Thromb Haemost 1993; 70(03): 418-422
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1649597
Original Article
Coagulation
Schattauer GmbH Stuttgart

Recombinant Human Soluble Thrombomodulin Delivers Bounded Thrombin to Antithrombin III: Thrombomodulin Associates with Free Thrombin and Is Recycled to Activate Protein C

Authors

  • Masaharu Aritomi

    1   The Institute for Life Science Research, Asahi Chemical Industry, Fuji City, Japan
  • Naoko Watanabe

    1   The Institute for Life Science Research, Asahi Chemical Industry, Fuji City, Japan
  • Rika Ohishi

    1   The Institute for Life Science Research, Asahi Chemical Industry, Fuji City, Japan
  • Komakazu Gomi

    1   The Institute for Life Science Research, Asahi Chemical Industry, Fuji City, Japan
  • Takao Kiyota

    1   The Institute for Life Science Research, Asahi Chemical Industry, Fuji City, Japan
  • Shuji Yamamoto

    1   The Institute for Life Science Research, Asahi Chemical Industry, Fuji City, Japan
  • Torao Ishida

    1   The Institute for Life Science Research, Asahi Chemical Industry, Fuji City, Japan
  • Ikuro Maruyama

    2   The Department of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, Kagoshima University School of Medicine, Kagoshima City, Japan
Further Information

Publication History

Received 15 July 1992

Accepted after revision 12 March 1993

Publication Date:
05 July 2018 (online)

Summary

Recombinant human soluble thrombomodulin (rhs-TM), having no transmembrane domain or chondroitin sulfate, was expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Interactions between rhs-TM, thrombin (Th), protein C (PC) and antithrombin III (ATIII) were studied. Equilibrium between rhs-TM and Th had no detectable time lag in clotting inhibition (K d = 26 nM) or PC activation (K d = 22 nM), while ATIII inhibited Th at a bimolecular rate constant = 5,200 M-1s-1 (K d <0.2 nM). A mixture of ATIII, Th and rhs-TM showed that ATIII reacted with Th slower than rhs-TM, whose presence did not affect the reaction between ATIII and Th. In a mixture of rhs-TM, ATIII and PC, the repeated addition of Th caused the repeated activation of PC; which was consistent with the Simulation based on the assumption that rhs-TM is recycled as a Th cofactor. From these results, we concluded that upon inhibition of the rhs-TM-Th complex by ATIII, rhs-TM is released to recombine with free Th and begins to activate PC, while the Th-ATIII complex does not affect rhs-TM-Th equilibrium.