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CLOT FORMATION AND LYSIS
Function Consequences of dysfunction Rapid formation of mechanically sound clot at areas of injury Bleeding Prevent clotting in areas removed from injury Thrombosis Controlled clot lysis and replacement by connective tissue Bleeding (if lysis too fast) Thrombosis (if too slow) Poor healing
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COMPONENTS OF THE HEMOSTATIC SYSTEM
Function Platelets and von Willebrand factor Formation of primary hemostatic plug Coagulation cascade Formation of fibrin clot (stabilizes and strengthens hemostatic plug) Vessel wall/endothelium Endothelium antithrombotic; vasoconstriction limits bleeding from injured site Fibrinolytic system Controlled clot lysis allows wound healing Defects in primary hemostasis tend to cause immediate bleeding after injury Defects in fibrin formation tend to cause delayed bleeding Endothelial damage promotes thrombosis Uncontrolled fibrinolysis causes bleeding
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PLATELETS
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Platelets are required to seal areas of vessel injury
Albumin extravasation vs time in injured vessels after inhibition of platelets (left) and thrombin (right) Blood 2015;127:1598
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PLATELETS 150-400,000/μl blood Lifespan in blood 7-10 days
30% sequestered in spleen (more if spleen enlarged) Megakaryocyte development under influence of thrombopoietin and other growth factors
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PLATELET ORGANELLES AND MEMBRANE COMPONENTS
Mitochondria Glycogen granules (energy source) Lysosomes Dense granules (serotonin, Ca++, ATP, ADP) Alpha granules (various plasma proteins, growth factors etc) Membrane glycoproteins GP Ib/IX/V: von Willebrand factor receptor (mediates platelet adhesion); 50K copies/platelet GP IIb/IIIa (αIIbß3 integrin): fibrinogen receptor (mediates platelet aggregation; cryptic in resting platelets); 50-80K copies/platelet Membrane phospholipids (inner leaflet) Anionic/procoagulant Arachidonic acid “Flippase” keeps procoagulant molecules on inner leaflet – they are exposed with platelet activation
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SOME IMPORTANT PLATELET MEMBRANE RECEPTORS
Thrombin ADP receptor (several forms) Thromboxane Prostacyclin P-selectin Thrombopoietin (modulates TPO concentration in blood) ß2-adrenergic receptor Adenosine receptor Serotonin receptor
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PLATELET FUNCTION Maintain vessel integrity
Red cells leak from uninjured vessels if platelets absent (petechiae) This effect mediated by various factors released by platelets, e.g., VEGF, angiopoietin, EGF Help plug holes in damaged vessels Adhesion (von Willebrand factor, GPIb) Shape change Activation Release of granule contents Aggregation (fibrinogen, GP IIb-IIIa) Provide large membrane surface for thrombin generation, fibrin clot formation Clot retraction
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Single platelet filling a gap in the endothelium
Blood 2018;131:277
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PLATELET ACTIVATORS AND INHIBITORS
Activators (partial list) Collagen (in subendothelium) ADP (from rbc, activated platelets) Thromboxane A2 (from activated platelets) Thrombin Epinephrine Inhibitors (partial list) Nitric oxide (from endothelium) Prostacyclin (Prostaglandin I2 - from endothelium) Aspirin (blocks thromboxane synthesis) Clopidogrel (Plavix® - blocks ADP receptor)
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Platelet activation and inhibition by prostaglandins
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PLATELET ADHESION TO AREA OF VESSEL INJURY
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PLATELET SPREADING Patel et al, Blood 2003;101:929-36
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PLATELET AGGREGATION
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VON WILLEBRAND FACTOR Large multimeric protein made by endothelial cells (and megakaryocytes) Released into blood and subendothelium Secretion stimulated by stress, exercise, epinephrine, thrombin and vasopressin analog DDAVP Mediates platelet adhesion via GP Ib receptor Largest multimers most effective very large multimers can cause excessive platelet agglutination; they are broken down by ADAMTS13 Immobilization and unfolding of VWF (collagen binding, shear stress) increases adhesiveness Deficiency or dysfunction of VWF causes bleeding tendency (von Willebrand disease) VWF in blood binds factor VIII and protects it from inactivation
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VON WILLEBRAND FACTOR Single very large molecules visualized by electron microscopy Electrophoresis showing range of multimer sizes
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Biosynthesis of VWF NEJM 2016;375:2067
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VWF Mediates Platelet Adhesion and Facilitates Platelet Activation
NEJM 2016;375:2067
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COMPONENTS OF THE PLATELET RESPONSE
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FIBRIN CLOT FORMATION Tissue factor (in subendothelium and other tissue) triggers enzymatic cascade that results in formation of thrombin Platelet membrane supports and catalyzes these enzymatic reactions Thrombin converts fibrinogen to fibrin Fibrin polymerizes, polymers are crosslinked to form stable clot
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Injury Initiation Propagation Thrombin Fibrinogen Fibrin TF VIIa IX
IXa VIIIa Xa Va Thrombin PT X XI XIa VIII V
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Plasma proteins involved in coagulation
Size (kD) Concentration (mg/dl) Type of protein Function (after activation) Fibrinogen (factor I) 340 300 Structural Polymerizes to form clot Prothrombin (factor II) 72.5 10 VKZ* Activates fibrinogen, V, VIII, XIII, protein C, platelets, XI Factor V 350 2 Helper Supports activation of II by Xa Factor VII 50 0.1 VKZ Activates IX and X Factor VIII Supports activation of X by IXa Factor IX 57 1 Activates X Factor X 59 Activates II Factor XI 160 0.5 Zymogen Activates IX Factor XIII 320 3 Crosslinks fibrin, other proteins *VKZ = vitamin K-dependent zymogen
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TISSUE FACTOR LARGE VESSEL MONOCYTE MONOCYTE + ENDOTOXIN SMALL VESSEL
Am J Pathol 1989; 134: LARGE VESSEL MONOCYTE MONOCYTE + ENDOTOXIN SMALL VESSEL Tissue factor is a ubiquitous, membrane-associated lipoprotein that is expressed by most cells. It is not normally expressed by endothelial cells or leukocytes, although expression can be induced in these cells by inflammatory cytokines (above, right). There is high expression in the adventita of blood vessels (above, left), brain, skin and mucosal tissue (the “hemostatic envelope”).
