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1.
A simplified assay for protein C activity in plasma is described which uses the ability of rabbit lung thrombomodulin to inhibit the procoagulant activity of thrombin while stimulating protein C activation. Barium eluates of plasma are activated for one hour at 37 degrees C by a mixture of human thrombin and rabbit lung thrombomodulin at concentrations which neutralize each other's effect on the kaolin-cephalin activated partial thromboplastin time (PTT). Protein C anticoagulant activity in the activated eluates is then measured directly in the PTT. The method is independent of protein S levels in the test samples, and is suitable for warfarinized and heparinized plasma. Protein C levels obtained with this method correlate closely with functional levels of vitamin K-dependent procoagulants as measured by the prothrombin and proconvertin time (P&P) in normal subjects and in patients receiving warfarin, indicating specificity for gamma-carboxylated protein C. The method has the potential to detect molecular variants defective in any of the interactions required for generation of anticoagulant activity in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Twenty-nine of 54 uremic patients had low levels of protein C measured as anticoagulant activity, contrasting with normal levels measured as amidolytic activity or antigenic concentration. We demonstrate that this discrepancy is due to the presence of a soluble plasma inhibitor that interferes specifically with the anticoagulant activity of activated protein C. The inhibitor does not interfere with other coagulation assays. It is resistant to diisopropylfluorophosphate, high temperatures and repeated freezing and thawing. It can be dissociated from protein C by anti-protein C antibodies or by dialysis in vitro and in vivo. It binds to positively charged resins and can be eluted with high salt concentrations without losing its inhibitory capacity. The inhibitory effect is correlated with plasma creatinine levels and fluctuates with time.  相似文献   

3.
In the present study a new assay, ProC® Global, globally estimating the activity of the main plasma components of anticoagulant protein C/protein S pathway, was evaluated with respect to test characteristics and its sensitivity in the detection of deficiency states of protein C and protein S and of increased aPCR. In the ProC® Global assay procedure protein C is activated in patient's plasma by an activator reagent (venom from agkistrodon contortrix). The extent of the prolongation of a sample's aPTT, caused by the activation of protein C, is taken as a measure for its anticoagulant capacity. Ninetyeight patients with one of the above mentioned defects were investigated. Decreased plasma protein C activity and increased aPCR were detected with a sensitivity of 1.0, while only 11 of 14 patients with decreased levels of free protein S antigen showed abnormal results in the ProC® Global assay (sensitivity=0.79). The test can be used in heparinized samples up to 1.0 anti Xa U/ml heparin (UFH and LMWH). When samples from patients on oral anticoagulant treatment are prediluted with factor V deficient plasma the test is sensitive for increased aPCR. © 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd  相似文献   

4.
A functional assay of protein C in human plasma   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A functional assay for protein C in plasma is described in which barium eluates of plasma are incubated with bovine thrombin and rabbit thrombomodulin to activate protein C. The activated protein C solution is added to an activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) system containing normal plasma and an APTT reagent (Dade ActinR). The prolongation of coagulation time after recalcification in this system is taken as a measure of the anticoagulant activity of protein C. When expressed as per cent of the value in pooled normal plasma, the results obtained by this method in 34 normal controls and in 3 untreated patients with protein C deficiency were very similar to those obtained by radioimmunoassay of protein C. In 2 patients with protein C deficiency and 23 patients without, all on dicoumarol or warfarin treatment, the anticoagulant activity of protein C was less than its antigen concentration. The day to day analytical coefficient of variation (SD/mean) was 12% at the 100% level (n = 12), and 10% at the 25% level (n = 12).  相似文献   

