Formation of Fibrin Clot and the Clotting Cascade (Homo sapiens)

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4, 1247, 27, 1305821, 2712, 1716, 70, 90, 100, 11322, 627, 82, 1252, 54, 7684, 1453912625103, 14310392, 12913141, 8235, 43, 63, 119593332, 13662222251, 71, 110, 123, 14160, 64, 72, 77, 81...1031221441, 391334036, 74, 875585891896, 104, 12848127393, 33, 69, 9447, 52, 99, 1091278, 60, 64, 8130, 106, 13212130, 13211712, 44, 7446, 102, 112, 14249, 14234, 65, 67, 101, 13557, 68, 919516, 70, 90, 100, 113929, 43, 80, 13879, 11815, 69, 78, 114, 116...6, 28, 50, 7320, 23, 80, 10819, 26, 31, 105, 13938, 47, 61, 98103endoplasmic reticulum lumencytoplasmGP5 factor XI:GPIb-IX-VcomplexF8(356-372)Protein CCa2+ F12 variant (20-328)factor Xa heavy chain KNG1(19-644)PF4(32-101) F8(392-759) A2domain variantfactor XIII A chainactivation peptidefactor IXathrombin:SERPINC1:SERPINC1 activatorsfactor VIIIa A2 polypeptide factor VIIIa A1 polypeptide factor VIIIa A1 polypeptide F5(29-334) factor VIIIa A1 polypeptide Ca2+ factor VIIIa A1 polypeptide PROCR(18-?)SERPING1 F8(392-759) N713I SERPINC1(426-464) KLKB1(20-390) Ca2+ SERPINC1factor VIIIa A1variant:A3-C1-C2factor IXa heavy chain SERPINC1(33-425) Factor IIainhibitors(peptide)FGG factor XIIaPROCR(18-?) PalmC-F3F8(392-759) R550H 11xCbxE-PROS1 KLKB1(20-638)11xCbxE-3D-F10(41-179) KLKB1(391-638) thrombin heavy chain thrombin light chain factor VIIIa withdefective A1 domainPROC(212-461) factor Xa heavy chain F12 T328R (329-615) 12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-461)Factor VIIIprecursorF8(373-581) F9(227-461) R384L Ca2+ activated thrombin(factor IIa)Ca2+ factor XIII A chain PROCR TFPIfactor VIIIa A2 polypeptide F5(29-534) thrombin heavy chain activated thrombin(factorIIa):SERPIND1factor VIIIa:factorIXa11xCbxE-3D-F10(41-179) fibrin multimerSERPINA5 Zn2+Ca2+PROC(200-461) factorXIa:GPIb:GPIX:GPVcomplexPROC(200-461) factor Xa:Factor Xainhibitorsfactor VSERPINE2 factor Va light chain SERPINE2:GAG:activated thrombin (factor IIa)factor XIIIaKNG1(390-644) FGB(31-44)F8(20-391) S308L FibrinogenA2M PF4V1(31-104) PRTN3 SERPINA5PROCR:Protein CGPIb-IX-Vthrombin heavy chain factor V activationpeptideKNG1(19-644) F8(392-759) N713I factor XIa heavy chain PROCR:Activatedprotein CKLKB1(20-390) thrombin light chain TF:F7aCa2+ Ca2+ SERPIND1 PROCR(18-?):Activated protein Cthrombin heavy chain F8(392-759) R717W C1QBP F8(392-759) R717L PROCR Factor IIainhibitors(compounds)FGA(20-35)PROCR(18-?):PRTN3:CD177thrombin heavy chain thrombin light chain SERPINC1(33-425) Va:XaCa2+Activated proteinC:Protein SC1QBP KLKB1(391-638) Inactivated factorVIII8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) factor Xa heavy chain TFPI:TF:F7a:factorXafactor XIF8(20-391) A303E Ca2+ F13B PalmC-F3 F8(582-640)THBD factor IX activationpeptideFVIIIa:FIXa:PROS1SERPING110xCbxE-F7(61-212) factor Vifactor Xa heavy chain Ca2+ KLKB1(391-638) Ca2+ Ca2+ NH4+8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) F5(535-737)SERPING1factor VIIIa A2 polypeptide GP9 PRTN3 factor VIIa heavy chain thrombin light chain factor VIIIa A1 polypeptide 10xCbxE-F7(61-466) factor VIIIa A1 polypeptide factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide F8(392-759) R550H Factor IIainhibitors:IIaPROCR 10xCbxE-F7(61-212) factor XIIa heavy chain factor Xa heavy chain factor IXafactor XIIa:C1InhCa2+ SERPIND1 factor VIII light chain factor Va heavy chain Ca2+ Ca2+ factor Vafactor VIIIaKNG1(19-644) 8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) factor VIIIa A1 polypeptide factor Va light chain factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide factor XIIa light chain factor VIII:vonWillebrand factormultimerSERPINC1(426-464) factor VIIIGP9 11xCbxE-3D-F10(41-179) Ca2+ 10xCbxE-F2(44-622)activatedkininogen:C1qbinding proteintetramerPROC(212-461) Plasma kallikreinVa:Xa:Factor Xainhibitorsfactor X activationpeptideBradykininPROC(212-461) 10xCbxE-F7(61-212) Platelet Factor 4FGG F8(20-391) S308L F8(392-759) R717L factor VIIIa withdefective A2 domainfactor Va light chain sequestered tissuefactoractivatedthrombin:thrombomodulinGP9 C1QBP factor VIIaFactor IIainhibitors(peptide):IIafactor VIIa heavy chain KLKB1(391-638) GAG ExtracellularthrombininactivatingcomplexesGAG SERPINC1(426-464) F12 T328R thrombin heavy chain F8(392-759) R550G thrombin light chain PROCRthrombin:cleavedSERPINC18xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) kallikrein:alpha2-macroglobulinFVIIIa:FIXa R384Lfactor XIIIa A chain 8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) factor Va heavy chain Ca2+ PRCP PalmC-F3 factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide FGA(20-866) Ca2+ factor XIII cleavedtetramerA2M tetramerprekallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramerFGG 12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-191) factor XIa light chain factor IXa heavy chain thrombin light chain factor VIII light chain 11xCbxE-3D-F10(41-179) PalmC-F3 PROCR(18-?) GP5 factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide KNG1(19-380) F12 T328R (373-615) GP1BB kallikrein:C1InhSERPINA5 fibrin multimer,crosslinkedfactor VIIIa A2 polypeptide FGA thrombin heavy chain 11xCbxE-3D-F10(41-179) activated thrombin(factor IIa)factor XaPROC(212-461) FGB factor XIIIa A chain factor VIIa heavy chain F8(20-391) A303E Ca2+ 10xCbxE-F7(61-466) PROC(200-211)Ca2+thrombin heavy chain factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide Ca2+ factor XI monomer KLKB1(391-638) F12 T328K(20-328) 10xCbxE-F7(61-466):Ca2+KNG1(19-644)factor VIIIa A2polypeptidethrombin heavy chain CD177 KLKB1(20-390) SERPINE2 factor VIIIaA1:A3-C1-C212xCbxE-3D-F9(47-191) von Willibrandfactor multimerthrombin light chain F12 T328R(20-328) VWF(764-2813) PROC(212-461) factor VIIIa A2 polypeptide 11xCbxE-PROS1factor VIIIa A2 polypeptide factor Va heavy chain SERPINA5:Activatedprotein CTHBDkallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramerCa2+ SERPING1 PROC(212-461) FGB(31-491) SERPINC1 activatorsCa2+ F12 T328K (329-615) factor Viintermediate formPROC(212-461) thrombin heavy chain Activated protein CCa2+ factor Xa heavy chain thrombin:cleavedSERPINC1:SERPINC1activators8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) factor VIIIa B A3acidic polypeptideGP1BA thrombin heavy chain KLKB1(20-638) Factor IIainhibitors:IIafactor XIIa heavy chain F5(335-534)8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide factor VIIIaGAGFGB C1QBP F8(392-759) R550G F12 variant(329-615)F12 variantTFPI factor XIIIfibrin monomerfactor Va light chain thrombin heavy chain Ca2+ factor XaA2M thrombin light chain F12 T328K (373-615) F9(29-461)factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide SERPINC1(33-425) thrombin light chain KNG:C1q bindingprotein tetramerC1q binding proteintetramerF12 T328K SERPIND1factor XI monomer 11xCbxE-PROS1 prolylcarboxypeptidase dimerSERPINC1 thrombin light chain F13B F12 variant(373-615)SERPINE2:GAGfactor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide factor IXa heavy chain factor VIII heavy chain 11xCbxE-3D-F10(41-179) F8(20-355) 12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-191) 10xCbxE-F2(44-327)GP1BB Ca2+ GP1BB Ca2+KLKB1(20-390) F2R 11xCbxE-3D-F10(41-179) factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide factor XIIa light chain 8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) thrombin heavy chain KLKB1(20-390) Ca2+Factor IIainhibitors(compounds):IIafactor VIII heavy chain KNG1(19-644) F13BGP1BA PRTN3:CD177CD177 F8(392-759) R717W Plasma kallikreinCa2+ 12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-191) GP1BA 8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) factor XTF:F7Ca2+ Factor Xa inhibitors12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-191) factor XIICa2+ SERPINC1 VWF(764-2813) Ca2+ C1QBP Ca2+ factor IXa heavy chain F2RPROCR:Activatedprotein C:F2RF8(392-759) R550C F8(392-759) R550C GP5 Ca2+ SERPINC1:SERPINC1activatorsthrombin light chain factor X heavy chain FGA thrombin light chain thrombin light chain Ca2+ factor Va light chain 42, 1408842, 14093, 13493111, 13, 241413, 24, 9714, 9762, 9310561, 13, 2412713, 24, 973713, 24, 97394845, 6642, 751142, 14053, 83, 10714, 9730, 13245, 6693, 13430, 106, 13213, 24, 975, 1113, 3353, 83, 1075, 1113753, 83, 10753, 83, 1075, 11113, 24, 9730, 13253, 83, 1075, 11112742, 1406242, 14013, 2493, 1341, 13, 243, 331, 13, 2445, 6614, 9793, 13445, 663714, 97108614, 9742, 140145, 1113, 3342, 1403, 33935, 11142, 14013445, 6611141, 13, 2493, 13414, 9713, 2442, 140861442, 14014, 9762, 9313, 24, 9742, 1401, 13, 2413, 24, 9713, 24, 97863, 33885, 11193, 13442, 75, 14053, 83, 10742, 14053, 83, 10713, 24, 9742, 1405, 11142, 14042, 1405, 11113, 2453, 83, 10745, 661, 13, 241, 13, 241, 13, 2442, 14045, 66


Description

The formation of a fibrin clot at the site of an injury to the wall of a normal blood vessel is an essential part of the process to stop blood loss after vascular injury. The reactions that lead to fibrin clot formation are commonly described as a cascade, in which the product of each step is an enzyme or cofactor needed for following reactions to proceed efficiently. The entire clotting cascade can be divided into three portions, the extrinsic pathway, the intrinsic pathway, and the common pathway. The extrinsic pathway begins with the release of tissue factor at the site of vascular injury and leads to the activation of factor X. The intrinsic pathway provides an alternative mechanism for activation of factor X, starting from the activation of factor XII. The common pathway consists of the steps linking the activation of factor X to the formation of a multimeric, cross-linked fibrin clot. Each of these pathways includes not only a cascade of events that generate the catalytic activities needed for clot formation, but also numerous positive and negative regulatory events. View original pathway at Reactome.

