 650 seconds-1) to blood from patients with factor VII deficiency and with umbilical artery segments (at shear rates of 90 to 180 seconds-1) that had been pretreated with a monoclonal antibody to human tissue factor. In a second method, everted umbilical artery segments were mounted on a stir bar and the subendothelial surface was exposed, with stirring, to plasma or purified coagulation factors. The capacity of the surface to clot plasma on addition of calcium was inhibited by the antibody to tissue factor. The surface also activated purified 3H-factor X in the presence of factor VIIa, but not in its absence, and this surface property was almost entirely eliminated by pretreating the vessel segments with antitissue factor. Tissue factor activity in subendothelium could play a role in both the arrest of bleeding and in promoting the formation of thrombi at sites of vascular injury.


1974 ◽  
Vol 32 (01) ◽  
pp. 057-064 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y Nemerson ◽  
S.A Silverberg ◽  
J Jesty

SummaryTwo reactions of the extrinsic pathway of coagulation, the activations of Factor X and prothrombin, have been studied in purified systems and shown to be self-damping. Factor X was activated by the tissue factor - Factor VII complex, and prothrombin by two systems: the coagulant protein of Taipan venom, and the physiological complex of activated Factor X, Factor V, lipid, and calcium ions. In each case the yield of enzyme, activated Factor X or thrombin, is a function of the concentration of activator. These and other observations are considered as a basis for a control mechanism in coagulation.


1991 ◽  
Vol 65 (02) ◽  
pp. 139-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia H Gemmell ◽  
Vincet T Turitto ◽  
Yale Nemerson

SummaryA novel reactor recently described for studying phospholipiddependent blood coagulation reactions under flow conditions similar to those occurring in the vasculature has been further charactenzed. The reactor is a capitlary whose inner wall is coated with a stable phospholipid bilayer (or two bilayers) containing tissue factor, a transmembrane protein that is required for the enzymatic activation of factor X by factor VIIa. Perfusion of the capillary at wall shear rates ranging from 25 s−1 to 1,200 s−1 with purified bovine factors X and VIIa led to steady state factor Xa levels at the outlet. Assay were performed using a chromogenic substrate, SpectrozymeTMFXa, or by using a radiometric technique. In the absence of Ca2+ or factor VIIa there was no product formation. No difference was noted in the levels of factor Xa achieved when non-activated factor VII was perfused. Once steady state was achieved further factor Xa production continued in the absence of factor VIIa implying a very strong association of factor VIIa with the tissue factor in the phospholipid membrane. In agreement with static vesicle-type studies the reactor was sensitive to wall tissue factor concentration, temperature and the presence of phosphatidylserine in the bilayer.


1976 ◽  
Vol 36 (01) ◽  
pp. 104-114 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. L Aronson ◽  
A. J Mustafa

SummaryHuman factor X was purified by several different procedures yielding products which had varying amounts of factor VII and factor IX. Treatment with CHC13 during the fractionation of the factor X removed 95% of the factor VII and factor IX activity and the resulting factor X activated more slowly when incubated in 25% sodium citrate. Removal of residual factor VII by DEAE cellulose chromatography yielded a factor X which activated still more slowly and less completely. When the factor VII, removed by chromatography, was added to the chromatographed factor X, the ability to be activated in 25% sodium citrate was restored. Confirmatory evidence for the role of factor VII in this reaction was the inhibition of the conversion of the factor X by both DFP and SBTI.


Blood ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 204-212
Author(s):  
NL Sanders ◽  
SP Bajaj ◽  
A Zivelin ◽  
SI Rapaport

A study was carried out to explore requirements for the inhibition of tissue factor-factor VIIa enzymatic activity in plasma. Reaction mixtures contained plasma, 3H-factor IX or 3H-factor X, tissue factor (vol/vol 2.4% to 24%), and calcium. Tissue factor-factor VIIa activity was evaluated from progress curves of activation of factor IX or factor X, plotted from tritiated activation peptide release data. With normal plasma, progress curves exhibited initial limited activation followed by a plateau indicative of loss of tissue factor-factor VIIa activity. With hereditary factor X-deficient plasma treated with factor X antibodies, progress curves revealed full factor IX activation. Adding only 0.4 micrograms/mL factor X (final concentration) could restore inhibition. Inhibition was not observed in purified systems containing 6% to 24% tissue factor, factor VII, 0.5 micrograms/mL, factor IX, 13 micrograms/mL, and factor X up to 0.8 micrograms/mL, but could be induced by adding barium-absorbed plasma to the reaction mixture. Thus, both factor X and an additional material in plasma were required for inhibition. The amount of factor X needed appeared related to the concentration of tissue factor; adding more tissue factor at the plateau of a progress curve induced further activation. These results also indicate that inhibited reaction mixtures contained active free factor VII(a). Preliminary data suggest that inhibition may stem from loss of activity of the tissue factor component of the tissue factor- factor VII(a) complex.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 17-17
Author(s):  
Dougald Monroe ◽  
Mirella Ezban ◽  
Maureane Hoffman

