McVey J H
Haemostasis Research Group, Royal Postgraduate Medical School, Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK.
Baillieres Clin Haematol. 1994 Sep;7(3):469-84. doi: 10.1016/s0950-3536(05)80094-0.
Blood coagulation is initiated in response to vessel damage in order to preserve the integrity of the mammalian vascular system. The coagulation cascade can also be initiated by mediators of the inflammatory response, and fibrin deposition has been noted in a variety of pathological states. The cascade of coagulation zymogen activations which leads to clot formation is initiated by exposure of flowing blood to tissue factor (TF), the cellular receptor and cofactor for factor VII (FVII). FVII binds to the receptor in a 1:1 stoichiometric complex and is rapidly activated. FVIIa undergoes an active site transition upon binding TF in the presence of calcium which enhances the fundamental properties of the enzyme. This results in rapid autocatalytic activation of FVII to VIIa thereby amplifying the response by generating more TF-VIIa complexes. The TF-VIIa activates both FIX and FX. Further FXa generation by the IXa-VIIIa-Ca(2+)-phospholipid complex is required to sustain the coagulation mechanism, since the TF-VIIa complex is rapidly inactivated. Structure and function studies have identified a number of regions on both TF and FVII involved in this interaction. It is clear, however, that the molecular structures of TF, FVII and the TF-VII complex will have to be solved before we fully understand this complex interaction. The activity of the TF-VIIa complex is controlled by two inhibitors:tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) and antithrombin III (AT-III). TFPI circulates in plasma, is associated with vascular cell surface and is released from platelets following stimulation by thrombin. TFPI requires the formation of an active TF-VIIa complex and FXa generation before inhibition can occur. Similarly, AT-III which is unable to inhibit circulating FVIIa requires the formation of the TF-VIIa complex. TFPI prevents further participation of TF in the coagulation process by forming a stable quaternary complex, TF-VIIa-Xa-TFPI. In contrast, the AT-III-VIIa complex is thought to dissociate from TF allowing it to interact with additional FVII-VIIa. TFPI has been considered the primary regulator of TF-VIIa activity during haemostasis. Whether AT-III in the presence of glycosaminoglycans on cell surfaces expressing TF can function as an auxiliary second physiological regulator is not known.
血液凝固是为了维持哺乳动物血管系统的完整性而对血管损伤做出的反应。炎症反应的介质也能启动凝血级联反应,并且在多种病理状态下都观察到了纤维蛋白沉积。导致血栓形成的凝血酶原激活级联反应是由流动的血液接触组织因子(TF)引发的,TF是因子VII(FVII)的细胞受体和辅因子。FVII以1:1的化学计量比与受体结合并迅速被激活。在钙离子存在的情况下,FVIIa与TF结合后会发生活性位点转变,这增强了该酶的基本特性。这导致FVII迅速自动催化激活为VIIa,从而通过生成更多的TF-VIIa复合物来放大反应。TF-VIIa激活FIX和FX。由于TF-VIIa复合物会迅速失活,因此需要IXa-VIIIa-Ca(2+)-磷脂复合物进一步生成FXa来维持凝血机制。结构和功能研究已经确定了TF和FVII上许多参与这种相互作用的区域。然而,很明显,在我们完全理解这种复杂的相互作用之前,必须解析TF、FVII和TF-VII复合物的分子结构。TF-VIIa复合物的活性受两种抑制剂控制:组织因子途径抑制剂(TFPI)和抗凝血酶III(AT-III)。TFPI在血浆中循环,与血管细胞表面相关,并在凝血酶刺激后从血小板释放。TFPI需要在抑制发生之前形成活性TF-VIIa复合物并生成FXa。同样,无法抑制循环FVIIa的AT-III需要形成TF-VIIa复合物。TFPI通过形成稳定的四元复合物TF-VIIa-Xa-TFPI来阻止TF进一步参与凝血过程。相比之下,AT-III-VIIa复合物被认为会与TF解离,使其能够与额外的FVII-VIIa相互作用。TFPI被认为是止血过程中TF-VIIa活性的主要调节因子。在表达TF的细胞表面存在糖胺聚糖的情况下,AT-III是否能作为辅助的第二种生理调节因子尚不清楚。