Coagulation
Hemostasis
     Balance between bleeding and clotting is ensured by a complex cascade
           o Primary hemostasis: formation of PLT plug
           o Secondary hemostasis: formation of fibrin clot
           o Fibrinolysis: breakdown of fibrin clot
Component roles: blood cells
     RBCs: add bulk and structural integrity to final fibrin clot
     WBCs: help stimulate wound healing
           o Monos and lymphs have TF on surface that can trigger coagulation
     PLTs: procoagulant only: Initiate and control hemostasis
           o PLTs do not prevent clotting or breakdown the clot, instead they adhere, aggregate, and secrete
               their granule contents to help form a clot
     Plasma components:
           o Zymogens (procoagulants), cofactors, control proteins (ACs), fibrinogen (substrate)
Primary Hemostasis
     Triggered by small injury to vessel walls exposing subendothelial collagen.
     Vasoconstriction: helps to seal wound or reduce blood flow
     PLTs become activated
           o Adhere to site of injury, secrete granule contents, aggregate with other PLTs, all to form a PLT
               plug
     (A), Normal blood flow in intact vessels. RBCs and platelets flow near the center, and WBCs marginate
       and roll evenly along the smooth endothelium. Endothelial cells and the subendothelial matrix, which
       contains collagen, smooth muscle cells (in arteries) and collagen-producing fibroblasts, have several
       mechanisms by which they can limit blood clotting (TM, TFPI, HS) and platelet activation (NO,
       PGI2). (B), Trauma to the blood vessel wall exposes subendothelial collagen and tissue factor, triggering
       platelet adhesion. (C), VWF serves as a bridge between subendothelial collagen and the platelet GP
       Ib/IX/V receptor. Platelet interaction with collagen via α2β1 and GP VI receptors triggers release of
       TXA2 and ADP and subsequent activation of the αIIbβ3 receptor. (D), Activation of αIIbβ3 supports
       platelet-platelet aggregation through binding of arginine-glycine-aspartate (RGD)–containing ligands
       such as fibrinogen and VWF. ADP, Adenosine diphosphate, FG, fibrinogen; HS, heparan
       sulfate; NO, nitric oxide; PGI2, prostacyclin; RBC, red blood cells; TF, tissue factor; TFPI, tissue factor
       pathway inhibitor; TM, soluble thrombomodulin; TXA2, thromboxane A2; VWF, von Willebrand
       factor; WBC, white blood cells
                                                                                         .
     Vasocontriction and PLT plug formation= rapid, short-lived response vessel damage
     To control major bleeding long term the plug must be reinforced by fibrin
     Defects in primary hemostasis can result debilitating chronic hemorrhage (sometimes fatal)
          o Seen with collagen abnormalities, thrombocytopenia, qualitative PLT disorders, or in VWD
Secondary hemostasis: activation of coagulation and fibrin clot formation
    Series or cascade of plasma coag protein activation that results in fibrin clot formation
    Activated by large injuries to BVs and surrounding tissues
    Triggered by activator tissue factor (TF)
          o TF membrane
          o Found in subendothelial SMCs, fibroblasts (therefore, released by disruption of endothelial cells
              in vasculature), monocytes and lymphs.
    Fibrin Clot
          o Fibrillar protein that gives semisolid character to blood clot or thrombus
          o Breakdown product of fibrinogen
                   Fibrinogen: plasma GP that is converted to fibrin by thrombin (serine protease)
                      digestion
                   Fibrinogen has no binding sites, while fibrin monomers can polymerize locally to site of
                      trauma/injury
Coagulation Cascade
    Series of plasma protein interactions
          o Coag factors are mostly serine proteases that circulate at zymogens (inactive enzymes)
          o During process of coag, they become activated and through a domino effect of activation (one
              activates another and so on), produce thrombin
    After injury
          o PLTs activated and ashere + aggregate to damaged areas until new endothelial cells can grow.
