Anticoagulant and fibrinolytic activities are promoted, not retarded, in vivo after thrombin generation in the presence of a monoclonal antibody that inhibits activation of protein C

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Abstract

This study examines the assumption that both the anticoagulant and fibrinolytic activity that follow the generation of thrombin induced by infusion of factor Xa/PCPS are due to generation of activated protein C. Untreated controls or animals given unrelated antibody were compared with animals pretreated with a specific monoclonal antibody to protein C (HPC4). Compared with untreated controls excess HPC4 substantially reduced the level of protein C activation as observed by protein C immunoblotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for antitrypsin/activated protein C complexes. Despite this, the anticoagulant activity as reflected by the decline of factors Va and Villa levels (as observed by coagulation assays and by factor V immunoblotting) was significantly greater than controls. The fibrinolytic activity (as observed by assays of tissue plasminogen activator, D-Dimer, α2-antiplasmin) also was significantly greater than controls. We conclude that neutralization of the protein C anticoagulant system while resulting in a significantly more intense coagulant response to Xa/PCPS does not preclude inactivation of factors Va and Villa and the full expression of the fibrinolytic response. We conclude further that after thrombin generation in vivo, protein C activation is not a prerequisite for the promotion of the fibrinolytic response previously observed, and that the inactivation of factors Va/VIIIa may be mediated by enzymes other than activated protein C. The reduction in α2-antiplasmin levels in association with increased tissue plasminogen activator activity suggests that plasmin is a likely candidate. © 1992 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Taylor, F. B., Hoogendoorn, H., Chang, A. C. K., Peer, G., Nesheim, M. E., Catlett, R., … Giles, A. R. (1992). Anticoagulant and fibrinolytic activities are promoted, not retarded, in vivo after thrombin generation in the presence of a monoclonal antibody that inhibits activation of protein C. Blood, 79(7), 1720–1728. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v79.7.1720.bloodjournal7971720

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