Abstract
Thrombin-mediated proteolysis is central to hemostatic function but also plays a prominent role in multiple disease processes. The proteolytic conversion of fII to α-thrombin (fIIa) by the prothrombinase complex occurs through 2 parallel pathways: (1) the inactive intermediate, prethrombin; or (2) the proteolytically active intermediate, meizothrombin (fIIaMZ). fIIaMZ has distinct catalytic properties relative to fIIa, including diminished fibrinogen cleavage and increased protein C activation. Thus, fII activation may differentially influence hemostasis and disease depending on the pathway of activation. To determine the in vivo physiologic and pathologic consequences of restricting thrombin generation to fIIaMZ, mutations were introduced into the endogenous fII gene, resulting in expression of prothrombin carrying 3amino acid substitutions (R157A, R268A, and K281A) to limit activation events to yield only fIIaMZ. Homozygous fIIMZ mice are viable, express fII levels comparable with fIIWT mice, and have reproductive success. Although in vitro studies revealed delayed generation of fIIaMZ enzyme activity, platelet aggregation by fIIMZ is similar to fIIWT. Consistent with prior analyses of human fIIaMZ, significant prolongation of clotting times was observed for fIIMZ plasma. Adult fIIMZ animals displayed significantly compromised hemostasis in tail bleeding assays, but did not demonstrate overt bleeding. More notably, fIIMZ mice had 2 significant phenotypic advantages over fIIWT animals: protection from occlusive thrombosis after arterial injury and markedly diminished metastatic potential ina setting of experimental tumor metastasis tothe lung. Thus, these novel animals will provide a valuable tool to assess the role of both fIIa and fIIaMZ in vivo.
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CITATION STYLE
Shaw, M. A., Kombrinck, K. W., McElhinney, K. E., Sweet, D. R., Flick, M. J., Palumbo, J. S., … Mullins, E. S. (2016). Limiting prothrombin activation to meizothrombin is compatible with survival but significantly alters hemostasis in mice. Blood, 128(5), 721–731. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2015-11-680280
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