Abstract

Activated protein C (APC), a natural anticoagulant protease, can trigger cellular responses via protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR1), a G protein-coupled receptor for thrombin. Whether this phenomenon contributes to the physiological effects of APC is unknown. Toward answering this question, we compared the kinetics of PAR1 cleavage on endothelial cells by APC versus thrombin. APC did cleave PAR1 on the endothelial surface, and antibodies to the endothelial protein C receptor inhibited such cleavage. Importantly, however, APC was approximately 10(4)-fold less potent than thrombin in this setting. APC and thrombin both triggered PAR1-mediated responses in endothelial cells including expression of antiapoptotic (tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced a20 and iap-1) and chemokine (interleukin-8 (il-8) and cxcl3) genes, but again, APC was approximately 10(4)-fold less potent than thrombin. The addition of zymogen protein C to endothelial cultures did not alter the rate of PAR1 cleavage at low or high concentrations of thrombin, and PAR1 cleavage was substantial at thrombin concentrations too low to trigger detectable conversion of protein C to APC. Thus, locally generated APC did not contribute to PAR1 cleavage beyond that effected by thrombin in this system. Although consistent with reports that sufficiently high concentrations of APC can cleave and activate PAR1 in culture, our data suggest that a significant physiological role for PAR1 activation by APC is unlikely.

Highlights

  • Thrombin and activated protein C (APC)1 are serine proteases with key roles in hemostasis and thrombosis [1]

  • Might APC contribute to proteaseactivated receptor-1 (PAR1) activation beyond that already effected by thrombin? Might APC versus thrombin activation of PAR1 somehow favor protective versus proinflammatory responses in endothelial cells? Toward addressing these questions, we have compared the kinetics and the effects of endothelial PAR1 activation by thrombin versus APC

  • These results are consistent with reports that a sufficiently high concentration of APC can cleave PAR1 and can trigger PAR1-dependent responses in endothelial cells in culture (18, 29 –31)

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Summary

Introduction

Thrombin and activated protein C (APC)1 are serine proteases with key roles in hemostasis and thrombosis [1]. 3–5, activation of signaling in such cells required at least 1000-fold more APC than thrombin, in accord with the relative potency of APC and thrombin for AP-PAR1 cleavage.

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