Background.Recently a novel bifunctional antibody (emicizumab) that binds both factor IXa (FIXa) and factor X (FX) has been used to treat hemophilia A. Emicizumab has proven remarkably effective as a prophylactic treatment for hemophilia A; however there are patients that still experience bleeding. An approach to safely and effectively treating this bleeding in hemophilia A patients with inhibitors is recombinant factor VIIa (rFVIIa). When given at therapeutic levels, rFVIIa can enhance tissue factor (TF) dependent activation of FX as well as activating FX independently of TF. At therapeutic levels rFVIIa can also activate FIX. The goal of this study was to assess the role of the FIXa activated by rFVIIa when emicizumab is added to hemophilia A plasma. Methods. Thrombin generation assays were done in plasma using 100 µM lipid and 420 µM Z-Gly-Gly-Arg-AMC with or without emicizumab at 55 µg/mL which is the clinical steady state level. The reactions were initiated with low (1 pM) tissue factor (TF). rFVIIa was added at concentrations of 25-100 nM with 25 nM corresponding to the plasma levels achieved by a single clinical dose of 90 µg/mL. To study to the role of factor IX in the absence of factor VIII, it was necessary to create a double deficient plasma (factors VIII and IX deficient). This was done by taking antigen negative hemophilia B plasma and adding a neutralizing antibody to factor VIII (Haematologic Technologies, Essex Junction, VT, USA). Now varying concentrations of factor IX could be reconstituted into the plasma to give hemophilia A plasma. Results. As expected, in the double deficient plasma with low TF there was essentially no thrombin generation. Also as expected from previous studies, addition of rFVIIa to double deficient plasma gave a dose dependent increase in thrombin generation through activation of FX. Interestingly addition of plasma levels of FIX to the rFVIIa did not increase thrombin generation. Starting from double deficient plasma, as expected emicizumab did not increase thrombin generation since no factor IX was present. Also, in double deficient plasma with rFVIIa, emicizumab did not increase thrombin generation. But in double deficient plasma with FIX and rFVIIa, emicizumab significantly increased thrombin generation. The levels of thrombin generation increased in a dose dependent fashion with higher concentrations of rFVIIa giving higher levels of thrombin generation. Conclusion. Since addition of FIX to the double deficient plasma with rFVIIa did not increase thrombin generation, it suggests that rFVIIa activation of FX is the only source of the FXa needed for thrombin generation. So in the absence of factor VIII (or emicizumab) FIX activation does not contribute to thrombin generation. However, in the presence of emicizumab, while rFVIIa can still activate FX, FIXa formed by rFVIIa can complex with emicizumab to provide an additional source of FX activation. Thus rFVIIa activation of FIX explains the synergistic effect in thrombin generation observed when combining rFVIIa with emicizumab. The generation of FIXa at a site of injury is consistent with the safety profile observed in clinical use. Disclosures Monroe: Novo Nordisk:Research Funding.Ezban:Novo Nordisk:Current Employment.Hoffman:Novo Nordisk:Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 218-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
LV Rao ◽  
SP Bajaj ◽  
SI Rapaport

Abstract We have studied factor VII activation by measuring the ratio of factor VII clotting to coupled amidolytic activity (VIIc/VIIam) and cleavage of 125I-factor VII. In purified systems, a low concentration of Xa or a higher concentration of IXa rapidly activated 125I-factor VII, yielding a VIIc/VIIam ratio of 25 and similar gel profiles of heavy and light chain peaks of VIIa. On further incubation, VIIa activity diminished and a third 125I-peak appeared. When normal blood containing added 125I- factor VII was clotted in a glass tube, the VIIc/VIIam ratio rose fivefold, and 20% of the 125I-factor VII was cleaved. Clotting normal plasma in an activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) system yielded a VIIc/VIIam ratio of 25 and over 90% cleavage of 125I-factor VII. Clotting factor XII-deficient plasma preincubated with antibodies to factor X in an APTT system with added XIa yielded a VIIc/VIIam ratio of 19 and about 60% cleavage, which indicates that IXa, at a concentration achievable in plasma, can effectively activate factor VII. Clotting normal plasma with undiluted tissue factor yielded a VIIc/VIIam ratio of 15 to 20 and 60% cleavage of 125I-factor VII, whereas clotting plasma with diluted tissue factor activated factor VII only minimally. We conclude that both Xa and IXa can function as significant activators of factor VII in in vitro clotting mixtures but believe that only small amounts of factor VII may be activated in vivo during hemostasis.


Blood ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 204-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
NL Sanders ◽  
SP Bajaj ◽  
A Zivelin ◽  
SI Rapaport

Abstract A study was carried out to explore requirements for the inhibition of tissue factor-factor VIIa enzymatic activity in plasma. Reaction mixtures contained plasma, 3H-factor IX or 3H-factor X, tissue factor (vol/vol 2.4% to 24%), and calcium. Tissue factor-factor VIIa activity was evaluated from progress curves of activation of factor IX or factor X, plotted from tritiated activation peptide release data. With normal plasma, progress curves exhibited initial limited activation followed by a plateau indicative of loss of tissue factor-factor VIIa activity. With hereditary factor X-deficient plasma treated with factor X antibodies, progress curves revealed full factor IX activation. Adding only 0.4 micrograms/mL factor X (final concentration) could restore inhibition. Inhibition was not observed in purified systems containing 6% to 24% tissue factor, factor VII, 0.5 micrograms/mL, factor IX, 13 micrograms/mL, and factor X up to 0.8 micrograms/mL, but could be induced by adding barium-absorbed plasma to the reaction mixture. Thus, both factor X and an additional material in plasma were required for inhibition. The amount of factor X needed appeared related to the concentration of tissue factor; adding more tissue factor at the plateau of a progress curve induced further activation. These results also indicate that inhibited reaction mixtures contained active free factor VII(a). Preliminary data suggest that inhibition may stem from loss of activity of the tissue factor component of the tissue factor- factor VII(a) complex.


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