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Pathway is converted from Reactome ID: 140877
Reactome-version 
Reactome version: 75
Reactome Author 
Reactome Author: D'Eustachio, Peter

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  83. Kane WH, Davie EW.; ''Cloning of a cDNA coding for human factor V, a blood coagulation factor homologous to factor VIII and ceruloplasmin.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  84. Kaufman RJ, Wasley LC, Furie BC, Furie B, Shoemaker CB.; ''Expression, purification, and characterization of recombinant gamma-carboxylated factor IX synthesized in Chinese hamster ovary cells.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  85. Laudano AP, Doolittle RF.; ''Studies on synthetic peptides that bind to fibrinogen and prevent fibrin polymerization. Structural requirements, number of binding sites, and species differences.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  86. Ichinose A, McMullen BA, Fujikawa K, Davie EW.; ''Amino acid sequence of the b subunit of human factor XIII, a protein composed of ten repetitive segments.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  87. Schreiber AD, Kaplan AP, Austen KF.; ''Inhibition by C1INH of Hagemann factor fragment activation of coagulation, fibrinolysis, and kinin generation.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  88. Celie PH, Van Stempvoort G, Jorieux S, Mazurier C, Van Mourik JA, Mertens K.; ''Substitution of Arg527 and Arg531 in factor VIII associated with mild haemophilia A: characterization in terms of subunit interaction and cofactor function.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  89. Riewald M, Petrovan RJ, Donner A, Mueller BM, Ruf W.; ''Activation of endothelial cell protease activated receptor 1 by the protein C pathway.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  90. Bhanwra S, Ahluwalia K.; ''The new factor Xa inhibitor: Apixaban.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  91. Sorensen AB, Madsen JJ, Frimurer TM, Overgaard MT, Gandhi PS, Persson E, Olsen OH.; ''Allostery in Coagulation Factor VIIa Revealed by Ensemble Refinement of Crystallographic Structures.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  92. Prandini MH, Reboul A, Colomb MG.; ''Biosynthesis of complement C1 inhibitor by Hep G2 cells. Reactivity of different glycosylated forms of the inhibitor with C1s.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  93. Leytus SP, Chung DW, Kisiel W, Kurachi K, Davie EW.; ''Characterization of a cDNA coding for human factor X.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  94. de Maat S, Clark CC, Boertien M, Parr N, Sanrattana W, Hofman ZLM, Maas C.; ''Factor XII truncation accelerates activation in solution.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  95. Griffin JH, Fernández JA, Gale AJ, Mosnier LO.; ''Activated protein C.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  96. Gladwell TD.; ''Bivalirudin: a direct thrombin inhibitor.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  97. McMullen BA, Fujikawa K, Kisiel W.; ''The occurrence of beta-hydroxyaspartic acid in the vitamin K-dependent blood coagulation zymogens.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  98. Kurachi K, Davie EW.; ''Activation of human factor XI (plasma thromboplastin antecedent) by factor XIIa (activated Hageman factor).''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  99. Naito K, Fujikawa K.; ''Activation of human blood coagulation factor XI independent of factor XII. Factor XI is activated by thrombin and factor XIa in the presence of negatively charged surfaces.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  100. Minor C, Tellor KB, Armbruster AL.; ''Edoxaban, a Novel Oral Factor Xa Inhibitor.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  101. Lenting PJ, van Mourik JA, Mertens K.; ''The life cycle of coagulation factor VIII in view of its structure and function.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  102. Shrimpton CN, Borthakur G, Larrucea S, Cruz MA, Dong JF, López JA.; ''Localization of the adhesion receptor glycoprotein Ib-IX-V complex to lipid rafts is required for platelet adhesion and activation.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  103. Mushunje A, Zhou A, Carrell RW, Huntington JA.; ''Heparin-induced substrate behavior of antithrombin Cambridge II.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  104. Graetz TJ, Tellor BR, Smith JR, Avidan MS.; ''Desirudin: a review of the pharmacology and clinical application for the prevention of deep vein thrombosis.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  105. Stangier J, Rathgen K, Stähle H, Gansser D, Roth W.; ''The pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and tolerability of dabigatran etexilate, a new oral direct thrombin inhibitor, in healthy male subjects.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  106. Hakeos WH, Miao H, Sirachainan N, Kemball-Cook G, Saenko EL, Kaufman RJ, Pipe SW.; ''Hemophilia A mutations within the factor VIII A2-A3 subunit interface destabilize factor VIIIa and cause one-stage/two-stage activity discrepancy.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  107. Kane WH, Ichinose A, Hagen FS, Davie EW.; ''Cloning of cDNAs coding for the heavy chain region and connecting region of human factor V, a blood coagulation factor with four types of internal repeats.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  108. Mahdi F, Shariat-Madar Z, Schmaier AH.; ''The relative priority of prekallikrein and factors XI/XIa assembly on cultured endothelial cells.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  109. Gailani D, Broze GJ.; ''Factor XII-independent activation of factor XI in plasma: effects of sulfatides on tissue factor-induced coagulation.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  110. Moreira CR, Schmaier AH, Mahdi F, da Motta G, Nader HB, Shariat-Madar Z.; ''Identification of prolylcarboxypeptidase as the cell matrix-associated prekallikrein activator.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  111. Thim L, Bjoern S, Christensen M, Nicolaisen EM, Lund-Hansen T, Pedersen AH, Hedner U.; ''Amino acid sequence and posttranslational modifications of human factor VIIa from plasma and transfected baby hamster kidney cells.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  112. Baglia FA, Badellino KO, Li CQ, Lopez JA, Walsh PN.; ''Factor XI binding to the platelet glycoprotein Ib-IX-V complex promotes factor XI activation by thrombin.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  113. Bondarenko M, Curti C, Montana M, Rathelot P, Vanelle P.; ''Efficacy and toxicity of factor Xa inhibitors.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  114. Joseph K, Shibayama Y, Ghebrehiwet B, Kaplan AP.; ''Factor XII-dependent contact activation on endothelial cells and binding proteins gC1qR and cytokeratin 1.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  115. Titani K, Kumar S, Takio K, Ericsson LH, Wade RD, Ashida K, Walsh KA, Chopek MW, Sadler JE, Fujikawa K.; ''Amino acid sequence of human von Willebrand factor.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  116. Silverberg M, Dunn JT, Garen L, Kaplan AP.; ''Autoactivation of human Hageman factor. Demonstration utilizing a synthetic substrate.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  117. Li W, Huntington JA.; ''Crystal structures of protease nexin-1 in complex with heparin and thrombin suggest a 2-step recognition mechanism.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  118. Fay PJ, Smudzin TM.; ''Characterization of the interaction between the A2 subunit and A1/A3-C1-C2 dimer in human factor VIIIa.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  119. Mahdi F, Madar ZS, Figueroa CD, Schmaier AH.; ''Factor XII interacts with the multiprotein assembly of urokinase plasminogen activator receptor, gC1qR, and cytokeratin 1 on endothelial cell membranes.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  120. Griffin JH, Cochrane CG.; ''Mechanisms for the involvement of high molecular weight kininogen in surface-dependent reactions of Hageman factor.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  121. Taylor FB, Peer GT, Lockhart MS, Ferrell G, Esmon CT.; ''Endothelial cell protein C receptor plays an important role in protein C activation in vivo.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  122. Broze GJ, Girard TJ, Novotny WF.; ''Regulation of coagulation by a multivalent Kunitz-type inhibitor.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  123. Tan F, Morris PW, Skidgel RA, Erdös EG.; ''Sequencing and cloning of human prolylcarboxypeptidase (angiotensinase C). Similarity to both serine carboxypeptidase and prolylendopeptidase families.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  124. Davie EW, Fujikawa K, Kisiel W.; ''The coagulation cascade: initiation, maintenance, and regulation.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  125. Rapaport SI, Rao LV.; ''The tissue factor pathway: how it has become a "prima ballerina".''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  126. Church FC, Noyes CM, Griffith MJ.; ''Inhibition of chymotrypsin by heparin cofactor II.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  127. Lewis SD, Janus TJ, Lorand L, Shafer JA.; ''Regulation of formation of factor XIIIa by its fibrin substrates.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  128. Weitz JI, Hudoba M, Massel D, Maraganore J, Hirsh J.; ''Clot-bound thrombin is protected from inhibition by heparin-antithrombin III but is susceptible to inactivation by antithrombin III-independent inhibitors.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  129. Pan S, Iannotti MJ, Sifers RN.; ''Analysis of serpin secretion, misfolding, and surveillance in the endoplasmic reticulum.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  130. Nemerson Y.; ''Tissue factor and hemostasis.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  131. Yegneswaran S, Smirnov MD, Safa O, Esmon NL, Esmon CT, Johnson AE.; ''Relocating the active site of activated protein C eliminates the need for its protein S cofactor. A fluorescence resonance energy transfer study.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  132. Pipe SW, Eickhorst AN, McKinley SH, Saenko EL, Kaufman RJ.; ''Mild hemophilia A caused by increased rate of factor VIII A2 subunit dissociation: evidence for nonproteolytic inactivation of factor VIIIa in vivo.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  133. Rosing J, Hoekema L, Nicolaes GA, Thomassen MC, Hemker HC, Varadi K, Schwarz HP, Tans G.; ''Effects of protein S and factor Xa on peptide bond cleavages during inactivation of factor Va and factor VaR506Q by activated protein C.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  134. Di Scipio RG, Hermodson MA, Davie EW.; ''Activation of human factor X (Stuart factor) by a protease from Russell's viper venom.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  135. Hoeben RC, Fallaux FJ, Cramer SJ, van den Wollenberg DJ, van Ormondt H, Briët E, van der Eb AJ.; ''Expression of the blood-clotting factor-VIII cDNA is repressed by a transcriptional silencer located in its coding region.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  136. Gilbert GE, Furie BC, Furie B.; ''Binding of human factor VIII to phospholipid vesicles.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  137. Schmaier AH.; ''The physiologic basis of assembly and activation of the plasma kallikrein/kinin system.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  138. Kellermann J, Lottspeich F, Henschen A, Müller-Esterl W.; ''Completion of the primary structure of human high-molecular-mass kininogen. The amino acid sequence of the entire heavy chain and evidence for its evolution by gene triplication.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  139. Wienen W, Stassen JM, Priepke H, Ries UJ, Hauel N.; ''In-vitro profile and ex-vivo anticoagulant activity of the direct thrombin inhibitor dabigatran and its orally active prodrug, dabigatran etexilate.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  140. Butkowski RJ, Elion J, Downing MR, Mann KG.; ''Primary structure of human prethrombin 2 and alpha-thrombin.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  141. Shariat-Madar Z, Mahdi F, Schmaier AH.; ''Recombinant prolylcarboxypeptidase activates plasma prekallikrein.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  142. Greengard JS, Heeb MJ, Ersdal E, Walsh PN, Griffin JH.; ''Binding of coagulation factor XI to washed human platelets.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  143. Holmer E, Söderberg K, Bergqvist D, Lindahl U.; ''Heparin and its low molecular weight derivatives: anticoagulant and antithrombotic properties.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  144. Kurosawa S, Esmon CT, Stearns-Kurosawa DJ.; ''The soluble endothelial protein C receptor binds to activated neutrophils: involvement of proteinase-3 and CD11b/CD18.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  145. Kurachi K, Kurachi S, Furukawa M, Yao SN.; ''Biology of factor IX.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia

