An update on factor XII-driven vascular inflammation

Abstract

The plasma protein factor XII (FXII) is the liver-derived zymogen of the serine protease FXIIa that initiates an array of proteolytic cascades. Zymogen activation, enzymatic FXIIa activity and functions are regulated by interactions with cell receptors, negatively charged surfaces, other serine proteases, and serpin inhibitors, which bind to distinct protein domains and regions in FXII(a). FXII exerts mitogenic activity, while FXIIa initiates the pro-inflammatory kallikrein-kinin pathway and the pro-thrombotic intrinsic coagulation pathway, respectively. Growing evidence indicates that FXIIa-mediated thrombo-inflammation plays a crucial role in various pathological states besides classical thrombosis, such as endothelial dysfunction. Consistently, increased FXIIa levels are associated with hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia. In contrast, FXII deficiency protects from thrombosis but is otherwise not associated with prolonged bleeding or other adverse clinical manifestations. Here, we review current concepts for FXII(a)-driven vascular inflammation focusing on endothelial hyperpermeability, receptor signaling, atherosclerosis and immune cell activation.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer119166
ISSN0167-4889
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.2022

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PubMed 34699874