An acquired antithrombin autoantibody directed toward the catalytic center of the enzyme
- PMID: 1711542
- PMCID: PMC296031
- DOI: 10.1172/JCI115290
An acquired antithrombin autoantibody directed toward the catalytic center of the enzyme
Abstract
Antibody inhibitors against human thrombin are rare and have remained poorly characterized. We report the case of a 40-yr-old patient who developed a potent thrombin inhibitor revealed by mild bleeding symptoms and marked prolongation of most laboratory clotting times. After two years of evolution, he died from cerebral hemorrhage. The inhibitor, a polyclonal IgG, was associated with hematological and immunological criteria of autoimmune disorder. Antithrombin IgG was isolated from the patient's plasma by protein A- and thrombin-affinity chromatography. Fab fragments inhibited amidolytic activity of alpha thrombin, and thrombin-thrombomodulin catalyzed protein C activation with a Ki of approximately 10(-8) M in a noncompetitive manner. Alpha to gamma conversion of thrombin resulted in a moderate loss of affinity for the inhibitor. Upon complex formation of thrombin with staphylocoagulase or alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M), inhibition was decreased by two orders of magnitude and acquired an apparent competitive character. In Western blot experiments, the antibody reacted with active alpha-thrombin, did not react with chloromethylketone-inhibited thrombin and reacted with a lower affinity with iPr2P-thrombin. The inhibitor did not block thrombin binding to benzamidine-, heparin-, or fibrin-Sepharose, but displaced proflavin from its complex with thrombin. Taken together, these results indicate that the patient's autoantibody recognized a conformational structure which includes, at least in part, the apolar binding site adjacent to the catalytic site of thrombin.
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