Thrombin Activatable Fibrinolysis Inhibitor (TAFI)
and its Role in Regulation of Fibrinolysis
Staško J., Hudeček J., Kubisz P.
Klinika hematológie a transfuziológie Jesseniovej lekárskej fakulty UK a Martinskej FN a Národné centrum hemostázy a trombózy Martinskej FN, Martin, Slovenská republika, prednosta prof. MUDr. P. Kubisz, DrSc. |
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Summary:
Thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) also named procarboxypeptidase U (CPU), procarboxypeptidase
R (CPR) and plasma procarboxypeptidase B (CPB) provides an important link
between fibrinolysis and coagulation cascade. Activated TAFI (TAFIa) reduces a generation of
plasmin because it cleaves off the carboxy-terminal lysine residues from partially degraded fibrin
and thereby abrogates the fibrin cofactor function in the tPA-mediated catalysis of plasminogen
to plasmin. TAFI is activated by thrombin-thrombomodulin complex. TAFI transformation to the
activated TAFI (TAFIa) induced by thrombin supports the important role of coagulation cascade
in regulation of fibrinolysis. This can be proved by a fact that the patients with a factor XI (FXI)
deficiency are prone to bleeding from tissues with a high local fibrinolytic activity (urinary tract,
nose, oral cavity, tonsils) that can be explained by a decreased thrombin-mediated TAFI activation.
On the other hand the prothrombotic mutation of factor V (FV Leiden) associated with a resistance
to activated protein C (APC-resistance) possess both mechanisms – an increased thrombin
generation in coagulation cascade and a down regulation of fibrinolysis by a way of the thrombininduced
TAFI activation. For the future an inhibition of TAFI (e.g. by FXI inhibitors) offers the
therapeutic possibilities to improve the decreased fibrinolysis and increase the efficiency of
fibrinolytic therapy in thrombotic disorders. In bleeding disorders (hemophilia A, B) the drugs
with a higher efficiency of TAFI for down regulation of an increased fibrinolysis could be used.
Key words:
Coagulation - Fibrinolysis - TAFI - Carboxypeptidase
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