Shear Stress-Induced Activation of von Willebrand Factor and Cardiovascular Pathology.
Sergey OkhotaIvan MelnikovYuliya AvtaevaSergey G KozlovZufar GabbasovPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2020)
The von Willebrand factor (vWF) is a plasma protein that mediates platelet adhesion and leukocyte recruitment to vascular injury sites and carries coagulation factor VIII, a building block of the intrinsic pathway of coagulation. The presence of ultra-large multimers of vWF in the bloodstream is associated with spontaneous thrombosis, whereas its deficiency leads to bleeding. In cardiovascular pathology, the progression of the heart valve disease results in vWF deficiency and cryptogenic gastrointestinal bleeding. The association between higher plasma levels of vWF and thrombotic complications of coronary artery disease was described. Of note, it is not the plasma levels that are crucial for vWF hemostatic activity, but vWF activation, triggered by a rise in shear rates. vWF becomes highly reactive with platelets upon unfolding into a stretched conformation, at shear rates above the critical value (more than 5000 s-1), which might occur at sites of arterial stenosis and injury. The activation of vWF and its counterbalance by ADAMTS-13, the vWF-cleaving protease, might contribute to complications of cardiovascular diseases. In this review, we discuss vWF involvement in complications of cardiovascular diseases and possible diagnostic and treatment approaches.
Keyphrases
- cardiovascular disease
- coronary artery disease
- risk factors
- heart failure
- metabolic syndrome
- aortic valve
- oxidative stress
- replacement therapy
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- type diabetes
- high glucose
- endothelial cells
- multidrug resistant
- escherichia coli
- cardiovascular risk factors
- molecular dynamics simulations
- peripheral blood
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- gram negative
- amino acid