Hultin M B, Jesty J
Blood. 1981 Mar;57(3):476-82.
The activation and inactivation of human factor VIII by thrombin have been investigated by the use of thrombin inhibitors. The addition of inhibitors to nonactivated factor VIII blocks activation by thrombin. In contrast, their addition to factor VIII activated with thrombin does not block inactivation, but causes an initial period of decay that is more rapid than in the absence of inhibitor. This effect was seen only with protease inhibitors that inhibit thrombin. After the initial decay, low levels of factor VIII coagulant activity persist in the presence of inhibitors, but an assay specific for activated factor VIII showed this to be largely a result of the persistence of nonactivated factor VIII. Only in the case of reversible inhibition is activated factor VIII present in this plateau phase. Possible mechanisms that would account for these observations were studied by iterative computer simulation of model reactions. Two classes were considered: (formula: see text). The experimental results are inconsistent with the first mechanism, which predicts that thrombin indicators should stabilize activated factor VIII (VIIIt). Alternative mechanisms were studied where activation is thrombin-dependent, but inactivation is a first-order reaction (mechanism 2). This family of mechanisms includes those where VIIIt is an VIII. thrombin complex. Simulation of the addition of thrombin inhibitors to such model systems shows the initial rapid decay of activity characteristic of the experimental observations and predicts qualitatively the different effects of reversible and irreversible inhibitors that are observed in the plateau phase. These results argue strongly against a two-cleavage model for the activation and inactivation of factor VII by thrombin and support a one-cleavage model in which inactivation is due to first-order decay. In addition, they provide a plausible mechanistic explanation for the fact that serine protease inhibitors appear to inhibit thrombin-activated factor VIII.
通过使用凝血酶抑制剂,对凝血酶激活和失活人凝血因子VIII的过程进行了研究。向未激活的因子VIII中添加抑制剂可阻断凝血酶的激活作用。相反,将它们添加到已被凝血酶激活的因子VIII中,并不会阻断失活过程,但会导致最初一段比无抑制剂时更快的活性衰减期。只有抑制凝血酶的蛋白酶抑制剂才会出现这种效应。在最初的衰减之后,在有抑制剂存在的情况下,因子VIII凝血活性仍维持在低水平,但一项针对活化因子VIII的检测表明,这在很大程度上是未激活的因子VIII持续存在的结果。只有在可逆抑制的情况下,活化因子VIII才会出现在这个平台期。通过对模型反应进行迭代计算机模拟,研究了可能解释这些观察结果的机制。考虑了两类机制:(公式:见原文)。实验结果与第一种机制不一致,第一种机制预测凝血酶指示剂应能稳定活化因子VIII(VIIIt)。研究了其他机制,其中激活过程依赖于凝血酶,但失活是一级反应(机制2)。这一类机制包括VIIIt是VIII.凝血酶复合物的那些机制。对向此类模型系统中添加凝血酶抑制剂的模拟显示了实验观察到的活性最初快速衰减的特征,并定性地预测了在平台期观察到的可逆和不可逆抑制剂的不同效应。这些结果有力地反驳了凝血酶激活和失活因子VII的双裂解模型,并支持失活是由于一级衰减的单裂解模型。此外,它们为丝氨酸蛋白酶抑制剂似乎能抑制凝血酶激活的因子VIII这一事实提供了一个合理的机制解释。