Dahlbäck B
Blood Coagulation Research Department of Clinical Chemistry, University of Lund, University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden.
Semin Hematol. 1997 Jul;34(3):217-34.
Protein C (PC) is the key component of a natural anticoagulant pathway that is activated on the surface of endothelial cells by thrombin bound to thrombomodulin. Activated protein C [APC] cleaves and inhibits membrane bound factor Va and factor VIIIa, which leads to specific and efficient downregulation of the coagulation pathway. In these reactions, protein S (PS) and intact factor V (FV) function as cofactors to APC. Inherited deficiencies of PC, PS, or antithrombin were until recently the major genetic causes of familial venous thrombophilia, but they were found in less than 5% to 10% of patients with thrombosis. The situation changed dramatically with the description in 1993 of resistance to APC as a major risk factor for venous thrombosis. Inherited APC resistance, which is found in 20% to 60% of patients with venous thrombosis, is caused by a single point mutation in the FV gene predicting substitution of arginine [R] at position 506 with a glutamine (Q). The mutation, which is the result of a founder effect, is common in Caucasians with 1% to 15% prevalence in the population, whereas it is not found in other human races. Mutated FV (FVR506Q, FV:Q506 or FV Leiden) has normal procoagulant properties but shows partial resistance to APC, which results in a hypercoagulable state conferring a lifelong increased risk of thrombosis. As a result of its high prevalence, the FV mutation is not uncommon among patients with other inherited defects such as deficiency of PS, PC, or antithrombin. Those having combined defects have a higher incidence of thrombosis, and it is now recognized that severe thrombophilia is a typical multigenetic disease. The high prevalence of the FVR506Q mutation and the availability of easy functional and genetic tests will profoundly influence the development of therapeutic and prophylactic regimens and will probably result in a decreased incidence of thromboembolic events.
蛋白C(PC)是天然抗凝途径的关键组成部分,它在内皮细胞表面被与血栓调节蛋白结合的凝血酶激活。活化蛋白C [APC] 可裂解并抑制膜结合的因子Va和因子VIIIa,从而导致凝血途径的特异性和有效下调。在这些反应中,蛋白S(PS)和完整的因子V(FV)作为APC的辅因子发挥作用。直到最近,PC、PS或抗凝血酶的遗传性缺陷仍是家族性静脉血栓形成的主要遗传原因,但在不到5%至10%的血栓形成患者中发现了这些缺陷。1993年,对活化蛋白C抵抗作为静脉血栓形成的主要危险因素的描述使情况发生了巨大变化。遗传性活化蛋白C抵抗在20%至60%的静脉血栓形成患者中被发现,它是由FV基因中的一个单点突变引起的,该突变预测第506位的精氨酸[R]被谷氨酰胺(Q)取代。这种突变是奠基者效应的结果,在白种人中很常见,人群患病率为1%至15%,而在其他人类种族中未发现。突变的FV(FVR506Q、FV:Q506或FV莱顿)具有正常的促凝特性,但对APC表现出部分抵抗,这导致高凝状态,使血栓形成风险终身增加。由于其高患病率,FV突变在患有其他遗传性缺陷(如PS、PC或抗凝血酶缺乏)的患者中并不罕见。那些有复合缺陷的患者血栓形成发生率更高,现在人们认识到严重血栓形成倾向是一种典型的多基因疾病。FVR506Q突变的高患病率以及简单的功能和基因检测的可用性将深刻影响治疗和预防方案的发展,并可能导致血栓栓塞事件的发生率降低。