History

View all...
CompareRevisionActionTimeUserComment
123618view08:20, 7 August 2022EgonwModified title
114744view16:23, 25 January 2021ReactomeTeamReactome version 75
113188view11:25, 2 November 2020ReactomeTeamReactome version 74
112416view15:35, 9 October 2020ReactomeTeamReactome version 73
101320view11:21, 1 November 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 66
100857view20:53, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 65
100398view19:27, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 64
99946view16:11, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 63
99502view14:44, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 62 (2nd attempt)
94025view13:52, 16 August 2017ReactomeTeamreactome version 61
93645view11:29, 9 August 2017ReactomeTeamreactome version 61
87449view13:55, 22 July 2016MkutmonOntology Term : 'coagulation cascade pathway' added !
86761view09:25, 11 July 2016ReactomeTeamreactome version 56
83143view10:09, 18 November 2015ReactomeTeamVersion54
81490view13:01, 21 August 2015ReactomeTeamVersion53
76965view08:24, 17 July 2014ReactomeTeamFixed remaining interactions
76670view12:03, 16 July 2014ReactomeTeamFixed remaining interactions
75999view10:05, 11 June 2014ReactomeTeamRe-fixing comment source
75702view11:04, 10 June 2014ReactomeTeamReactome 48 Update
75538view19:27, 9 June 2014MaintBotchanged description source
75512view12:25, 5 June 2014AnweshaUpdated in Reactome48
75058view13:56, 8 May 2014AnweshaFixing comment source for displaying WikiPathways description
74702view08:46, 30 April 2014ReactomeTeamReactome46
73650view00:25, 12 February 2014AriuttaRemoved GroupRef="group_comp_1316" because there is no Group with GroupId="group_comp_1316"
73634view20:28, 10 February 2014KhanspersReverted to version '20:24, 8 February 2014' by Khanspers
73633view20:24, 10 February 2014Khanspersremoved cell shape
73632view20:22, 10 February 2014Khanspersremoved all groups to possibly resolve crash
73624view20:24, 8 February 2014MaintBotTrying out new gpml conversion to resolve crash of new pvjs viewer
69011view17:46, 8 July 2013MaintBotUpdated to 2013 gpml schema
42041view21:52, 4 March 2011MaintBotAutomatic update
39844view05:52, 21 January 2011MaintBotNew pathway

External references

DataNodes

View all...
NameTypeDatabase referenceComment
10xCbxE-F2(44-327)ProteinP00734 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
10xCbxE-F2(44-622)ProteinP00734 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
10xCbxE-F7(61-212) ProteinP08709 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
10xCbxE-F7(61-466) ProteinP08709 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
10xCbxE-F7(61-466):Ca2+ComplexR-HSA-8959612 (Reactome)
11xCbxE-3D-F10(41-179) ProteinP00742 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
11xCbxE-PROS1 ProteinP07225 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
11xCbxE-PROS1ProteinP07225 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-191) ProteinP00740 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-461)ProteinP00740 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
8xCbxE-3D-PROC(43-197) ProteinP04070 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
A2M ProteinP01023 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
A2M tetramerComplexR-HSA-158255 (Reactome)
Activated protein C:Protein SComplexR-HSA-5604926 (Reactome)
Activated protein CComplexR-HSA-141050 (Reactome)
BradykininProteinP01042 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
C1QBP ProteinQ07021 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
C1q binding protein tetramerComplexR-HSA-158318 (Reactome)
CD177 ProteinQ8N6Q3 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
Ca2+ MetaboliteCHEBI:29108 (ChEBI)
Ca2+MetaboliteCHEBI:29108 (ChEBI)
Extracellular

thrombin inactivating

complexes
ComplexR-HSA-5607050 (Reactome)
F12 T328K (329-615) ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F12 T328K (373-615) ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F12 T328K ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F12 T328K(20-328) ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F12 T328R (329-615) ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F12 T328R (373-615) ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F12 T328R ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F12 T328R(20-328) ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F12 variant (329-615)ComplexR-HSA-9653229 (Reactome)
F12 variant (373-615)ComplexR-HSA-9655054 (Reactome)
F12 variant (20-328)ComplexR-HSA-9653235 (Reactome)
F12 variantComplexR-HSA-9653247 (Reactome)
F13B ProteinP05160 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F13BProteinP05160 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F2R ProteinP25116 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F2RProteinP25116 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F5(29-334) ProteinP12259 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F5(29-534) ProteinP12259 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F5(335-534)ProteinP12259 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F5(535-737)ProteinP12259 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(20-355) ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(20-391) A303E ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(20-391) S308L ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(356-372)ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(373-581) ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(392-759) A2 domain variantComplexR-HSA-9670027 (Reactome) Haemophilia A-associated mutations within the predicted A1-A2 and A1-A3 interface that have the molecular phenotype of increased rate of inactivation of FVIIIa due to increased rate of A2 subunit dissociation.
F8(392-759) N713I ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(392-759) R550C ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(392-759) R550G ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(392-759) R550H ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(392-759) R717L ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(392-759) R717W ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F8(582-640)ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F9(227-461) R384L ProteinP00740 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
F9(29-461)ProteinP00740 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
FGA ProteinP02671 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
FGA(20-35)ProteinP02671 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
FGA(20-866) ProteinP02671 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
FGB ProteinP02675 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
FGB(31-44)ProteinP02675 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
FGB(31-491) ProteinP02675 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
FGG ProteinP02679 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
FVIIIa:FIXa R384LComplexR-HSA-9668257 (Reactome)
FVIIIa:FIXa:PROS1ComplexR-HSA-9669957 (Reactome)
Factor IIa

inhibitors

(compounds):IIa
ComplexR-HSA-9015343 (Reactome)
Factor IIa

inhibitors

(compounds)
ComplexR-ALL-9603311 (Reactome)
Factor IIa

inhibitors

(peptide):IIa
ComplexR-HSA-9603322 (Reactome)
Factor IIa

inhibitors

(peptide)
ComplexR-ALL-9603327 (Reactome)
Factor IIa inhibitors:IIaComplexR-HSA-9603332 (Reactome)
Factor VIII precursorProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
Factor Xa inhibitorsComplexR-ALL-9038743 (Reactome)
FibrinogenComplexR-HSA-114618 (Reactome) Fibrinogen is a hexamer, containing two fibrinogen alpha chains, two fibrinogen beta chains, and two fibrinogen gamma chains, held together by disulfide bonds.
GAG MetaboliteCHEBI:18085 (ChEBI)
GAGMetaboliteCHEBI:18085 (ChEBI)
GP1BA ProteinP07359 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
GP1BB ProteinP13224 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
GP5 ProteinP40197 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
GP9 ProteinP14770 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
GPIb-IX-VComplexR-HSA-114668 (Reactome)
Inactivated factor VIIIComplexR-HSA-5607059 (Reactome)
KLKB1(20-390) ProteinP03952 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
KLKB1(20-638) ProteinP03952 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
KLKB1(20-638)ProteinP03952 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
KLKB1(391-638) ProteinP03952 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
KNG1(19-380) ProteinP01042 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
KNG1(19-644) ProteinP01042 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
KNG1(19-644)ProteinP01042 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
KNG1(390-644) ProteinP01042 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
KNG:C1q binding protein tetramerComplexR-HSA-158172 (Reactome)
NH4+MetaboliteCHEBI:28938 (ChEBI)
PF4(32-101) ProteinP02776 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PF4V1(31-104) ProteinP10720 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PRCP ProteinP42785 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PROC(200-211)ProteinP04070 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PROC(200-461) ProteinP04070 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PROC(212-461) ProteinP04070 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PROCR ProteinQ9UNN8 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PROCR(18-?) ProteinQ9UNN8 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PROCR(18-?):Activated protein CComplexR-HSA-5610097 (Reactome)
PROCR(18-?):PRTN3:CD177ComplexR-HSA-5610092 (Reactome)
PROCR(18-?)ProteinQ9UNN8 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PROCR:Activated protein C:F2RComplexR-HSA-5607093 (Reactome)
PROCR:Activated protein CComplexR-HSA-5603469 (Reactome)
PROCR:Protein CComplexR-HSA-5603321 (Reactome)
PROCRProteinQ9UNN8 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PRTN3 ProteinP24158 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PRTN3:CD177ComplexR-HSA-5610107 (Reactome)
PalmC-F3 ProteinP13726 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PalmC-F3ProteinP13726 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
Plasma kallikreinComplexR-HSA-158140 (Reactome)
Platelet Factor 4ComplexR-HSA-203105 (Reactome)
Protein CComplexR-HSA-141043 (Reactome)
SERPINA5 ProteinP05154 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPINA5:Activated protein CComplexR-HSA-5607007 (Reactome)
SERPINA5ProteinP05154 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPINC1 ProteinP01008 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPINC1 activatorsComplexR-ALL-9693058 (Reactome)
SERPINC1(33-425) ProteinP01008 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPINC1(426-464) ProteinP01008 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPINC1:SERPINC1 activatorsComplexR-HSA-140799 (Reactome)
SERPINC1ProteinP01008 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPIND1 ProteinP05546 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPIND1ProteinP05546 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPINE2 ProteinP07093 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPINE2:GAG:activated thrombin (factor IIa)ComplexR-HSA-5607781 (Reactome)
SERPINE2:GAGComplexR-HSA-5607782 (Reactome)
SERPING1 ProteinP05155 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
SERPING1ProteinP05155 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TF:F7ComplexR-HSA-140775 (Reactome)
TF:F7aComplexR-HSA-140734 (Reactome)
TFPI ProteinP10646 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TFPI:TF:F7a:factor XaComplexR-HSA-140833 (Reactome)
TFPIProteinP10646 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
THBD ProteinP07204 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
THBDProteinP07204 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
VWF(764-2813) ProteinP04275 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
Va:Xa:Factor Xa inhibitorsComplexR-HSA-9015116 (Reactome)
Va:XaComplexR-HSA-140662 (Reactome)
Zn2+MetaboliteCHEBI:29105 (ChEBI)
activated

