Properties of the factor Xa binding site on human platelets
Related Experiment Videos
View abstract on PubMed
Summary
Human coagulation Factor Xa binds to platelets with high affinity, significantly amplifying its enzymatic activity for thrombin generation. Platelet-bound Factor Xa is protected from inactivation, highlighting its crucial role in hemostasis.
Area of Science:
- Biochemistry
- Hematology
- Molecular Biology
Background:
- Coagulation Factor Xa (FXa) plays a central role in the coagulation cascade.
- Platelets are known to accelerate coagulation reactions.
- The precise mechanism and significance of FXa interaction with platelets require further elucidation.
Purpose of the Study:
- To quantify the affinity of human FXa for activated platelets.
- To determine the impact of platelet binding on FXa enzymatic activity.
- To investigate the role of platelet-derived factors in FXa-platelet interaction.
Main Methods:
- Equilibrium binding studies using 125I-labeled FXa.
- Measurement of FXa enzymatic activity in prothrombin to thrombin conversion.
- Competition assays with related coagulation factors.
- Effect of calcium ions (Ca2+) on FXa-platelet interaction.
- Inhibition studies using an antibody against coagulation Factor V.
Main Results:
- High affinity (Ka = 3-4 x 10^10 M^-1) of FXa for thrombin-activated platelets.
- Platelet binding increases FXa activity by 300,000-fold in thrombin generation.
- Platelet-associated FXa activity exceeds that with optimal Factor V and phospholipids.
- Ca2+ is essential for FXa-platelet binding (optimum 2.5 mM).
- FXa bound to platelets is resistant to antithrombin III inactivation.
- An antibody against Factor V inhibits FXa binding and subsequent thrombin generation, implicating platelet Factor V.
Conclusions:
- Platelets provide a high-affinity binding site for coagulation Factor Xa.
- Platelet surface dramatically enhances FXa catalytic efficiency in thrombin formation.
- Platelet Factor V appears to mediate the interaction between FXa and activated platelets.
- This interaction is crucial for rapid thrombin generation and may be significant in hemostasis.