5.
We investigated the effect of plasma and serum from 10 subjects with the lupus anticoagulant and thrombosis and 9 normal subjects on the secretion of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and its rapid inhibitor (type 1 plasminogen activator inhibitor, or PAI-1) by cultured human endothelial cells. Confluent monolayers of human umbilical vein endothelial cells were incubated for 48 hours with plasma or serum diluted ten-fold in serum-free endothelial cell growth medium, and the secretion of t-PA and PAI-1 measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. No consistent differences in mean t-PA and PAI-1 release were found between cells exposed to normal plasma or serum and plasma or serum from subjects with the lupus anticoagulant and thrombosis. No plasma or serum sample produced consistent inhibition of t-PA release or stimulation of PAI-1 release (defined as t-PA levels less than the mean minus two standard deviations for normal subjects, and PAI-1 levels greater than the mean plus two standard deviations for normal subjects, respectively). These findings do not support a role for altered endothelial fibrinolytic activity in the pathogenesis of thrombosis in subjects with the lupus anticoagulant, and are consistent with previous observations that these subjects have normal fibrinolytic activity in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
Activated protein C is a potent anticoagulant which inactivates Factors V and VIII in plasma. Normal plasma contains an inhibitor of activated protein C. A previous report from our laboratory hypothesized that the absence of this inhibitor in plasmas from patients with combined Factor V/VIII deficiency could be the molecular basis for this disease. This report demonstrates the presence of protein C inhibitor in those Factor V/VIII deficient plasmas originally studied. Freezing and thawing significantly reduced the ability of normal and Factor V/VIII deficient plasmas to inhibit activated protein C. It is suggested that this explains the conflicting literature reports describing functional assays of protein C inhibitor in Factor V/VIII deficient plasma. This observation also emphasizes that extreme care must be used in handling and storing plasma samples that are to be assayed for protein C inhibitor.  相似文献   

7.
In vivo expression of protein C activity is dependent on the availability of the activated protein C (APC) cofactor protein S. In the clinical laboratory, measurement of protein C anticoagulant activity is mostly performed in modified APTT assays. We have evaluated 13 commercial APTT reagents for their sensitivity to the cofactor effect of protein S by comparing APC-dependent clotting time prolongations in normal plasma and in protein S depleted plasma. In normal plasma, the sensitivities of the APTT reagents to the anticoagulant effect of APC were markedly different and correlated with the sensitivity of reagents to factor V and VIII. Reagents containing soy phosphatides appeared more sensitive than reagents containing phospholipid of animal origin. Analysis of dose-response curves obtained in normal plasma distinguished one group of reagents showing clotting time prolongations linearly related to the APC concentrations, a second group showing a log-linear relationship and a third group showing a log-log relationship. In protein S depleted plasma, sensitivity of APTT reagents to APC was in general proportional to that observed in normal plasma. However, for some reagents dose-response curves were qualitatively different in normal and in protein S depleted plasma. With all the APTT reagents, APC-dependent clotting time prolongations corresponding to 30-80% of APC anticoagulant activity observed in normal plasma, were observed in protein S depleted plasma. At variance, in a modified Xa one-stage clotting assay, negligible clotting time prolongations were observed in protein S depleted plasma, indicating that over 90% of the APC anticoagulant activity was protein S dependent in this assay system. Dilution of a relative insensitive APTT reagent effectively increased its sensitivity to the cofactor effect of protein S, suggesting that different phospholipid content and/or composition might be responsible for the different sensitivity of APTT reagents to protein S. These results question the validity of APTT based assays for the identification of qualitative protein C abnormalities with defective interaction with protein S.  相似文献   

8.
Species specificity of the fibrinolytic effects of activated protein C.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Activated protein C (APC) has been shown to stimulate fibrinolysis in both in vitro and in vivo experimental systems. In order to test the importance of protein S in the fibrinolytic activity of APC we have compared the activity of APC, prepared from rabbit, bovine and human plasma, in the stimulation of whole blood clot lysis, the inactivation of plasminogen activator inhibitors and anticoagulant activity. When whole blood clot lysis was performed using tissue plasminogen activator in either human or rabbit blood, APC was found to enhance clot lysis in a species specific manner that paralleled the pattern observed for its anticoagulant activity. Bovine APC, was the poorest stimulator of fibrinolysis in human plasma. However, if bovine protein S was also added to human plasma, bovine APC was as effective in promoting fibrinolysis as human APC. In contrast, no species specific effects on the inactivation of plasminogen activator inhibitor activity was observed. Though substantial effects of APC on plasminogen activator inhibitor levels were made by rabbit, human and bovine activated protein C in human plasma, there was no effect of activated protein C on the rate of clot lysis of human plasma. These results suggest that protein S is important for the expression of the fibrinolytic activity of activated protein C and that the effect of protein S may be useful for the differentiation of fibrinolytic effects of activated protein C that may be related to the inactivation of plasminogen activator inhibitors and those that are not.  相似文献   

