Plasma Kallikrein as a Forgotten Clotting Factor
- PMID: 37072020
- DOI: 10.1055/s-0043-57034
Plasma Kallikrein as a Forgotten Clotting Factor
Abstract
For decades, it was considered that plasma kallikrein's (PKa) sole function within the coagulation cascade is the activation of factor (F)XII. Until recently, the two key known activators of FIX within the coagulation cascade were activated FXI(a) and the tissue factor-FVII(a) complex. Simultaneously, and using independent experimental approaches, three groups identified a new branch of the coagulation cascade, whereby PKa can directly activate FIX. These key studies identified that (1) FIX or FIXa can bind with high affinity to either prekallikrein (PK) or PKa; (2) in human plasma, PKa can dose dependently trigger thrombin generation and clot formation independent of FXI; (3) in FXI knockout murine models treated with intrinsic pathway agonists, PKa activity results in increased formation of FIXa:AT complexes, indicating direct activation of FIX by PKa in vivo. These findings suggest that there is both a canonical (FXIa-dependent) and non-canonical (PKa-dependent) pathway of FIX activation. These three recent studies are described within this review, alongside historical data that hinted at the existence of this novel role of PKa as a coagulation clotting factor. The implications of direct PKa cleavage of FIX remain to be determined physiologically, pathophysiologically, and in the context of next-generation anticoagulants in development.
Thieme. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
None declared.
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Grants and funding
- SP/14/1/30717/BHF_/British Heart Foundation/United Kingdom
- MC_PC_14109/Medical Research Council Confidence in Concept
- RG/12/9/29775/J.E. acknowledges funding from the British Heart Foundation Program
- 30084/Innovate UK
- UO1HL117659/N.S.K. acknowledges funding support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
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