kininogen:C1q binding protein

tetramer
ComplexR-HSA-158257 (Reactome)
activated thrombin:thrombomodulinComplexR-HSA-141038 (Reactome)
activated thrombin

(factor

IIa):SERPIND1
ComplexR-HSA-5578881 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)ComplexR-HSA-140811 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)ComplexR-HSA-156786 (Reactome)
apixaban
argatroban
bivalirudin
dalteparin
factor

XIa:GPIb:GPIX:GPV

complex
ComplexR-HSA-158130 (Reactome)
factor IX activation peptideProteinP00740 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor IXa heavy chain ProteinP00740 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor IXaComplexR-HSA-140896 (Reactome)
factor IXaComplexR-HSA-5633117 (Reactome)
factor V activation peptideProteinP12259 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIII heavy chain ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIII light chain ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIII:von

Willebrand factor

multimer
ComplexR-HSA-158363 (Reactome)
factor VIIIComplexR-HSA-158350 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa A1:A3-C1-C2ComplexR-HSA-9670019 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa A1 variant:A3-C1-C2ComplexR-HSA-9670061 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa A1 polypeptide ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIIIa A2 polypeptideProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIIIa A2 polypeptide ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIIIa A3 C1 C2 polypeptide ProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIIIa B A3 acidic polypeptideProteinP00451 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIIIa with defective A1 domainComplexR-HSA-9670038 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa with defective A2 domainComplexR-HSA-9670051 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa:factor IXaComplexR-HSA-158392 (Reactome)
factor VIIIaComplexR-HSA-158307 (Reactome)
factor VIIIaComplexR-HSA-5633116 (Reactome)
factor VIIa heavy chain ProteinP08709 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VIIaComplexR-HSA-140751 (Reactome)
factor VProteinP12259 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor Va heavy chain ProteinP12259 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor Va light chain ProteinP12259 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor VaComplexR-HSA-140692 (Reactome)
factor Vi intermediate formComplexR-HSA-141055 (Reactome)
factor ViComplexR-HSA-5605105 (Reactome)
factor X activation peptideProteinP00742 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor X heavy chain ProteinP00742 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XI monomer ProteinP03951 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XI:GPIb-IX-V complexComplexR-HSA-158162 (Reactome)
factor XIII A chain activation peptideProteinP00488 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XIII A chain ProteinP00488 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XIII cleaved tetramerComplexR-HSA-140789 (Reactome)
factor XIIIComplexR-HSA-140608 (Reactome)
factor XIIIa A chain ProteinP00488 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XIIIaComplexR-HSA-140849 (Reactome)
factor XIIProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XIIa heavy chain ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XIIa light chain ProteinP00748 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XIIa:C1InhComplexR-HSA-158141 (Reactome)
factor XIIaComplexR-HSA-158306 (Reactome)
factor XIComplexR-HSA-158234 (Reactome)
factor XIa heavy chain ProteinP03951 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XIa light chain ProteinP03951 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor XComplexR-HSA-140739 (Reactome)
factor Xa heavy chain ProteinP00742 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
factor Xa:Factor Xa inhibitorsComplexR-HSA-9015108 (Reactome)
factor XaComplexR-HSA-140649 (Reactome)
factor XaComplexR-HSA-140689 (Reactome)
fibrin monomerComplexR-HSA-140586 (Reactome) Fibrin is a hexamer of two fibrinogen alpha chains, two fibrinogen beta chains, and two fibrinogen gamma chains, held together by disulfide bonds. It is formed in vivo by the thrombin-catalyzed removal of amino terminal fibinopeptides from the A alpha and B beta chains of fibrinogen. This fibrin hexamer ("fibrin monomer") is the subunit that multimerizes to form a fibrin clot ("fibrin multimer").
fibrin multimer, crosslinkedR-ALL-157771 (Reactome)
fibrin multimerComplexR-HSA-139933 (Reactome) The fibrin "monomers" formed by the action of thrombin on fibrinogen associate spontaneously into multimers. This association can follow several distinct pathways and may be able to form several types of higher-order structures. All of these possibilities are represented in Reactome as a fibrin trimer.
kallikrein:C1InhComplexR-HSA-158423 (Reactome)
kallikrein:alpha2-macroglobulinComplexR-HSA-158334 (Reactome)
kallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramerComplexR-HSA-158197 (Reactome)
prekallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramerComplexR-HSA-158404 (Reactome)
prolylcarboxypeptidase dimerComplexR-HSA-158176 (Reactome)
sequestered tissue factorProteinP13726 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
thrombin heavy chain ProteinP00734 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
thrombin light chain ProteinP00734 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
thrombin:SERPINC1:SERPINC1 activatorsComplexR-HSA-140812 (Reactome)
thrombin:cleaved

SERPINC1:SERPINC1

activators
ComplexR-HSA-140871 (Reactome)
thrombin:cleaved SERPINC1ComplexR-HSA-140874 (Reactome)
von Willibrand factor multimerComplexR-HSA-158136 (Reactome)

Annotated Interactions

View all...
SourceTargetTypeDatabase referenceComment
10xCbxE-F2(44-327)ArrowR-HSA-140664 (Reactome)
10xCbxE-F2(44-327)ArrowR-HSA-140700 (Reactome)
10xCbxE-F2(44-622)R-HSA-140664 (Reactome)
10xCbxE-F2(44-622)R-HSA-140700 (Reactome)
10xCbxE-F7(61-466):Ca2+R-HSA-140769 (Reactome)
10xCbxE-F7(61-466):Ca2+R-HSA-140783 (Reactome)
11xCbxE-PROS1R-HSA-5604929 (Reactome)
12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-461)ArrowR-HSA-9670673 (Reactome)
12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-461)R-HSA-140823 (Reactome)
12xCbxE-3D-F9(47-461)R-HSA-158333 (Reactome)
A2M tetramerR-HSA-158340 (Reactome)
Activated protein C:Protein SArrowR-HSA-5604929 (Reactome)
Activated protein C:Protein Smim-catalysisR-HSA-141026 (Reactome)
Activated protein C:Protein Smim-catalysisR-HSA-5591040 (Reactome)
Activated protein C:Protein Smim-catalysisR-HSA-5607002 (Reactome)
Activated protein CArrowR-HSA-5603467 (Reactome)
Activated protein CR-HSA-5591086 (Reactome)
Activated protein CR-HSA-5604929 (Reactome)
Activated protein CR-HSA-5606996 (Reactome)
BradykininArrowR-HSA-158311 (Reactome)
C1q binding protein tetramerR-HSA-158354 (Reactome)
Ca2+ArrowR-HSA-140748 (Reactome)
Ca2+ArrowR-HSA-140783 (Reactome)
Ca2+ArrowR-HSA-140823 (Reactome)
Ca2+ArrowR-HSA-158278 (Reactome)
Ca2+ArrowR-HSA-158333 (Reactome)
Ca2+R-HSA-140736 (Reactome)
Ca2+R-HSA-140847 (Reactome)
Ca2+R-HSA-158164 (Reactome)
Ca2+R-HSA-9668253 (Reactome)
Extracellular

thrombin inactivating

complexes
TBarR-HSA-140599 (Reactome)
Extracellular

thrombin inactivating

complexes
TBarR-HSA-140696 (Reactome)
Extracellular

thrombin inactivating

complexes
TBarR-HSA-140840 (Reactome)
Extracellular

thrombin inactivating

complexes
TBarR-HSA-158137 (Reactome)
Extracellular

thrombin inactivating

complexes
TBarR-HSA-158419 (Reactome)
F12 variant (329-615)ArrowR-HSA-9653249 (Reactome)
F12 variant (329-615)R-HSA-9655046 (Reactome)
F12 variant (373-615)ArrowR-HSA-9655046 (Reactome)
F12 variant (20-328)ArrowR-HSA-9653249 (Reactome)
F12 variantR-HSA-9653249 (Reactome)
F13BArrowR-HSA-140847 (Reactome)
F2RR-HSA-5607058 (Reactome)
F5(335-534)ArrowR-HSA-5591040 (Reactome)
F5(535-737)ArrowR-HSA-141026 (Reactome)
F8(356-372)ArrowR-HSA-5607002 (Reactome)
F8(392-759) A2 domain variantArrowR-HSA-9670054 (Reactome)
F8(582-640)ArrowR-HSA-5607002 (Reactome)
F9(29-461)R-HSA-9670673 (Reactome)
FGA(20-35)ArrowR-HSA-140840 (Reactome)
FGB(31-44)ArrowR-HSA-140840 (Reactome)
FVIIIa:FIXa R384Lmim-catalysisR-HSA-9668253 (Reactome)
FVIIIa:FIXa:PROS1TBarR-HSA-158164 (Reactome)
Factor IIa

