
Formation of thrombin is triggered when membrane-localized tissue factor (TF) is exposed to blood. In closed models of this process, thrombin formation displays an initiation phase (low rates of thrombin production cause platelet activation and fibrinogen clotting), a propagation phase (>95% of thrombin production occurs), and a termination phase (prothrombin activation ceases and free thrombin is inactivated). A current controversy centers on whether the TF stimulus requires supplementation from a circulating pool of blood TF to sustain an adequate procoagulant response. We have evaluated the requirement for TF during the progress of the blood coagulation reaction and have extended these analyses to assess the requirement for TF during resupply ("flow replacement"). Elimination of TF activity at various times during the initiation phase indicated: a period of absolute dependence (240 s). Resupply of reactions late during the termination phase with fresh reactants, but no TF, yielded immediate bursts of thrombin formation similar in magnitude to the original propagation phases. Our data show that independence from the initial TF stimulus is achieved by the onset of the propagation phase and that the ensemble of coagulation products and intermediates that yield this TF independence maintain their prothrombin activating potential for considerable time. These observations support the hypothesis that the transient, localized expression of TF is sufficient to sustain a TF-independent procoagulant response as long as flow persists.
Models, Molecular, Time Factors, Coagulants, Thrombin, Fibrinogen, Factor VIIa, Models, Theoretical, Platelet Activation, Models, Biological, Blood Coagulation Factors, Thromboplastin, Humans, Computer Simulation, Prothrombin, Blood Coagulation, Software
Models, Molecular, Time Factors, Coagulants, Thrombin, Fibrinogen, Factor VIIa, Models, Theoretical, Platelet Activation, Models, Biological, Blood Coagulation Factors, Thromboplastin, Humans, Computer Simulation, Prothrombin, Blood Coagulation, Software
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