              TF in subendothelial cells exposed by injury
          o Coag system initiation occurs on TF-bearing cells
          o Coag reactions then propagated on PLT surface
           o Thrombin generated- fibrin clot stabilized- fibrinolysis
Coagulation Cascade
     Cellular base of negatively charged phospholipid (subendothelial cells or PLT surface)
     Ca2+ to bind factors/co-factors to a negatively charged phospholipids (coag limited to site of injury)
     Plasma coag proteins
          o Serine proteases for enzyme activity
          o Co-factors for stabilizing and enhancing enzyme activity
     Phospholipid (-ve) + Ca2+ + SP + CF
Plasma-Based Coagulation Cascade
     The coagulation cascade consists of the contact system (simplified here) and the intrinsic, extrinsic, and
      common pathways. In the intrinsic pathway (red), the contact factors XII, prekallikrein (pre-K), and
      high-molecular-weight kininogen (HMWK) are activated and proceed to activate factors XI, IX, VIII, X,
      and V and prothrombin, which converts fibrinogen to fibrin. In the extrinsic pathway (green), tissue
      factor (TF) activates factor VII, which activates factors X, V, and prothrombin, cleaving fibrinogen to
      fibrin. Both the intrinsic and extrinsic pathways converge with the activation of factor X, so factors X, V,
      prothrombin, and fibrinogen are called the common pathway (blue). Dashed boxes indicate the
      coagulation factor complexes that assemble on phospholipid (yellow symbol). These pathways are the
      basis of clinical coagulation laboratory tests. Thr, Thrombin
     3 in-vivo complexes formed + contact factors
          o VIIa and TF (extrinsic tenase)
          o IXa and VIIIa (intrinsic tenase)
          o Xa and Va (prothrombinase)
          o Contact factor pathway (XII, pre-K and HMWK)
Extrinsic Pathway
       TF (FIII), VII + common
       TF + VII + Ca2+ + PL= extrinsic tenase complex. Extrinsic because TF not found in blood.
       Initiates coagulation after tissue injury and TF exposure. Initiates the common pathway and also
        intrinsic pathway
     Extrinsic: TF exposed in subendothelium, activates FVII and forms extrinsic tenase complex TF: VIIa
     Small ampunt of FX is activated by the TF: VIIa complex and initiates the common pathway- a small
        amount of thrombin is produced
     Extrinsic pathway also activates a small smount of FIX to IXa
             o Initiates activation of the intrinsic pathway
Intrinsic pathway
    All factors found in plasma. True in vivo intrinsic pathway starts at FIXa and Factor FXIa
          o FIX activated by extrinsic pathway
          o FXI activated by thrombin. Contact factor complex can also activate FXI
    Extrinsic pathway activates small amount of FIX. FXIa further activates FIX to FIXa
    FIXa combines with cofactor FVIIIa forming intrinsic tenase complex
          o Occurs on PLT surface. Complex also activates FX (much more effectively), initiating the
             common pathway
    Contact factor complex
          o Can also activate FXI. Contact factors= HMWK, pre-K, XIIa
          o Activated by contact with negatively charged foreign surfaces.
Common Pathway
      FX is activated by both extrinsic and intrinsic pathways
      FXa activates FV- Va and forms the prothrombinase complex (Xa and Va on PLT membrane in presence
       of Ca2+)
      Prothrombinase complex activates prothrombin (FII) into thrombin (FIIa)
      Thrombin then converts fibrinogen (FI) to fibrin (red clot formation)
      Thrombin activates FXIII to cross-link fibrin or stabilize clot
      Thrombin positive feedback loop creates a cascade of activation
           o Thrombin loops back into cascade to further activate V, VIII, XI, and PLTs until solid clot is
               formed
           o Once intrinsic pathway is active, extrinsic gets shut down
                   TF inhibitors stop the extrinsic system (no more activation of X and IX)
           o Antithrombin comes in to prevent further initiation of thrombin once clot is solid.
