Pixley R A, Schapira M, Colman R W
Blood. 1985 Jul;66(1):198-203.
Human antithrombin III (ATIII) is a plasma inhibitor of several serine proteases of the blood coagulation system. Previous investigations have reported that the presence of heparin has a multifold accelerating effect on the inhibition of factor XIIa and XIIf, the active species derived from factor XII. Recent studies from our laboratories have confirmed that ATIII inactivates factor XIIa and factor XIIf, but only contributes 2% to 3% to the inhibition of activated factor XII species in plasma. The major inhibitor is C1 inhibitor. Therefore, we have reexamined the heparin effect on the rate of inhibition of factor XIIa and factor XIIf in purified systems. We also have studied the effect of heparin on the inactivation of both factor XII-derived active species by various plasmas. Using purified factor XIIa and ATIII, we found that heparin (0.7 to 34.0 U/mL) increased the rate of inhibition of Factor XIIa. However, at heparin concentrations usually achieved during anticoagulant therapy (0.7 U/mL), the inhibition was accelerated only fourfold. This implies only a 6% contribution to the inhibitory effect of plasma. This suggestion was confirmed by the observation that heparin (1.5 U/mL) added to factor XII-deficient plasma and reconstituted with factor XIIa did not produce a detectable enhancement of the rate of inhibition of factor XIIa. Furthermore, using purified factor XIIf and antithrombin III, heparin (3.6 to 57.2 U/mL) increased the inactivation rate constant of factor XIIf by 1.6 to 14.0 times. This small effect was confirmed by the observation that heparin at a concentration greater than that sufficient for anticoagulation (1.4 U/mL) did not modify the inactivation rate of factor XIIf by prekallikrein-deficient plasma, and thus C1 inhibitor remains the major inhibitor even in the presence of heparin. From this study and our previous investigations on the effect of heparin on the inhibition of kallikrein and factor XIa, we conclude that heparin does not significantly affect the protease activity of purified contact activation factors or the activities expressed by these proteases in plasma.
人抗凝血酶III(ATIII)是血液凝固系统中几种丝氨酸蛋白酶的血浆抑制剂。先前的研究报道,肝素的存在对XIIa因子和XIIf因子(源自XII因子的活性物质)的抑制具有多重加速作用。我们实验室最近的研究证实,ATIII可使XIIa因子和XIIf因子失活,但在血浆中对活化XII因子物种抑制作用的贡献仅为2%至3%。主要抑制剂是C1抑制剂。因此,我们重新研究了肝素对纯化系统中XIIa因子和XIIf因子抑制速率的影响。我们还研究了肝素对各种血浆使XII因子衍生的两种活性物质失活的影响。使用纯化的XIIa因子和ATIII,我们发现肝素(0.7至34.0 U/mL)可提高XIIa因子的抑制速率。然而,在抗凝治疗期间通常达到的肝素浓度(0.7 U/mL)下,抑制作用仅加速了四倍。这意味着对血浆抑制作用的贡献仅为6%。这一观点通过以下观察得到证实:将肝素(1.5 U/mL)添加到缺乏XII因子的血浆中并用XIIa因子重构后,未观察到XIIa因子抑制速率有可检测到的提高。此外,使用纯化的XIIf因子和抗凝血酶III,肝素(3.6至57.2 U/mL)使XIIf因子的失活速率常数提高了1.6至14.0倍。这一微小作用通过以下观察得到证实:肝素浓度高于足以抗凝的浓度(1.4 U/mL)时,不会改变缺乏前激肽释放酶的血浆对XIIf因子的失活速率,因此即使在有肝素存在的情况下,C1抑制剂仍是主要抑制剂。从这项研究以及我们先前关于肝素对激肽释放酶和XIa因子抑制作用的研究中,我们得出结论,肝素不会显著影响纯化的接触激活因子的蛋白酶活性或这些蛋白酶在血浆中表达的活性。