Familial thrombophilia: clinical and molecular analysis of Swedish families with inherited resistance to activated protein C or protein S deficiency

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

This report describes the characterization of Swedish families with inherited resistance to activated protein C (APC resistance) and/or protein S deficiency, two genetic disorders associated with functional impairment of the protein C anticoagulant pathway. The APC resistance phenotype was linked to the factor V gene locus in a kindred with independent inheritance of APC resistance and protein S deficiency. A point mutation changing Arg506 to a Gln (FV:Q506) in the factor V gene was the cause of APC resistance. In studies of 50 families with hereditary APC resistance, the FV:Q506 mutation was identified in 94% (47/50) of the families, and the thrombotic risk was found to be dependent on the factor V genotype. Moreover, 18 families with hereditary deficiency of free protein S were investigated. Type I protein S deficiency (low free and total protein S) and type III deficiency (low free but normal total protein S) coexisted in 78% (14/18) of the families, suggesting the two types to be phenotypic variants of the same genetic disorder. Deficiency of free protein S was caused by equimolar relationship between protein S and beta-chain containing isoforms of C4BP. Though protein S deficiency was a strong risk factor for thrombosis, the FV:Q506 mutation was identified as an additional genetic risk factor in 39% of the families. Thus, familial thrombophilia is a multiple gene disorder. The thrombophilic tendency associated with APC resistance or protein S deficiency was related to increased levels of prothrombin fragment 1 + 2, reflecting increased activation of the common coagulation pathway.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)19-46
Number of pages28
JournalScandinavian journal of clinical and laboratory investigation. Supplementum
Volume56
Issue number226
Publication statusPublished - 1996

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Medicinal Chemistry

Free keywords

  • activated protein C
  • blood clotting factor 5
  • familial disease
  • family
  • gene locus
  • heredity
  • human
  • phenotype
  • point mutation
  • priority journal
  • protein S deficiency
  • review
  • Sweden
  • thrombophilia

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