Summary
Plasmas of 16 patients positive for both IgG anticardiolipin (aCL) antibodies and
lupus anticoagulant (LA) antibodies were subjected to adsorption with liposomes containing
cardiolipin. In 5 of these plasmas both the anticardiolipin and the anticoagulant
activities were co-sedimented with the liposomes in a dose-dependent manner, whereas
in the remaining cases only the anticardiolipin activity could be removed by the liposomes,
leaving the anticoagulant activity (LA) in the supernatant plasma. aCL antibodies
purified from the first 5 plasmas were defined as aCL-type A, while the term aCL-type
B was used for antibodies in the other 11 plasmas, from which 2 were selected for
this study.
Prolongation of the dRVVT was produced by affinity-purified aCL-type A antibodies
in plasma of human as well as animal (bovine, rat and goat) origin. aCL-type B antibodies
were found to be devoid of anticoagulant activity, while the corresponding supernatants
containing LA IgG produced prolongation of the dRVVT only in human plasma.
These anticoagulant activities of aCL-type A and of LA IgG's were subsequently evaluated
in human plasma depleted of β2-glycoprotein I (β2-GPI), a protein which was previously shown to be essential in the binding of aCL
antibodies to anionic phospholipids. Prolongation of the dRVVT by aCL-type A antibodies
was abolished using β2-GPI deficient plasma, but could be restored upon addition of β2-GPI. In contrast, LA IgG caused prolongation of the dRVVT irrespective of the presence
or absence of β2-GPI.
Since β2-GPI binds to negatively-charged phospholipids and impedes the conversion of prothrombin
by the factor Xa/Va enzyme complex (Nimpf et al., Biochim Biophys Acta 1986; 884:
142–9), comparison was made of the effect of aCL-type A and aCL-type B antibodies
on the rate of thrombin formation in the presence and absence of β2-GPI. This was measured in a system containing highly purified coagulation factors
Xa, Va and prothrombin and lipid vesicles composed of 20 mole% phosphatidylserine
and 80 mole% phosphatidylcholine. No inhibition on the rate of thrombin formation
was observed with both types of aCL antibodies when either β2-GPI or the lipid vesicles were omitted. Addition of β2-GPI to the prothrombinase assay in the presence of lipid vesicles causes a time-dependent
inhibition which was not affected by the presence of aCL-type B or non-specific IgG.
In contrast, the presence of aCL-type A antibodies dramatically increased the anticoagulant
effect of β2-GPI. These data indicate that the anticoagulant activity of aCL-type A antibodies
in plasma is mediated by β2-GPI.