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γ-carboxy glutamyl residues (vitamin K-dependent)
Generation of thrombin. Each step in the coagulation cascade requires an enzyme (in this case factor Xa), a proenzyme substrate (in this case prothrombin), a “helper” protein (here it is factor Va), a phospholipid surface (eg, a platelet membrane) and calcium. The enzyme and its substrate proenzyme contain calcium-binding regions that are vitamin K-dependent.
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Blood 2013;122:2773
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VITAMIN K Fat-soluble vitamin present in many foods
Some also made by gut bacteria Needed to create calcium-binding sites on several clotting factors (II, VII, IX, X) and anticoagulant proteins (protein C, S) Deficiency can cause bleeding tendency Warfarin (Coumadin®) is an antagonist of vitamin K, used as an anticoagulant
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Initiation of coagulation
Tissue factor exposed to blood, binds VIIa Small amounts of VIIa in normal plasma TF/VIIa activates X and IX IXa/VIIIa activate X Xa/Va activate II to form thrombin Initial activation of V probably by Xa TF/VIIa complex quickly inhibited by Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor (TFPI) Amount of thrombin generated as a result of these reactions may be insufficient for clot formation
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Propagation (amplification) of coagulation
IIa activates XI, VIII, V (positive feedback) Xa and IIa activate VII XIa generates more IXa IXa/VIIIa generate more Xa Xa/Va generate more IIa IIa converts fibrinogen to fibrin (and XIII to XIIIa) Fibrin crosslinked by XIIIa
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Injury Initiation Propagation Thrombin Fibrinogen Fibrin TF VIIa IX
IXa VIIIa Xa Va Thrombin PT X XI XIa VIII V
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The “Contact System” When plasma is exposed to a negatively charged surface, this proteolytic pathway is activated 3 components: high molecular weight kininogen, prekallikrein, and factor XII The end product of contact activation is factor XIIa, a serine protease that can activate factor XI This system is responsible for the fact that blood clots when exposed to glass and other foreign surfaces Polyphosphate released from platelets supports activation Complete deficiency of any of the contact factors does not cause bleeding, suggesting that this pathway has little if any role in physiologic coagulation System may contribute to regulation of fibrinolysis, angiogenesis, and inflammatory response
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FIBRIN FORMATION Fibrinogen Thrombin Fibrin monomer Fibrin polymer
Blood 2005;106:2944
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FACTOR XIII
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Clot formation in a mouse following vascular injury
Platelets (red) Tissue factor (green) Fibrin (blue) Platelets + tissue factor (yellow) Tissue factor + fibrin (turquoise) Platelets + fibrin (magenta) Platelets + fibrin + tissue factor (white) Celi et al, J Thrombos Haemost 2003;1:60
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Propagation Initiation IXa-VIIIa Tissue factor-VIIa APC TFPI Xa-Va
Fibrinogen Tissue factor-VIIa IXa-VIIIa Xa-Va Initiation Propagation Thrombin Fibrin AT3 APC TFPI Regulation by anticoagulants (black boxes). TFPI- tissue factor pathway inhibitor, AT3- antithrombin, APC- activated protein C. Red arrows indicate inhibitory activity.
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ANTITHROMBOTIC PROPERTIES OF ENDOTHELIUM
Sequesters tissue factor from blood Prostaglandin I2 inhibits platelet aggregation Heparan sulfate catalyzes inhibition of thrombin by antithrombin Thrombomodulin catalyzes activation of protein C by thrombin Nitric oxide is a vasodilator and inhibits platelet aggregation ADPase inhibits platelet aggregation Tissue factor pathway inhibitor neutralizes TF/VIIa
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Blood 2019;133:906
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Antithrombin mechanism
(substrate) T
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THE ANTITHROMBIN SYSTEM
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THE PROTEIN C SYSTEM A negative feedback loop that degrades factors Va, VIIIa
VIIIi Va P S VIIIa IIa P C APC IIa TM E C
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Tissue factor pathway inhibitor
Xa TFPI Xa X Xa TF VIIa TF VIIa Xa TFPI VIIa TF
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FIBRINOLYSIS Proteolysis of clot and replacement by connective tissue
Conversion of plasminogen to plasmin by plasminogen activator starts the process Plasminogen activation catalyzed by fibrin Alpha 2 antiplasmin and plasminogen activator inhibitors regulate the process Products of fibrinolysis can be measured in blood (fibrin split products, D-dimer) Plasminogen activators are useful in treatment of some thrombotic conditions (MI, stroke, etc) Excessive fibrinolysis can cause bleeding (eg, DIC)
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FIBRINOLYSIS
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Riley et al, Lab Med 2016
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FIBRINOLYSIS Intact fibrin clot Fibrin clot exposed to plasmin
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Extravascular fibrin endocytosed by macrophages after plasminolysis
Blood 2016;127:1085
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