9.
The use of oral contraceptives (OC) causes disturbances of the procoagulant, anticoagulant and fibrinolytic pathways of blood coagulation which may contribute to the increased risk of venous thrombosis associated with OC therapy. Here we report the results of a cycle-controlled randomized cross-over study, in which we determined the effects of so-called second and third generation OC's on a number of anticoagulant parameters. In this study, 28 non-OC using women were randomly prescribed either a second generation (150 microg levonorgestrel/30 microg ethinylestradiol) or a third generation OC (150 microg desogestrel/30 microg ethinylestradiol) and who switched to the other OC after a two month wash out period. The anticoagulant parameters determined were: antithrombin (AT), alpha2-macroglobulin (alpha2-M), alpha1-antitrypsin, protein C inhibitor (PCI), protein C, total and free protein S and activated protein C sensitivity ratios (APC-sr) measured with two functional APC resistance tests which quantify the effect of APC on either the activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) or on the endogenous thrombin potential (ETP). During the use of desogestrel-containing OC the plasma levels of alpha2-M, alpha1-antitrypsin, PCI and protein C significantly increased, whereas AT and protein S significantly decreased. Similar trends were observed with levonorgestrel-containing OC, although on this kind of OC the changes in AT, PCI and protein S (which was even slightly increased) did not reach significance. Compared with levonorgestrel, desogestrel-containing OC caused a significant decrease of total (p <0.005) as well as free protein S (p <0.0001) and more pronounced APC resistance in both the aPTT (p = 0.02) and ETP-based (p <0.0001) APC resistance tests. These observations indicate that the activity of the anticoagulant pathways in plasma from users of desogestrel-containing OC is more extensively impaired than in plasma from users of levonorgestrel-containing OC.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated the effect of purified immunoglobulin G (IgG) on endothelial cell functions in 16 patients with lupus anticoagulant, 9 of whom had systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Spontaneous or thrombin-stimulated secretion of prostacyclin (PGI2) by cultured human endothelial cells from umbilical cord vein (HUVEC) was not inhibited by the patient's IgG. Nor was spontaneous release of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) or of its inhibitor (PAI) modified in the presence of patient's IgG. The rate of activation of purified protein C (PC) by HUVEC in the presence of thrombin was significantly lowered by patient's IgG or Fab' fragment (inhibition of 43%). Neutralization of this effect was obtained by incubation of a greater quantity of phospholipids (phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine) with the patient's IgG. Activation of PC was also performed using purified rabbit thrombomodulin (TM) and a similar inhibition of the patient IgG was observed (inhibition of 48%) but the activation of Gla-domainless PC was not modified.  相似文献   

11.
A simple and fast method for the quantitative determination of protein C activity in plasma is here described. The first step consists in the conversion of protein C in the test sample into activated protein C by means of an activator isolated from Southern Copperhead venom. Subsequently, the degradation of factor Va, in presence of protein C-deficient plasma, is measured by the prolongation of the prothrombin time which is proportional to the amount of protein C in the sample. The dose-response curve showed a linear relationship from 6 to 150% protein C activity and the inter- and intra-assay reproducibility was 3.5% and 5.6% respectively. In normal subjects, a mean of protein C level of 98 +/- 15% of normal pooled plasma was found. Comparison with the anticoagulant assay in samples of patients with oral anticoagulant, liver cirrhosis, disseminated intravascular coagulation and severe preeclampsia revealed an excellent correlation (r = 0.94, p less than 0.001). Also, a similar correlation (r = 0.93, p less than 0.001) existed between amidolytic assay and the method here proposed for all the samples studied without including the oral anticoagulant group. These results allowed us to infer that this method evaluates the ability of protein C to interact with protein S, phospholipids, calcium ions and factor Va.  相似文献   

12.
We describe a functional assay for protein C in human plasma samples based on the ability of activated protein C to prolong the kaolincephalin activated partial thromboplastin time of normal plasma. Protein C is separated from its inhibitor by elution of a barium citrate precipitate, and activated by incubation with human alpha-thrombin for one hour. Thrombin is then inhibited by antithrombin III and heparin, heparin neutralized by protamine sulfate, and protein C activity measured in the partial thromboplastin time. 24 normal subjects had a mean protein C level of 94 ± 12% (SD) of the activity in pooled normal plasma. Seven patients with severe liver disease had a mean protein C of 28%. Eleven patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation had a mean protein C of 29%. Eight patients receiving warfarin therapy had a mean protein C of 17%. The assay is relatively simple and should be suitable for general laboratory use.  相似文献   