Cell-Based Coagulation
     Can be described via interdependent phases: initiation, amplification, propagation
     Initiation: triggered with formation of the extrinsic tenase complex. Complex activates low levels of
      factors IX and X to generate a small amount of thrombin
    Amplification: thrombin feedback loop creates a cascade of activation
           o Activates small amounts of factors FV, VIII, XI and activates more PLTs (COAT PLT formation also
               seen)
           o Serves to amplify more thrombin generation
           o Begins fibrin formation
    Propagation:
           o cofactors Va and VIIIa activated by thrombin during amplification phase bind to activated PLT
               membranes
                    Become receptors for Xa and IXa, respectively
           o IXa generated from initiation phase binds to VIIIa on PLT membrane forming intrinsic temase
               complex
                    Thrombin activation of FXI in amplification phase also activates more FIX. This process
                       initiates intrinsic pathway
                    Platelet factor 3
                             A phospholipid from the platelet membrane that contributes to the blood
                               clotting cascade by forming a phospholipid-protein complex (THROMBOPLASTIN)
                               which serves as a cofactor with FVIIa to activate FX in the extrinsic pathway
           o Intrinsic tenase complex activates FX at 50-100 fold higher rate than extrinsic complex,
               producing more activated FXa
           o Activated Xa binds to Va forming the prothrombinase complex
                    This complex activates prothrombin and generate a bust of thrombin
           o Thrombin cleaves fibrinogen to fibrin forming fibrin clot
           o Thrombin activates FXIII to cross-link or stabilize clot (RBCs incorporated in clot as well- forms
               red clot)
Secondary Hemostasis
    Cofactors: bind serine proteases ton stabilize and enhance their reactivity
   FV
        o Procoagulant cofactor- soluble GP circulating in plasma and stored in platelet alpha-granules
               During PLT activation, PLTs release/secrete partially activated FV (by thrombin) at the
                 site of injury
        o Primarily synthesized in BM megakaryocytes. Unstable in plasma. Aka labile factor
        o Cofactor to FXa in the prothrombinase complex
   FVIII
        o Procoagulant factor- soluble plasma protein circulating in plasma
               Extremely unstable in plasma except during coagulation. Circulates bound to VWF,
                 which increases its stability while circulating (from minutes to 12h)
        o Produced primarily by hepatocytes and by microvascular endothelial cells (i.e in the lung)
        o Aka Anti-hemophilic factor
               X-linked recessive factor
               Deficiency in VIIII results in hemophilia A (severe bleeding)
        o Cofactor to FIX, which form the intrinsic tenase complex
   Serine Proteases
        o IIa, VIIa, IXa, Xia, XIIa, prekallikrein (pre-K)
        o Start as zymogens (inactive enzymes) that circulate in plasma
           o Become proteolytic enzymes
                  Activated by cleavage (at one or more sites)
                  One zymogens gets activated and becomes a serine protease- which activates the next
                   zymogen- which becomes protease
                  Local activation on cell or PLT surface at site of injury or disruption of BV membrane
           o Most coag factors are produced in the liver- when liver fails patient has increased tendency to
             bleed
           o Some factors require vitamin K for normal production: Factors II, VII, IX and X are vitamin-K
             dependent
      Vitamin K
           o In liver, vitamin K carboxylates certain factors so they can bind Ca2+ and PL and participate in
              coag reactions
           o Without the second carboxyl group, factors cannot bind Ca2+ and PL- ineffective factors
           o Absence of VitK= non functional factors
           o Vitamin K dependent factors: FII, VII, IX, X and regulatory control proteins, protein C, S and Z
           o Blood thinner or oral AC coumadin/Warfarin works by blocking vitamin K
                   Factors cant bind Ca2+ and PL, essential to complex formation
                   No clotting
Serine Proteases
     FIX: Xmas factor
           o Vitamin K dependent factor- cofactor is FVIIa and together form the intrinsic tenase complex
              that will activate FX
           o Deficiency leads to hemophilia B or Xmas disease
                   X-linked recessive factor, severe bleeding results
     FXI
           o Serine protease: not part of any complex
           o Activated by contact factor complex or thrombin-in turn activates FIX
           o Deficiency leads to hemophilia C or Rosenthal syndrome (mild and variable bleeding results
     FXII
           o Serine protease that forms part of the contact factor complex
                   Activated by contact with negatively charged foreign surfaces
                   FXIIa transforms pre-K into active Kallikrein
                   Kallikrein cleaves or activates HWMK to Bradykinin
                   Activates FXI