inhibitors

(compounds):IIa
ArrowR-HSA-9015379 (Reactome)
Factor IIa

inhibitors

(compounds)
R-HSA-9015379 (Reactome)
Factor IIa

inhibitors

(peptide):IIa
ArrowR-HSA-9603302 (Reactome)
Factor IIa

inhibitors

(peptide)
R-HSA-9603302 (Reactome)
Factor IIa inhibitors:IIaTBarR-HSA-158137 (Reactome)
Factor IIa inhibitors:IIaTBarR-HSA-158419 (Reactome)
Factor VIII precursorR-HSA-9661625 (Reactome)
Factor Xa inhibitorsR-HSA-9015111 (Reactome)
Factor Xa inhibitorsR-HSA-9015122 (Reactome)
FibrinogenR-HSA-140840 (Reactome)
GAGArrowR-HSA-5578883 (Reactome)
GAGArrowR-HSA-5591086 (Reactome)
GPIb-IX-VR-HSA-158145 (Reactome)
Inactivated factor VIIIArrowR-HSA-5607002 (Reactome)
KLKB1(20-638)R-HSA-158218 (Reactome)
KNG1(19-644)ArrowR-HSA-158313 (Reactome)
KNG1(19-644)R-HSA-158354 (Reactome)
KNG:C1q binding protein tetramerArrowR-HSA-158354 (Reactome)
KNG:C1q binding protein tetramerR-HSA-158218 (Reactome)
NH4+ArrowR-HSA-140851 (Reactome)
PROC(200-211)ArrowR-HSA-141040 (Reactome)
PROCR(18-?):Activated protein CArrowR-HSA-5606996 (Reactome)
PROCR(18-?):Activated protein CTBarR-HSA-5591052 (Reactome)
PROCR(18-?):PRTN3:CD177ArrowR-HSA-5607004 (Reactome)
PROCR(18-?)R-HSA-5606996 (Reactome)
PROCR(18-?)R-HSA-5607004 (Reactome)
PROCR:Activated protein C:F2RArrowR-HSA-5607058 (Reactome)
PROCR:Activated protein CArrowR-HSA-141040 (Reactome)
PROCR:Activated protein CR-HSA-5603467 (Reactome)
PROCR:Activated protein CR-HSA-5607058 (Reactome)
PROCR:Protein CArrowR-HSA-5591052 (Reactome)
PROCR:Protein CR-HSA-141040 (Reactome)
PROCRArrowR-HSA-5603467 (Reactome)
PROCRR-HSA-5591052 (Reactome)
PRTN3:CD177R-HSA-5607004 (Reactome)
PalmC-F3ArrowR-HSA-140761 (Reactome)
PalmC-F3R-HSA-140748 (Reactome)
PalmC-F3R-HSA-140783 (Reactome)
Plasma kallikreinArrowR-HSA-158311 (Reactome)
Plasma kallikreinR-HSA-158340 (Reactome)
Plasma kallikreinR-HSA-158399 (Reactome)
Plasma kallikreinmim-catalysisR-HSA-9655046 (Reactome)
Platelet Factor 4ArrowR-HSA-141040 (Reactome)
Protein CR-HSA-5591052 (Reactome)
R-HSA-140599 (Reactome) Activated thrombin cleaves the A chains of factor XIII tetramers in a reaction stimulated by the presence of fibrin multimers (Lewis et al. 1985). The amino terminal portions of the A chains are released as activation peptides, which have no known function. The resulting factor XIII tetramer remains catalytically inactive.
R-HSA-140664 (Reactome) The membrane-bound Va:Xa (prothrombinase) complex rapidly activates large amounts of thrombin. Factor Xa (aka Factor X heavy chain), a cleavage product of coagulation factor X (F10), is a vitamin K-dependent glycoprotein able to convert prothrombin to thrombin during the blood clotting process (Mann et al. 1988, Orfeo et al. 2004). Factor Xa is a target for direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) drugs that are direct factor Xa inhibitors (the so-called 'xabans') and used in the treatment and prevention of thromboembolic disorders (Galanis et al. 2014).
R-HSA-140686 (Reactome) Factors Va and Xa associate on a membrane surface to form a complex in which the activity of factor Xa on prothrombin is greatly increased (Mann et al. 1988). The presence of negatively charged phospholipid in the membrane greatly facilitates this process, a feature that may contribute to its localization, as such phospholipids are normally on the cytosolic face of the plasma membrane (Devaux 1992), but could be exposed to the extracellular space following platelet activation or mechanical injury to endothelial cells.
R-HSA-140696 (Reactome) Activated thrombin (factor IIa) catalyzes the conversion of factor V to factor Va (activated factor V). The activation peptide released in this reaction has no known function.
R-HSA-140700 (Reactome) Membrane-bound factor Xa catalyzes the activation of small amounts of thrombin. The amino terminal portion of prothrombin is released as an activation peptide, which can be cleaved further by activated thrombin. Neither the full-length activation peptide nor its cleavage products have known functions.

Factor Xa (aka Factor X heavy chain), a cleavage product of coagulation factor X (F10), is a vitamin K-dependent glycoprotein able to convert prothrombin to thrombin during the blood clotting process. Factor Xa is a target for direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) drugs that are direct factor Xa inhibitors (the so-called 'xabans') and used in the treatment and prevention of thromboembolic disorders (Galanis et al. 2014).
R-HSA-140736 (Reactome) Factor VIIa, bound to tissue factor at the endothelial cell surface (the "extrinsic tenase complex"), catalyzes the formation of activated factor X with high efficiency. The amino terminal part of the heavy chain of factor X, the factor X activation peptide, is released. (This peptide has no known function.)
R-HSA-140748 (Reactome) Tissue factor exposed at the endothelial cell surface forms a Ca2+-dependent complex with factor VIIa (FVIIa, activated FVII) from the plasma (Butenas S et al. 1994; Sabharwal AK et al. 1995; Banner DW et al. 1996; Bajaj SP et al. 2006; Persson E & Olsen OH 2011; Madsen JJ et al. 2015). FVIIa is allosterically activated by TF, which increases the amidolytic activity of FVIIa several-fold by restructuring the active site region (Butenas S et al. 1994; Higashi S et al. 1996; Sorensen AB et al. 2019). FVIIa, bound to TF at the endothelial cell surface, catalyzes the formation of activated factor IXa (FIXa) and FXa with high efficiency leading to thrombin generation and fibrin formation (Vadivel K & Bajaj SP 2012).
R-HSA-140761 (Reactome) Tissue factor (TF), also known as thromboplastin or CD142, is an integral transmembrane glycoprotein, that functions as a co-factor for coagulation factor VII (FVII) and FVIIa (Broze GJ et al. 1985; Nemerson Y & Repke D 1985; Rao LV & Rapaport SI 1988). The TF:FVIIa complex is the primary activator of the coagulation protease cascade. The formation of TF:FVIIa complex triggers the coagulation cascade by activating both FIX and FX through their limited proteolysis. TF is expressed on the surface of several cell types located in subendothelial structures throughout the vasculature, and it is normally not in contact with circulating blood, where other coagulation factors are present in their inactivated forms (Drake TA et al. 1989; Wilcox JN et al. 1989; Fleck RA et al. 1990). Cells that are normally not exposed to the flowing blood, such as smooth muscle cells, constitutively express TF on their surface (Drake TA et al. 1989; Fleck RA et al. 1990). Upon vascular injury, through physical damage of the endothelial layer of the blood vessel, TF becomes exposed to circulating blood and the extracellular part of TF binds FVII with very high affinity and specificity. Infectious and inflammatory disease conditions induce TF expression, either in circulating blood cells or vascular endothelial cells, by activation of TF gene transcription (van den Eijnden MM et al. 1997; Osterud B & Bjorklid E 2012). Induced expression of TF by monocytes in response to infection is thought to be a part of the innate immune response to limit the dissemination of pathogens by trapping them inside clots (van der Poll T & Herwald H 2014).

Irrespective of the cellular source of TF and whether it is induced or constitutively expressed, most of the TF expressed on the surfaces of resting cells exists in a cryptic coagulant-inactive state (Schecter AD et al. 1997; Bach RR 2006; Kothari H et al. 2013; Grover SP & Mackman N 2018). The encrypted TF can bind to FVIIa, but the assembled TF:FVIIa complex fails to activate FIX and FX (Rao LV & Pendurthi UR 2012). Activation or disruption of cells markedly enhances cell surface TF procoagulant activity without altering TF antigen levels at the cell surface (‘decryption’). Several mechanisms have been proposed for TF decryption on cell surfaces, and out of them, externalization of phosphatidylserine (PS) to the outer leaflet and PDI-mediated thiol-disulfide exchange pathways that affect the allosteric disulfide bond in TF seem most likely (Rao LV & Pendurthi UR 2012; Grover SP & Mackman N 2018; Ansari SA et al. 2019). The presence of a high molar concentration of sphingomyelin (SM) in the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane inhibits TF procoagulant activity on the cell surface, thus maintaining TF in an encrypted state in resting cells (Wang J et al. 2017). Acid-sphingomyelinase (ASM)-mediated hydrolysis of SM following cell injury removes the inhibitory effect of SM on TF activity, thus leading to TF decryption (Wang J, et al. 2017; Ansari SA et al. 2019). It has been suggested that the coordinated effects of SM hydrolysis, PS externalization and thiol-disulphide exchange pathways are responsible for full cellular activation of TF (Ansari SA et al. 2019). However, molecular links among various pathways of TF decryption are not fully known yet. The Reactome event describes exposure of TF sequestered in the wall of a blood vessel to flowing blood.

