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PubMed:10753602 JSONTXT

Cardiolipin enhances protein C pathway anticoagulant activity. The anticoagulant activity of activated protein C (APC) was studied using factor Xa-1-stage assays of both the procoagulant and anticoagulant activities of phospholipid vesicles containing phosphatidylserine or cardiolipin as active phospholipids. In the absence of APC, phosphatidylserine vesicles showed higher procoagulant activity than cardiolipin vesicles whereas cardiolipin vesicles supported APC-dependent anticoagulant activity better than phosphatidylserine vesicles. Enhancement of APC anticoagulant activity in plasma by cardiolipin was markedly stimulated by the APC cofactor protein S. In purified reaction mixtures, cardiolipin in phospholipid vesicles dose-dependently enhanced APC anticoagulant activity. This effect of cardiolipin was partially dependent on protein S, and immunoblotting studies showed that cardiolipin enhanced the APC-mediated cleavage of the factor Va heavy chain at Arg506 and Arg306. In solid-phase binding assays, increasing amounts of cardiolipin in multicomponent phospholipid vesicles increased the affinity for protein S and to a lesser extent APC. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that cardiolipin stimulates the anticoagulant protein C pathway by increasing the affinity of phospholipid surfaces for protein S:APC and by enhancing inactivation of factor Va by APC due to cleavages at Arg506 and Arg306 in factor Va. Based on this, it is further hypothesized that anti-cardiolipin or anti-oxidized cardiolipin antibodies may be thrombogenic because they inhibit phospholipid-dependent expression of the anticoagulant protein C pathway.

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