           o Deficiencies in contact factors do not cause clinical bleeding disorders but will prolong in vitro
              coag testing and from this, require further investigation
     Thrombin (FIIa)
           o Main enzyme of coag cascade with multiple key activities (prothrombin to thrombin)
           o Triggers positive feedback loop to generate more of itself
                    Activates cofactors FV and FVIII=> Va and VIIIa
                    Activates FXI=> FXIa
                    Induces PLT aggregation and activation
                    Cleaves fibrinogen to fibrin (FI=> FIa) (primary function)
                    Activates FXIII=> FXIIIa (factor stabilizing factor)
                    Thrombin also plays a role in regulation of coag and in fibrinolysis
                    Thrombin: final serine protease
     Fibrinogen (FI)
            o Large plasma GP produced by liver
            o Absorbed, carried and released by PLTs (alpha granules)
            o Highest mean plasma conc or procoagulants
            o Involved in PLT aggregation
                    Linking activated PLTs together via their GP Ib/IIIa receptors
            o Primary substrate of thrombin
                    Cleaved or digested by thrombin into fibrin monomers which spontaneously polymerize
                       to form fibrin polymer (fibrillar lattice network of fibrin)
     FXIII
            o A transglutaminase
            o Fibrin stabilizing factor
                    Crosslinks adjacent D-domains of fibrin polymers
                    Final product is a meshwork of crosslinked or stabilized fibrin polymers resistant to
                       fibrinolysis (insoluble)
     Von Willebrand Factor (VWF)
            o Plasma procoagulant
            o Large multimeric GP
            o Produced by megakaryocytes and endothelial cells
                    Stored in PLTs (alpha granules) and endothelial cells (Weibel-Palade bodies)
                    Released when injury or disruption occurs via variety of henmostatic stimuli
                    Blood group O individuals have lower levels of VWF
            o Primary function
                    Bridges PLTs and subendothelial collagen during PLT adhesion- helps to initiate primary
                       hemostasis through this function
                    Receptor site to support PLT aggregation
            o Carrier protein for FVIII
            o Abnormalities in VWF molecular structure and concentration can lead to severe bleeding
Regulatory Mechanisms (Inhibitors and Fibrinolysis)
     Inhibitors (natural AC) and their cofactors regulate serine proteases/cofactors in the coag cascade
        through AC feedback loops
     Ensures coag is localized (not systemic) and maintain balance between abnormal thrombosis and
        bleeding via
            o Slowing procoagulant activation, suppressing thrombin production
     Main control proteins/regulators
            o TFPI, APC and protein S, AT and heparin cofactor II, protein Z and protein Z dependent protease
               inhibitor (ZPI)
Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor
     TFPI is a serine protease inhibitor (SERPIN)
     Synthesized primarily by endothelial cells and also expressed on PLT membrane
     Principal regulator of the extrinsic pathway
          o Inhibits extrinsic complex and FXa from this pathway
      Cofactor-Protein S
          o Enhances enzyme reaction tenfold
      Inhibits coagulation via 2 step process
           o TFPI bind and inactivates FXa
           o TFPI: Xa complex binds and inactivates TF:VIIa on subendothelial cell membrane
    Once intrinsic pathway is active, TFPI shuts down extrinsic tenase complex and Xa
    Xa + IXa production shifts to intrinsic pathway (as propagation phase occurs)
Protein C regulatory System
    The protein C system changes thrombin’s function from a procoagulant to an AC
    Thrombin binds to endothelial cell membrane protein thrombomodulin
           o Thrombin becomes inactive and can no longer activate procoagulant factors or PLTs
    Together, thrombin-thrombomodulin/ T-T complex activates protein C system
           o Thrombin activates protein C (activated protein C/ APC)- serpin
           o APC disassociates from EPCR and binds cofactor protein S (stabilizes APC)
           o APC-protein S complex inactivates (by further cleaving or digesting) FVa and FVIIIa
           o Slows or blocks thrombin generation and coagulation
Protein S Regulatory System
    Cofactor that binds and stabilizes APC and TFPI
    Enhances factor Xa inhibition by TFPI tenfold
    Augments action T-T complex fivefold. Synthesized in liver and circulates in free (cofactor form) and
       bound (unavailable) forms
Antithrombin
    Serine protease inhibitor (SERPIN)
       Binds and neutralizes serine proteases
            o Thrombin (FIIa) and FIXa, FXIa, FXIUIa, pre-K) and plasmin
     Heparin is required for effective AC activity
     AT activity is accelerated 2000 fold by binding to heparin
     Basis for the AC activity of pharmaceutical heparin. Also, circulating in plasma is heparin cofactor II=
        serpin that exclusively inactivates thrombin
     Acts to prevent, amongst others further activation of thrombin
Protein Z + Protein Z Dependent Protease Inhibitor (ZPI)
     ZPI: serine protease inhibitor (SERPIN).