R-HSA-140769 (Reactome) Factor Xa catalyzes the activation of factor VII from plasma.
R-HSA-140777 (Reactome) Factor VII, bound to tissue factor at the endothelial cell surface, catalyzes the activation of factor X from plasma with moderate efficiency. The amino terminal part of the heavy chain of factor X, the factor X activation peptide, is released. (This peptide has no known function.)
R-HSA-140783 (Reactome) Coagulation factor VII circulates in plasma mostly in the zymogen form (FVII); about 1% of plasma FVII is found in the active form (FVIIa) (Morrissey JH et al. 1993). Initiation of coagulation begins by exposure of blood (which contains both zymogen FVII and activated FVIIa) to tissue factor (TF) in the extravascular space at an injury site and formation of the Ca2+-dependent complex between TF and plasma FVII/FVIIa (Kelley RF et al. 2004; Ruf W et al. 1991). The TF:FVII zymogen complex has low but measurable proteolytic activity on factor X, suggesting that this complex initiates TF-dependent clotting through a minimal generation of factor Xa, which in turn catalyzes the activation of FVII from plasma. (Rao LV et al. 1986). As factor VIIa accumulates, TFr:FVIIa complexes also form, accelerating the process (Nemerson 1988). Formation of the TF:FVIIa complex greatly increases the enzymatic activity of FVIIa via allosteric interactions between TF and FVIIa, as revealed by a 20- to 100-fold increase in the rate of amidolysis of small, chromogenic peptidyl substrates (Broze GJ Jr & Majerus PW.1980; Butenas S et al. 1994; Higashi S et al. 1996). A second model, building on the observation that normal plasma contains low levels of activated FVIIa constitutively, suggests that complexes with FVIIa form immediately at the onset of clotting (Rapaport and Rao 1995). The two models are not mutually exclusive, and in any event, the central roles of TF and FVIIa in generating an initial supply of factors IXa and Xa, and the self-limiting nature of the process due to the action of TFPI, are all well-established.
R-HSA-140791 (Reactome) Activated thrombin binds to the antithrombin III:heparin complex on the cell surface.
R-HSA-140806 (Reactome) The human gene SERPINC1 produces antithrombin III, the most important serine protease inhibitor in plasma that regulates the blood coagulation cascade (van Boven & Lane 1997). Antithrombin III binds to membrane-associated low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs) and their derivatives (SERPINC1 activators) on the surface of normal endothelial cells. This binding increases the affinity of antithrombin III for thrombin approximately 1000-fold, inactivating thrombin and other proteases involved in blood clotting (e.g. factor Xa) and resulting in an overall decrease in clotting ability (Holmer et al. 1986, Eriksson et al. 1995, Mushunje et al. 2003).

The Covid-19 pandemic is an infection caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus. Severe cases of this infection can lead to acute respiratory distress syndrome and coagulation changes leading to a higher risk of thrombosis, especially pulmonary embolism (Susen et al. 2020). LMWHs may play a role as potential attachment factors for SARS-CoV-2 (Tandon et al. 2020), potentially reducing the incidence and/or severity of thrombosis (Marietta et al. 2020).
R-HSA-140823 (Reactome) Conversion of factor IX (FIX) to FIXa requires proteolytic cleavages after Arg191 and Arg226, releasing an activation peptide (Ala192-Arg226) (Geng Y et al. 2012; Vadivel K & Bajaj SP 2012). This calcium-dependent reaction is catalyzed by factor VIIa (FVIIa) in the presence of tissue factor (TF) and phosphatidylserine-rich phospholipid (Osterud B, Rapaport SI 1977; Banner DW et al. 1996; Bajaj SP et al. 2006). In this reaction, FVIIa and FIX anchor to the phospholipid bilayer through their Gla domains for optimal rates of FIXa formation (Vadivel K & Bajaj SP 2012). Further, the N-terminal Gla and epidermal growth factor-like (EGF1) domains of FIX represent the primary recognition determinants in binding to FVIIa & TF and formation of the ternary complex (Zhong D et al. 2002; Vadivel K & Bajaj SP 2012). In the formed ternary complex, the scissile peptide bond sequence in FIX or FX then approaches the active site cleft in FVIIa and induces the formation of the oxyanion hole for efficient proteolysis (Vadivel K & Bajaj SP 2012). FVIIa, bound to TF at the endothelial cell surface, cleaves FIX first after Arg191, forming the inactive intermediate which is released from FVIIa. The intermediate form of FIX must rebind to the protease to be cleaved after Arg226 to form an activated FIXa. As the second cleavage is rate-limiting, the inactive intermediate accumulates during FIX activation by FVIIa. The proteolytic cleavage of FIX results in a two-chain protein consisting of a light chain (Gla-EGF1-EGF2 domains) and a heavy chain (protease domain with the catalytic center) held together by a single disulfide bond (Yoshitake S et al. 1985). The released activation peptide FIX (192-226) has no known function.
R-HSA-140825 (Reactome) TFPI binds to the factor VIIa:TF complex and to factor Xa at the endothelial surface, forming a stable heterotetrameric complex in which factor VIIa is catalytically inactive.
R-HSA-140840 (Reactome) The alpha and beta chains of fibrinogen hexamer are cleaved by thrombin to generate fibrin monomer (Ni et al. 1989). The amino terminal regions of the cleaved alpha and beta chains are released (fibrinopeptides A and B respectively).
R-HSA-140842 (Reactome) Fibrin monomers rapidly and spontaneously associate into large multimers, binding to one another via sites created by fibrinopeptide release (Laudano and Doolittelle 1980). The process of multimerization, and the range of multimer structures that can form in vivo and in vitro, have been studied in detail (Doolittle 1984). Here, multimer size has arbitrarily been set to three fibrin monomers.
R-HSA-140847 (Reactome) Once the A chains of the Factor XIII tetramer have been cleaved by thrombin, the complex dissociates and the resulting A chain dimer binds Ca++ (one per peptide monomer) to form activated factor XIII (factor XIIIa).
R-HSA-140851 (Reactome) Fibrin multimers are stabilized by the formation of multiple covalent crosslinks between the side chains of specific lysine and glutamine residues in fibrinogen alpha and gamma chains, catalyzed by factor XIIIa.
R-HSA-140870 (Reactome) Antithrombin III in the complex is cleaved by thrombin, thereupon undergoing a conformational change that stabilizes the thrombin:antithrombin III complex, trapping and inactivating the thrombin moiety.
R-HSA-140872 (Reactome) The same conformational change that traps thrombin in its complex with cleaved antithrombin III also decreases the affinity of the latter for heparin, and the complex of cleaved antithrombin III and thrombin dissociates from the cell-bound heparin molecule.
R-HSA-141026 (Reactome) Activated protein C cleaves peptide bonds in activated factor V (factor Va), converting it to an inactive form (factor Vi). APC proteolysis involves cleavage of the factor Va heavy chain at Arg-334 (306 if signal peptide is not included) and Arg-534 (506 with no signal peptide) (Nicolaes et al. 1985). Most factor Va molecules are initially cleaved at Arg-534, yielding a partially active intermediate, followed by complete inactivation through cleavage at Arg-334 (Kalafatis et al. 1994). Factor Xa inhibits Arg-534 cleavage but this effect is mitigated by Protein S (Norstrom et al. 2006). A mutation of the APC cleavage sites in Fv at Arg-534Gln a.k.a. FVLeiden is the most common identifiable hereditary risk factor for venous thrombosis among Caucasians (Camire 2011).
R-HSA-141040 (Reactome) Thrombin complexed with thrombomodulin at the endothelial cell surface cleaves the heavy chain of protein C, generating activated protein C and an activation peptide. The activation peptide has no known function.
R-HSA-141046 (Reactome) Activated thrombin (factor IIa) binds to thrombomodulin at the external face of the plasma membrane, forming a thrombin:thrombomodulin complex. In this complexed form, the activity of thrombin towards protein C is greatly increased, and as thrombomodulin is particularly abundant on the surfaces of endothelial cells, this association plays a major role in restricting clot formation.
R-HSA-158118 (Reactome) Factor VIII (FVIII) binds to von Willebrand factor (vWF) to form a complex (Lollal P et al. 1988; Leyte A et al. 1989; Vlot et al. 1995). Antibody inhibition data, site-directed deletion and mutagenesis studies suggest that the acidic subdomain a3, C1 & C2 domains of the FVIII light chain together control high affinity binding to vWF (Foster PA et al. 1988; Leyte A et al. 1989, 1991; Shima M et al. 1993; Saenko EL et al. 1994; Saenko EL & Scandella D 1997; Jacquemin M et al. 2000). Structural studies using negative stain electron microscopy (EM) and hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) have revealed that the vWF TIL’ domain interacts with the FVIII C1 domain, the vWF E’ domain bridges the vWF TIL’ and D3 domains, whereas the vWF D3 domain interacts with the FVIII C1 and C2 domains (Yee A et al. 2015; Chiu PL et al. 2015). In addition, HDX-MS experiments showed that the FVIII a3 subdomain residues V1689-D1697 are directly involved in the interaction (Chiu PL et al. 2015). A combination of NMR spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) confirmed direct interaction between the FVIII a3 region and the VWF TIL’ domain mapping it to the residues in the two β-sheet regions on the VWF TIL’ domain (Dagil L et al. 2019). Further, tyrosine sulfation at residue 1699 is required for the interaction of FVIII with vWF (Leyte A et al. 1991). In the absence of sulfation at Y1699 in FVIII, the affinity for vWF was reduced by 5-fold (Leyte A et al. 1991). The nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum studies of the complex between FVIII and vWF showed significantly larger residue-specific chemical shift changes when Y1699 was sulfated further highlighting the importance of FVIII sulfation at Y1699 for the binding affinity to vWF (Dagil L et al. 2019). The significance of the sulfation of FVIII at Y1699 in vivo is made evident by the presence of a Y1699F mutation that causes a moderate hemophilia A, likely due to reduced interaction with vWF and decreased plasma half-life (van den Biggelaar M et al. 2011). The vWF stabilizes FVIII, which otherwise has a very short half-life in the blood stream (Kaufman RJ et al. 1988). The interaction of FVIII with vWF allows thrombin to activate the bound FVIII and impedes cleavage of the molecules of nonactivated FVIII by the proteases FXa and activated protein C (APC) (Hamer RJ et al. 1987; Hill-Eubanks DC & Lollar P 1990; Koedam JA et al. 1990; Nogami K et al. 2002). Furthermore, vWF prevents the nonspecific binding of FVIII to the membranes of activated human platelets (Nesheim M et al. 1991; Li X & Gabriel DA 1997).

Factor VIII is a heterodimer containing a heavy and a light polypeptide chain, generated by the proteolytic cleavage of a single large precursor polypeptide (Vehar et al. 1984). Several forms of the heavy chain are found in vivo, all functionally the same but differing in the amount of the B domain removed by proteolysis. The single form annotated here is the shortest one (Eaton et al. 1986; Hill-Eubanks et al. 1989).

