Inhibition of thrombin generation by protein S at low procoagulant stimuli: implications for maintenance of the hemostatic balance

KM Sere, J Rosing, TM Hackeng*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The activated protein C (APC)-independent anticoagulant activity of protein S on tissue factor-induced thrombin generation was quantified in plasma. In absence of APC, protein S significantly decreased the endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) in a concentration-dependent manner. The APC-independent anticoagulant activity of protein S in plasma was not affected by phospholipid concentrations but strongly depended on tissue factor concentrations: protein S inhibited the ETP from 6% at 140 pM tissue factor to 74% at 1.4 pM tissue factor. Plasma with both 60% protein S and 140% prothrombin showed an ETP of 240% compared to normal plasma, suggesting an APC-independent protective role of protein S in the development of thrombosis as a result of protein S deficiency and the prothrombin-G20210A mutation. At high tissue-factor concentrations, protein S hardly expressed APC-independent anticoagulant activity but exerted potent APC-cofactor activity when thrombomodulin or APC were added to plasma. Neutralization of protein S under these conditions resulted in a 20-fold reduction of the anticoagulant activity of APC. The present study shows that protein S effectively regulates coagulation at 2 levels: at low procoagulant stimuli, protein S maintains the hemostatic balance by directly inhibiting thrombin formation, and at high procoagulant stimuli, protein S restores the hemostatic balance via its APC-cofactor activity. (C) 2004 by The American Society of Hematology.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3624-3630
Number of pages7
JournalBlood
Volume104
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2004

Keywords

  • INDEPENDENT ANTICOAGULANT ACTIVITY
  • GAMMA-CARBOXYGLUTAMIC ACID
  • HUMAN FACTOR-VIII
  • HUMAN-FACTOR-VA
  • COFACTOR ACTIVITY
  • FACTOR-X
  • PROTHROMBINASE COMPLEX
  • ENDOTHELIAL-CELLS
  • BINDING
  • PLASMA

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