     Protein Z: nonproteolytic factor
            o Vitamin K -dep plasma GP synthesized in liver
            o Increases the ability of ZPI to inhibit factor Xa 2000-fold
     Binds to ZPI
            o ZPI + Protein Z/ PL + Ca2+= serpin- potent inhibitor of FXa
     ZPI also inhibits FXIa
            o Separate reaction that does not require protein Z, PL, and Ca2+
            o The inhibition of FXIa is accelerated twofold by the presence of heparin
Fibrinolysis Control Mechanisms
Fibrinolysis
     Systemic hydrolysis of fibrin- digesting clot (final stage of coag)
     Restores normal blood flow: occurs as vasculature heals or disruption repairs
     Begins a few hours after the insoluble and stable fibrin clot produced (fibrin polymerization and
        crosslinking)
     Initiates with fibrinolytic proteins assembly on fibrin during clotting (localizes fibrinolysis to site of
        injury/disruption)
            o Plasminogen, tissue plasminogen activator (TPA), Urokinase Plasminogen Activator (UPA)
     Digestion of clot leaves Fibrin degradation products
Fibrinolytic Proteins
     Fibrinolytic proteins Plasminogen, TPA, UPA are incorporated into fibrin as clot forms
     Several hours after clot formation and in response to inflammation and coag, TPA, UPA are activated
        (or released) and act to convert plasminogen to plasmin (the primary serine protease of fibrinolytic
        system)
     This process begins fibrin degradation and helps to restore normal blood flow
Tissue Plasminogen Activator (TPA)
     Serine protease. Secreted by endothelial cells
     Released in response to IF and coag and covalently binds fibrin clot
            o Hydrolyzes fibrin bound plasminogen
                     Converts plasminogen=> plasmin
                     Initiates fibrin degradation
                     Helps to restore normal blood flow
     Circulating TPA is bound to fibrinolysis inhibitor, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) is neutralized
        and taken out of circulation
Urokinase Plasminogen Activator (UPA)
     Becomes incorporated into the mix of fibrin-bound plasminogen and TPA while clot is being formed
            o Does not bind fibrin firmly and has a minor physiologic effect
     UPA converts plasminogen to plasmin
            o Initiates fibrin degradation and helps to restore normal blood flow
Plasminogen and Plasmin
     Plasma zymogen (serine protease) produced by the liver. Abundant in plasma
     Plasminogen becomes incorporated into clot as fibrin polymerizes
     Plasminogen becomes converted into plasmin when cleaved by fibrin bound TPA and/or UPA
     Bound plasmin digests clots (fibrin), restores blood flow-localized and prevents systemic clotting (slow
        digestion
     Free plasmin is capable of digesting plasma fibrinogen (FI), FV and FVIII
            o Free plasmin levels controlled by a2-antiplasmin
Fibrinolysis Inhibitors
     A2-antiplasmin (AP): SERPIN
            o Synthesized in liver and primary inhibitor of plasmin
            o Slow fibrinolysis
                     Competes for plasminogen binding with fibrin
                     Binds directly (rapidly and irreversibly) to plasmin. Inactivates plasmin
     Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1 (PAI-1)
            o Serine protease inhibitor (SERPIN).
            o Produced by endothelial cells, megakaryocytes, smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts, monocytes,
                adipocytes, hepatocytes, and other cell types
                     PLTs store a pool of PAI-1, accounting for more than half of its availability and fir its
                        availability and for its delivery to the fibrin clot
            o Principal inhibitor of plasminogen activation
                    o Inactivates TPA and UPA
                            Prevents conversion of plasminogen to active plasmin
     Thrombin Activatable Fibrinolysis Inhibitor (TAFI)
            o Plasma procarboxypeptidase. Synthesized in the liver
            o Activated by thrombin-thrombomodulin complex (same complex that activates Protein C
                pathway)
            o Functions as an antifibrinolytic enzyme
                     Inhibits fibrinolysis
                            Prevents binding of TPA and plasminogen to fibrin
                            Blocks the formation of plasmin. Result is suppression of fibrinolysis
     Thrombin Activatable Fibrinolysis Inhibitor (TAFI)
            o In coagulopathies with factor deficiencies, such as hemophilia
                     Decreased thrombin production may reduce activation of TAFI
                     Resulting in increased fibrinolysis that contributes to more bleeding
            o In thrombotic disorders
                     Increased thrombin generation may increase activation of TAFI
                     Resulting in decreased fibrinolysis and can further contribute to thrombosis
           o TAFI also may play a role in regulating inflammation and wound healing
Fibrin Degradation Products
     Plasmin cleaves fibrin and fibrinogen and produces a series of identifiable fibrin fragments
           o X,Y, D, E and D-Dimer
     Several of these fragments inhibit hemostasis
           o Contribute to hemorrhage by preventing PLT activation
           o Prevent fibrin polymerization
     Fragments X, Y, D, and E
           o Produced by systematic digestion of either fibrin or fibrinogen by plasmin
     D-Dimer: specific product of digestion of crosslinked fibrin only
           o Therefore, a marker of thrombosis and fibrinolysis
           o Separately detectable by monoclonal ab for d-dimer antigen
           o D-Dimer immunoassay
                   Identify chronic and acute DIC: uncontrolled activation of thrombin and consumption of
                      coag factors PLTs and fibrinolytic proteins
           o Rule out venous thromboembolism
                  o Suspected deep venous thrombosis (DVT) or pulmonary embolism (PE)