It has been demonstrated in in vitro experiments that vWF facilitates the association of FVIII chains and the retention of procoagulant activity in the conditioned medium of cells producing FVIII (Kaufman RJ et al. 1988; Wise RJ et al. 1991). Similar data have been obtained for re-association of FVIII chains in solution (Fay PJ 1988). In vitro, von Willebrand factor (Titani et al. 1986) can form complexes with factor VIII with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The complexes that form in vivo, however, involve large multimers of von Willebrand factor and varied, but always low, proportions of factor VIII (Vlot et al. 1995). A stoichiometry of one molecule of factor VIII associated with 50 of von Willebrand factor is typical in vivo, and is used here to annotate the factor VIII:von Willebrand factor complex.

R-HSA-158137 (Reactome) Factor VIII complexed to von Willibrand factor in the blood is cleaved into several smaller polypeptides that remain associated. The acidic polypeptide on the aminoterminal side of the A3 domain of the light chain is released, however, and as this polypeptide mediates the association of factor VIII with von Willibrand factor, the activated factor VIII is released. While several proteases are capable of catalyzing these cleavages in vitro, only thrombin is active on factor VIII:von Willibrand factor complexes under physiological conditions (Eaton et al. 1986; Hill-Eubanks et al. 1989; Lollar et al. 1988; Pieters et al. 1989).
R-HSA-158145 (Reactome) Plasma factor XI binds to the platelet glycoprotein Ib:IX:V complex (Baglia et al. 2002; Greengard et al. 1986). In the body, this reaction occurs specifically on the surfaces of activated platelets, but not on endothelial cells (Baird and Walsh 2002). The stoichiometry of the platelet glycoprotein Ib:IX:V complex has not been established directly, but is inferred from the relative abundances of its components in platelet membranes (Modderman et al. 1992; Shrimpton et al. 2002).
R-HSA-158164 (Reactome) Factor IXa, in a complex with factor VIIIa on the surfaces of activated platelets (the "intrinsic tenase complex"), catalyzes the formation of activated factor X with high efficiency. The amino terminal part of the heavy chain of factor X, the factor X activation peptide, is released. (This peptide has no known function.)
R-HSA-158218 (Reactome) Prekallikrein (PK) associates specifically with kininogen (HK) on cell surfaces. In vivo, this reaction may occur primarily on the surfaces of endothelial cells in response to platelet activation (Lin et al. 1997; Motta et al. 1998; Mahdi et al. 2003).
R-HSA-158251 (Reactome) Prekallikrein in a complex with kininogen and C1q binding protein on the plasma membrane is cleaved to generate active kallikrein, which remains bound to the complex. In the body, this reaction appears to occur on the surfaces of endothelial cells and may require the presence of activated platelets. Recent work indicates that the protease that cleaves prekallikrein under these conditions is prolylcarboxypeptidase. Although this enzyme was originally isolated from lysosomes (Odya et al. 1978; Tan et al. 1993), it is associated with plasma membranes of cultured human endothelial cells in vitro (Moreira et al. 2002; Shariat-Madar et al. 2002), and the purified recombinant enzyme efficiently cleaves prekallikrein (Shariat-Madar et al. 2004). In contrast factor XII, despite its activity on prekallikrein in vitro, appears not to be responsible for prekallikrein activation on the cell surface (Rojkjaer et al. 1998).
R-HSA-158278 (Reactome) Factors VIIIa and IXa associate on cell surfaces to form a complex that very efficiently catalyzes the activation of factor X, the so-called "intrinsic tenase complex". In vitro, negatively charged phospholipids can provide an appropriate surface. In the body, the surface is provided by the plasma membranes of activated platelets (Gilbert and Arena 1996).
R-HSA-158300 (Reactome) Factor XI, bound to the cell surface, is converted to activated factor XI (factor XIa). Chemically, this reaction involves the cleavage of a single peptide bond in each subunit of the factor XI homodimer; intra- and inter-chain disulfide bonds hold the resulting four polypeptides together (Bouma and Griffin 1977; Kurachi and Davie 1977; McMullen et al. 1991). In the body, this reaction occurs on the surfaces of activated platelets (Greengard et al. 1986; Baglia et al. 2002; Baird and Walsh 2002); when this reaction occurs as a step in the intrinsic ("contact") pathway of blood coagulation, it is catalyzed by activated factor XIIa (Kurachi and Davie 1977, Baglia and Walsh 2000) which in turn is generated through the interactions of factor XII, kallikrein, and kininogen on endothelial cell surfaces (Schmaier 2004).
R-HSA-158311 (Reactome) The cleavage of kininogen (HK, high molecular weight kininogen) yields activated kininogen and the vasoactive peptide bradykinin (Kerbirou and Griffin 1979; Lottspeich et al. 1985; Kellerman et al. 1986). In vivo, this reaction is catalyzed by activated kallikrein, takes places within the kallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramer complex on the endothelial cell surface, and results in the release of kallikrein and bradykinin (Motta et al. 1998).
R-HSA-158313 (Reactome) Cleavage of a single peptide bond converts factor XII to activated factor XII (factor XIIa) (Fujikawa and McMullen 1983; McMullen and Fujikawa 1985). Identification of the catalytic activity or activities responsible for this cleavage has not been straightforward. Studies in vitro have demonstrated the autoactivation of factor XII as well as activation by kallikrein. Both reactions require the presence of negatively charged surfaces and are accelerated in the presence of kininogen (high molecular weight kininogen, HK) (Griffin and Cochrane 1976; Meier et al. 1977; Silverberg et al. 1980). Recent work suggests that factor XII activation in vivo may occur primarily on endothelial cell surfaces and that, as in vitro, association with kininogen may accelerate the reaction (Mahdi et al. 2002; Schmaier 2004), although alternative pathways and alternative mechanisms for associating factor XII with the cell surface have not been excluded (Joseph et al. 2001).
R-HSA-158333 (Reactome) The mature factor IX (FIX) is secreted and circulates in the plasma as an inactive 57kDa zymogen form F9(47-461). Activation of FIX involves cleavage of two peptide bonds, at arginine 191 (R191-A192, the α-cleavage) and at arginine 226 (R226-V227, the β-cleavage), releasing an activation peptide (A192-R226) (Di Scipio RG et al. 1978; Zögg T & Brandstetter H 2009). The activation peptide has no known function. This calcium-dependent reaction is catalyzed by factor XIa (FXIa), bound to platelet glycoprotein (GP) Ib:IX:V on the platelet cell surface (Osterud B et al. 1978; Gailani D et al. 2001; Geng Y et al. 2012). Binding studies showed that FIX does not bind to FXIa in the absence of calcium (Geng Y et al. 2012). Structural studies suggest that both activation of factor XI and binding it to FIX induced conformational changes at the interface between the catalytic and the apple domains of the activated FXIa. The conformational changes of FXIa increased the accessibility to the apple 3 (A3) domain to enable FIX binding (Geng Y et al. 2012; Bar Barroeta A et al. 2019). FIX activation is ordered. FIX first binds to the FXIa A3 domain followed by engagement at the protease active site and cleavage of the R191-Al192 bond (Geng Y et al. 2012, 2013; Gailani D et al. 2014). The cleavage after R191 facilitates cleavage of the R226-V227 bond, forming the activated FIXa (also known as factor IXaβ). Catalytic efficiency for the second cleavage by FXIa is 7-fold greater than for the first cleavage, explaining the low accumulation of the α-cleavage product of FIX (Wolberg AS et al. 1997; Smith SB et al. 2008; Geng Y et al. 2012; Mohammed BM et al. 2018). Activated FIXa comprises an N-terminal light chain and a C-terminal heavy chain held together by a disulphide bridge between cysteine resides 178 and 335 (Di Scipio RG et al. 1978; Zögg T & Brandstetter H 2009). X-ray structure of the FIXa EGF2/protease domain at 1.37 A revealed that a Na+-binding site in association with Ca2+-binding site contributed to stabilization of the FIXa protease domain (Vadivel K et al. 2019).
R-HSA-158340 (Reactome) Activated kallikrein binds to alpha2-macroglobulin (Sottrup-Jensen et al. 1984), forming a stable and enzymatically inactive complex. Under normal conditions in vivo, this reaction appears to be responsible for the inactivation of about 1/6 of activated kallikrein (with C1Inh responsible for the inactivation of about 5/6) (Harpel et al. 1985).
R-HSA-158354 (Reactome) Kininogen (high molecular weight kininogen; HK) associates with C1q binding protein on the cell surface in a reaction dependent on Zn++ (Joseph et al. 1996). In the body, the Zn++ needed to drive this reaction may be provided locally by Zn++ release from activated platelets (Mahdi et al. 2002). The C1q binding protein is inferred to form tetramers based on the properties of purified recombinant protein in vitro (Ghebrehiwet et al. 1994); the stoichiometry of the cell surface complex has not been determined directly.
R-HSA-158357 (Reactome) Activated factor XII (factor XIIa) binds to C1Inh (C1 inhibitor - Bock et al. 1986) to form a stable, inactive complex (Schneider et al. 1973). While several protease inhibitors can form stable complexes with XIIa in vitro, only C1Inh does so to a significant extent under normal conditions in vivo (Pixley et al. 1985).
R-HSA-158399 (Reactome) Activated kallikrein binds to C1Inh (plasma protease C1 inhibitor, SERPING1) (Bock et al. 1986), forming a stable and enzymatically inactive complex. This reaction appears to be the major means by which kallikrein is inactivated (kallikrein can also be inactivated by binding to alpha2-macroglobulin) (Harpel et al. 1985; Ratnoff et al. 1969).
R-HSA-158419 (Reactome) Factor XI, bound to the cell surface, is converted to activated factor XI (factor XIa). In the body, this reaction occurs on the surfaces of activated platelets (Baglia et al. 2002). Small quantities of factor XI can be activated in a reaction catalyzed by factor XIIa, to initiate formation of a fibrin clot. However, the efficient activation of larger quantities of factor XI, needed to propagate the blood clotting process, appears to be mediated by thrombin (Baglia and Walsh 2000; Gailani and Broze 1993; Naito and Fujikawa 1991; Oliver et al. 1999; Monroe et al. 2002).
R-HSA-5578883 (Reactome) SERPIND1 (Heparin cofactor 2) is a serine endopeptidase inhibitor (SERPIN) that acts as a pseudosubstrate for activated thrombin, forming a stable complex which has the effect of inactivating thrombin protease activity (Church et al. 1985), although with slower kinetics than SERPINC1 (antithrombin-III). The presence of the glycosaminoglycans heparin or dermatan sulphate increases thrombin inactivation 1000-fold (Van Deerlin & Tollefsen 199) by facilitating the interaction between the active site of thrombin and the reactive site of SERPIND1. Thrombin specificity is conferred by a 90-residue N-terminal extension that contains two acidic motifs containing sulphated Tyr residues, resembling the C-terminus of hirudin (Tollefsen et al. 1997). SERPIND1 also inhibits chymotrypsin and neutrophil cathepsin G, but in a glycosaminoglycan independent manner (Church et al. 1985). In contrast to SERPINC1 deficiency, SERPIND1 deficiency is not associated with venous thrombosis (Corral et al. 2004).
R-HSA-5591040 (Reactome) Protein C is best known for its anticoagulant activity, the proteolytic inactivation of FVa and FVIIIa on negatively charged phospholipid membranes. This is enhanced by cofactors protein S and FV (Rosing et al. 1995, Norstrom et al. 2006). Inactivation of FVa involves APC-mediated cleavages at Arg306 and Arg506. The rapid cleavage at Arg506 is kinetically favored over cleavage at Arg306, but results only in partial inactivation of FVa, whereas the slower cleavage at Arg306 results in a complete loss of FVa function (Kalafatis et al. 1994, Nicolaes et al. 1995). Protein S accelerates factor Va inactivation by selectively promoting the slow cleavage at Arg306 (Rosing et al. 1995). A mutation of the APC cleavage sites in FV Arg506Gln a.k.a. FVLeiden is the most common identifiable hereditary risk factor for venous thrombosis among Caucasians (Camire 2011). APC also has a role in the inactivation of FVIIIa (Regan et al. 1994). Similar to FVa inactivation, FVIIIa is cleaved by APC at Arg336 in the A1 subunit and at Arg562 in the A2 subunit, with either resulting in a complete loss of cofactor activity (O'Brien et al. 2000, Manithody et al. 2003). Both protein S and FV but not FVa enhance inactivation of FVIIIa by APC (O'Brien et al. 2000,57). By acting on FVa and FVIIIa Protein C down-regulates both primary and secondary thrombin formation, delaying clot formation and diminishing activation of TAFI, enhanced susceptibility of the clot to fibrinolysis, respectively. The latter effects of APC on secondary thrombin formation is sometimes referred to as APC’s profibrinolytic effect (Bajzar et al. 1996).
R-HSA-5591052 (Reactome) Physiological activation of protein C on the endothelial cell surface requires the binding of protein C to the endothelial protein C receptor PROCR (EPCR) as well as binding of thrombin to thrombomodulin (TM) (Stavenuiter et al. 2013). PROCR binding to protein C (Fukudome & Esmon 1994) augments by at least 5-fold the effect of thrombin-thrombomodulin on the rate of protein C activation (Stearns-Kurosawa et al. 1996, Taylor et al. 2001).
R-HSA-5591086 (Reactome) SERPINA5, also called Plasma serine protease inhibitor or Protein C inhibitor, inactivates serine proteases by binding irreversibly to their serine activation site. It is involved in the regulation of intravascular and extravascular proteolytic activities, promoting coagulation by inhibiting the anticoagulant complex Activated protein C (APC), but also acts as an anticoagulant factor by inhibiting blood coagulation factors such as prothrombin, factor XI, factor Xa, plasma kallikrein and fibrinolytic enzymes such as tissue- and urinary-type plasminogen activators. Its inhibitory activity is greatly enhanced in the presence of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), heparin, thrombomodulin and phospholipids vesicles (Suzuki et al. 1985).

