The protein C ω-loop substitution Asn2Ile is associated with reduced protein C anticoagulant activity |
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Authors: | Roger J. S. Preston Colin Morse Sherina L. Murden Sara Kate Brady James S. O'Donnell Andrew D. Mumford |
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Affiliation: | Haemostasis Research Group, Institute of Molecular Medicine, Trinity College Dublin, St James Hospital, Dublin, Ireland;, Department of Haematology, University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust, Bristol, UK;, and Bristol Heart Institute, University of Bristol, Bristol Royal Infirmary, Bristol, UK |
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Abstract: | We report a kindred with heritable protein C (PC) deficiency in which two siblings with severe thrombosis showed a composite type I and IIb PC deficiency phenotype, identified using commercial PC assays (proband: PC antigen 42 u/dl, amidolytic activity 40 u/dl, anticoagulant activity 9 u/dl). The independent PROC nucleotide variations c.669C>A (predictive of Ser181Arg) and c.131C>T (predictive of Asn2Ile) segregated with the type I and type IIb PC deficiency phenotypes respectively, but co-segregated in the siblings with severe thrombosis. Soluble thrombomodulin (sTM)-mediated inhibition of plasma thrombin generation from an individual with PC-Asn2Ile was lower (endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) 56 ± 1% that of ETP determined without sTM) than control plasma (ETP 15 ± 2%) indicating reduced PC anticoagulant activity. Recombinant APC-Asn2Ile exhibited normal amidolytic activity but impaired anticoagulant activity. Protein S (PS)-dependent anticoagulant activity of recombinant APC-Asn2Ile and binding of recombinant APC-Asn2Ile to endothelial protein C receptor (EPCR) were reduced compared to recombinant wild-type APC. Asn2 lies within the ω-loop of the PC/APC Gla domain and this region is critical for calcium-induced folding and subsequent interactions with anionic phospholipids, EPCR and PS. The disruption of these interactions in this naturally-occurring PC variant highlights their collective importance in mediating APC anticoagulant activity in vivo. |
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Keywords: | thrombosis purpura fulminans protein C endothelial protein C receptor |
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