13.
Although protein C (PC) and activated protein C (APC) have been postulated to be useful for treating patients with thrombosis, their critical effect remains to be studied in human subjects. To examine whether purified PC or APC are useful for treating patients with thrombosis without showing any adverse effect, we studied effects on coagulation and fibrinolysis in normal human subjects. When highly purified human PC was administered intravenously to healthy subjects, plasma levels of immunoreactive PC decreased with a half-life of 10.9 h. Intravenously administered APC decreased with a half-life of 23 min as measured by prolongation of activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT). However, 1.7 h was obtained for the plasma half-life of APC when it was measured immunologically. These findings suggested that a significant fraction of the administered APC was rapidly inhibited by plasma inhibitor. Upon administration of APC, APTT was prolonged and plasma levels of clotting factor VIII (F-VIII) decreased transiently as measured by clotting assay. However, when determined by a chromogenic assay method in which 120-fold diluted plasma samples were used, plasma levels of F-VIII remained unchanged. Plasma levels of F-V did not decrease after APC administration. These findings suggested that prolongation of APTT and apparent decrease in plasma F-VIII clotting activity might be due to the in vitro-effect of APC present in plasma samples used. Diurnal fluctuation of plasminogen activator inhibitor in normal subject was not affected by administration of APC. Thus, PC or APC seems to function selectively at the site of thrombin-formation without lowering plasma levels of coagulation factors.  相似文献   

14.
A family is described in which venous thrombo-embolic disease is associated with reduced plasma protein C anticoagulant activity but normal levels of protein C amidolytic activity and antigen. The partial characterization of the heterozygous defect is described using crossed immunoelectrophoresis (CIE) with or without calcium and seven functional assays which differ by activators (thrombin-thrombomodulin complex, bovine thrombin and Protac snake venom) and by an eventual preliminary adsorption on insoluble salts. PC activity was thereafter determined either by chronometric or amidolytic assays. The results indicate that this abnormal protein C (PC) is normally activated and at least partially carboxylated. Three hypothesis are proposed to explain the discrepancy between normal amidolytic and low anticoagulant activities.  相似文献   

15.
A simple sensitive method for verification of lupus anticoagulants utilizing dilution of phospholipid in the activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) system is described. Patient plasma, mixed with an equal volume of normal plasma, is activated with micronized silica. To this mixture are added different dilutions of Thrombofax and then calcium chloride. Clotting times are plotted linearly against the logarithm of the phospholipid dilutions and slopes are calculated by regression analysis. In this assay the mean negative slope of 19 plasmas that contained anti-phospholipid activity was five times greater than those of normal plasma or those obtained from patients having single or multiple coagulation factor deficiencies such as those induced by warfarin. The assay can be modified to test heparinized plasmas. Thus, it is a sensitive means by which to verify the presence of lupus anticoagulants in patients who have congenital or acquired factor deficiencies or who are receiving anticoagulant therapy.  相似文献   

16.
The partial characterization of a dysfunctional protein C (PC), provisionally named "PC Cádiz", in a 45-year-old male patient suffering from recurrent venous thrombosis is described. The only defect found in laboratory assays for haemostasis and hepatic function was a half normal level of both amidolytic and anticoagulant protein C activity, measured by different functional assays that use thrombin-thrombomodulin complex and a snake venom to activate protein C. Protein C antigen was always found to be within normal levels. Two young daughters of the propositus were found to have the same defect. Double-crossed immunoelectrophoresis, performed in the presence and absence of Ca2+ in the first dimension, showed no clear differences between patient and control PC. PC adsorption to barium salts was also found to be normal. Measurement of the PC activation peptide in the barium citrate eluates after PC activation showed no significant differences between patient and 10 normal controls, the concentration of this peptide being very similar to that of PC zymogen in the same eluates before PC activation. These results indicate that this abnormal PC is able to be normally activated by thrombin-thrombomodulin complex but does not exhibit serine protease activity, probably due to a defect in the PC molecule near the active site center.  相似文献   

