Tissue factor pathway inhibitor-alpha inhibits prothrombinase during the initiation of blood coagulation

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Abstract

Tissue factor (TF) pathway inhibitor (TFPI) is a well-characterized activated factor X (FXa)-dependent inhibitor of TF-initiated coagulation produced in two alternatively spliced isoforms, TFPI and TFPI. The TFPI/ C terminus has a basic sequence nearly identical to a portion of the factor V (FV) B domain necessary for maintaining FV in an inactive conformation via interaction with an acidic region of the B domain. We demonstrate rapid inhibition of prothrombinase by TFPI/ mediated through a high-affinity exosite interaction between the basic region of TFPI/ and the FV acidic region, which is retained in FXa-activated FVa and platelet FVa. This inhibitory activity is not mediated by TFPI and is lost upon removal of the acidic region of FVa by thrombin. The data identify a previously undescribed, isoform-specific anticoagulant function for TFPI and are a unique description of physiologically relevant inhibition of prothrombinase. These findings, combined with previous descriptions of differential expression patterns of TFPI and TFPI in platelets and endothelial cells, suggest that the TFPI isoforms may act through distinct mechanisms to inhibit the initial stages of intravascular coagulation, with TFPI acting to dampen TF expressed on the surface of vascular cells, whereas TFPI dampens the initial prothrombinase formed on the activated platelet surface.

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Wood, J. P., Bunce, M. W., Maroney, S. A., Tracy, P. B., Camire, R. M., & Mast, A. E. (2013). Tissue factor pathway inhibitor-alpha inhibits prothrombinase during the initiation of blood coagulation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(44), 17838–17843. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1310444110

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