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Unfolded Von Willebrand Factor Binds Protein S and Reduces Anticoagulant Activity.

Martha M S SimMolly Y MollicaHammodah R AlfarMelissa HollifieldDominic W ChungXiaoyun FuSiva GandhapudiDaniëlle M CoenenKanakanagavalli Shravani PrakhyaDlovan F D MahmoodMeenakshi BanerjeeChi PengXian LiAlice C ThorntonJames Z PorterfieldJamie L SturgillGail A SievertMarietta Barton-BaxterZe ZhengKenneth S CampbellJerold G WoodwardJosé A LópezSidney W WhiteheartBeth A GarvyJeremy P Wood
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Protein S (PS), the critical plasma cofactor for the anticoagulants tissue factor (TF) pathway inhibitor (TFPI) and activated protein C (APC), circulates in two functionally distinct pools: free (anticoagulant) or bound to complement component 4b-binding protein (C4BP) (anti-inflammatory). Acquired free PS deficiency is detected in several viral infections, but its cause is unclear. Here, we identified a shear-dependent interaction between PS and von Willebrand Factor (VWF) by mass spectrometry. Consistently, plasma PS and VWF comigrated in both native and agarose gel electrophoresis. The PS/VWF interaction was blocked by TFPI but not APC, suggesting an interaction with the C-terminal sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) region of PS. Microfluidic systems, mimicking arterial laminar flow or disrupted turbulent flow, demonstrated that PS stably binds VWF as VWF unfolds under turbulent flow. PS/VWF complexes also localized to platelet thrombi under laminar arterial flow. In thrombin generation-based assays, shearing plasma decreased PS activity, an effect not seen in the absence of VWF. Finally, free PS deficiency in COVID-19 patients, measured using an antibody that binds near the C4BP binding site in SHBG, correlated with changes in VWF, but not C4BP, and with thrombin generation. Our data suggest that PS binds to a shear-exposed site on VWF, thus sequestering free PS and decreasing its anticoagulant activity, which would account for the increased thrombin generation potential. As many viral infections present with free PS deficiency, elevated circulating VWF, and increased vascular shear, we propose that the PS/VWF interaction reported here is a likely contributor to virus-associated thrombotic risk.
Keyphrases
  • binding protein
  • mass spectrometry
  • venous thromboembolism
  • sars cov
  • anti inflammatory
  • risk assessment
  • machine learning
  • high throughput
  • replacement therapy
  • big data
  • capillary electrophoresis