17.
An assay system for protein C (PC) activity and PC-inhibitor in plasma was developed. The assay was based on: (1) binding of PC to wells of a microtiter plate coated with a murine monoclonal anti-PC antibody (C3) that did not interfere with the activity or activation of PC; (2) activation of immobilized PC with Protac C; (3) incubation with or without a source of activated PC inhibitor; and (4) measurement of amidolytic activity using the substrate S-2366. The activity assay was specific for PC and sensitive to less than 1 microliter of plasma or 4 ng PC. Inhibition of activated PC by plasma followed pseudo first order kinetics. Heparin caused a dose dependent increase in the inhibition rate with half maximal stimulation at approximately 3 U/ml and maximal stimulation at heparin concentrations greater than or equal to 10 U/ml. This assay is suitable not only for determination of functional plasma levels of PC and PC inhibitor activities but also for kinetic studies of inhibition of activated PC in complex systems, such as plasma. Studies showed that urokinase interfered with the inhibition of APC by plasma inhibitor(s).  相似文献   

18.
The fibrinolytic system was evaluated in a patient with homozygous protein C deficiency as well as in several members of his family with a partial deficiency of this protein. Before anticoagulant therapy the patient showed skin lesions which quickly disappeared after administration of fresh plasma. After anticoagulant treatment, the propositus suffered two clinical episodes of "ecchymotic" lesions, which were controlled with fresh plasma. The patient has remained free of new lesions and other clinical episodes up to the present date. The fibrinolytic activity of both the propositus and his family was normal. The patient's father showed adequate release of tissue plasminogen activator after controlled physical exercise. According to clinical and analytical data from our patient and his family, it is suggested that, in spite of the preservation of the fibrinolytic system in this case, a localized deficiency in fibrinolysis could exist in view of the clinical behaviour of the skin lesions described.  相似文献   

19.
INTRODUCTION: One of the recommended criteria for the laboratory diagnosis of lupus anticoagulants (LA) is demonstration of inhibitory activity. This is confirmed by performing mixing tests with normal plasma, usually in a 1:1 ratio, and demonstrating persistence of an abnormal clotting time in the screening test with significant confirmatory test reduction. However, the mixing with normal plasma can dilute the antibodies to undetectable levels and generate apparent negative results. No guidelines or consensus exist in how to interpret mixing study results. PATIENTS AND METHODS: The present study assessed the 1:1 mixing study results from 600 patients with a thrombotic history positive for LA demonstrated in neat plasma by individual assays, or combinations, of dilute Russell's viper venom time, dilute activated partial thromboplastin time, activated seven lupus anticoagulant assay and Taipan snake venom time, plus confirmatory tests. Mixing tests were assessed initially using locally derived neat plasma reference ranges and subsequently with mixture specific ranges. RESULTS: The mixture specific ranges had lower upper limits. Of the total LA positive results, 32.5% were positive in the mixing studies when neat plasma reference ranges were applied, and a further 11.2% demonstrated LA activity when using the mixture specific ranges. The remaining 56.3% had been diluted such that they did not elevate the screening test above the upper limit of normal or generated minimal prolongation with an insignificant difference between the screen and confirmatory test result sufficient to confirm LA activity. CONCLUSIONS: The significant impact of the dilution effect in 1:1 mixing studies emphasises the limitations of mixing studies as a vehicle for confirmation of inhibition by LA antibodies.  相似文献   

20.
Protein C assays in uremia   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Protein C was determined in 42 patients with terminal uremia and 20 healthy controls in three different ways 1) anticoagulant activity 2) amidolytic activity 3) antigen level. Protein C anticoagulant activity was markedly decreased in uremia, but was partly normalized during hemodialysis treatment, whereas the amidolytic activity and antigen level of protein C were normal and without changes during dialysis. The activities and antigen levels of factor II and X were normal before and after hemodialysis. In anticoagulated patients we found a good correlation between prothrombin levels and protein C levels determined with three different assays. We did not find any evidence for a defect carboxylation of protein C as the cause for the defective protein C in uremia. The BaCl2 precipitation in the Protein C anticoagulant assay was incomplete both in uremia and in controls but without differences between the two groups. In vitro addition of urea and creatinine did not decrease protein C activity. The cause of the defective protein C in uremia is still not known but it might contribute to thromboembolic complications.  相似文献   

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