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Procoagulant activities of skeletal and cardiac muscle myosin depend on contaminating phospholipid.

Authors :
Novakovic VA
Gilbert GE
Source :
Blood [Blood] 2020 Nov 19; Vol. 136 (21), pp. 2469-2472.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Recent reports indicate that suspended skeletal and cardiac myosin, such as might be released during injury, can act as procoagulants by providing membrane-like support for factors Xa and Va in the prothrombinase complex. Further, skeletal myosin provides membrane-like support for activated protein C. This raises the question of whether purified muscle myosins retain procoagulant phospholipid through purification. We found that lactadherin, a phosphatidyl-l-serine-binding protein, blocked >99% of prothrombinase activity supported by rabbit skeletal and by bovine cardiac myosin. Similarly, annexin A5 and phospholipase A2 blocked >95% of myosin-supported activity, confirming that contaminating phospholipid is required to support myosin-related prothrombinase activity. We asked whether contaminating phospholipid in myosin preparations may also contain tissue factor (TF). Skeletal myosin supported factor VIIa cleavage of factor X equivalent to contamination by ∼1:100 000 TF/myosin, whereas cardiac myosin had TF-like activity >10-fold higher. TF pathway inhibitor inhibited the TF-like activity similar to control TF. These results indicate that purified skeletal muscle and cardiac myosins support the prothrombinase complex indirectly through contaminating phospholipid and also support factor X activation through TF-like activity. Our findings suggest a previously unstudied affinity of skeletal and cardiac myosin for phospholipid membranes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1528-0020
Volume :
136
Issue :
21
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32604409
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.2020005930