SERPINA5 inhibits activated protein C In the blood plasma and inhibits thromibin as part of the thrombin:thrombomodulin complex (Rezaie et al. 1995). On the other hand, PCI can also inhibit coagulation factors (Radtke et al. 2007). The SERPINA5:APC complex is a marker of thrombotic events (Kolbel et al. 2006), which suggests that despite low circulating SERPINA5 concentrations and rates of APC inhibition, its predominant role is procoagulatory (Li & Huntington 2008). This is due to the enhancing effect of GAGs, which line the vascular endothelium. Both SERPINA5 and APC bind to GAGs. The presence of heparin in vitro accelerates the maximal rate of inhibition by over 2000-fold (when accounting for dissociation constants) (Yang et al. 2002).
R-HSA-5602080 (Reactome) SERPINE2 (Protease nexin-1, PN1) is a specific and extremely efficient inhibitor of thrombin. Unlike other thrombin inhibitors belonging to the serpin family, SERPINE2 does not circulate in the blood (Bouton et al. 2012). Rather, it is bound to glycosaminoglycans on the surface of cell types including macrophages, smooth muscle cells and platelets, where it inhibits the signaling functions of thrombin. SERPINE2 sets the threshold for thrombin-induced platelet activation (Gronke et al. 1987, Boulaftali et al. 2010) and has been implicated in atherosclerosis (Bouton et al. 2012). Recent studies have demonstrated an important antithrombotic effect of platelet SERPINE2 in vitro and in vivo (Boulaftali et al. 2010).
R-HSA-5603467 (Reactome) Activated protein C (APC) can either dissociate from PROCR to exert its anticoagulant activity, or remain bound to PROCR where it influences multiple direct cellular activities. Dissociation of APC from PROCR allows APC to associate with other cell membrane surface molecules, various microparticles, or lipoproteins (e.g., high-density lipoprotein). As an anticoagulant, APC cleaves the activated cofactors Va (fVa) and VIIIa (fVIIIa), yielding inactivated cofactors, fVi and fVIIIi. This proteolytic inactivation is enhanced by protein cofactors (e.g., protein S, factor V) and lipids cofactors (e.g., phosphatidylserine, cardiolipin, glucosylceramide, or HDL).
R-HSA-5604929 (Reactome) Activated protein C binds to Protein S on appropriate cell surfaces where it inactivates factors Va and VIIIa.
Protein S is best known as a cofactor for the Activated protein C (APC)-catalyzed inactivation of factor Va (Walker 1980). Protein S must be membrane-bound to display this cofactor activity (Hackeng et al. 1993). Protein S binding brings the active site of APC closer to the phospholipid cell surface (Yegneswaran et al. 1999).

APC proteolysis involves cleavage of the factor Va heavy chain at Arg-306 and Arg-506 (Nicolaes et al. 1985). Most factor Va molecules are initially cleaved at Arg506, yielding a partially active intermediate, followed by complete inactivation through cleavage at Arg306 (Kalafatis et al. 1994). Protein S stimulates the cleavage at Arg306 ~20-fold (Rosing et al. 1995) and also counteracts the protective effect of factor Xa on Arg506 cleavage (Norstrom et al. 2006).

Protein S also enhances the APC-mediated inactivation of factor VIIIa (van de Poel et al. 2001). Protein S and factor V act as synergistic cofactors in the APC-mediated inactivation of factor VIIIa (Shen & Dahlback 1994, Somajo et al. 2014).
R-HSA-5606996 (Reactome) A soluble form of PROCR (sEPCR) fully retains the ability to bind Protein C and Activated protein C (Kurosawa et al. 1997). This form increases up to 5-fold in patients with sepsis or systemic lupus erythematosus (Kurosawa et al. 1998), either from vascular injury or through a regulated proteolytic release of soluble receptor (Gu et al. 2000). sEPCR inhibits protein C activation over large vessel endothelium in culture, reflecting competition between the soluble and cell surface forms of PROCR (Liaw et al. 2000).
R-HSA-5607002 (Reactome) Activated Protein C (APC) is best known for its anticoagulant activity, the proteolytic inactivation of FVa and FVIIIa on negatively charged phospholipid membranes. This is enhanced by cofactors protein S and factor V (Rosing et al. 1995, Norstrom et al. 2006).

APC inactivates FVIIIa (Regan et al. 1994) with a mechanism similar to its inactivation of FVa. FVIIIa is cleaved by APC at Arg355 (336 if numbering excludes signal peptide) in the A1 subunit and at Arg581 (562 if numbering excludes signal peptide) in the A2 subunit (O'Brien et al. 2000, Manithody et al. 2003). The Arg355 cleavage is 6-fold faster than the Arg581 cleavage but does not fully inactivate factor VIIIa if dissociation of the A2 subunit is blocked (Gale et al. 2008). Protein S and Factor V (but not FVa) enhance the inactivation of FVIIIa by APC (O'Brien et al. 2000). Protein S and factor V both enhance cleavage at both sites, more so at Arg581 (Gale et al. 2008).

The A2 subunit of FVIIIa spontaneously dissociates, inactivating FVIIIa with a half-life of about 2 min (Fay et al. 1991).

By acting on FVa and FVIIIa Protein C down-regulates both primary and secondary thrombin formation, delaying clot formation and diminishing activation of TAFI, enhanced susceptibility of the clot to fibrinolysis, respectively. The latter effects of APC on secondary thrombin formation is sometimes referred to as APC’s profibrinolytic effect (Bajzar et al. 1996).
R-HSA-5607004 (Reactome) Soluble PROCR binds to activated neutrophils via PRTN3, also cknown as myeloblastin and (Leukocyte) proteinase-3 (Kurosawa et al. 2000). PRTN3 is the most abundant serine protease in neutrophils (Campbell et al. 2000). After neutrophil activation, PRTN3 is secreted from azurophil granules, rebinding to the neutrophil surface through an association with CD177 (NB1) a 60-kDa glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-linked cell surface glycoprotein, which is expressed on a subpopulation of neutrophils in 97% of healthy individuals (Knuckleburg et al. 2012). PRTN3 is partially protected from inactivation when associated with CD177 (Campbell et al. 2000) which may increase its efficacy. CD177 is a heterophilic binding partner for endothelial cell platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM)-1, which is expressed at endothelial cell junctions where transmigration occurs (Sun et al. 2000) suggesting that CD177 directs at least a subpopulation of PRTN3 molecules to these areas to aid neutrophil diapedesis, perhaps through PRTN3 degradation of cell junction proteins or the extracellular matrix.
R-HSA-5607023 (Reactome) Membrane-bound thrombin-activated factor VIII (fVIIIa) functions as a cofactor for factor IXa in the factor Xase complex. Factors VIIIa and IXa associate with anionic phospholipid surfaces with high affinity (Gilbert et al. 1990, Mertens & Bertina 1984, Mertens et al. 1984; Greengard et al. 1986). Studies using physiologic surfaces provide evidence for coordinated binding interactions of the enzyme, cofactor and substrate to discrete surface structures. For example, the presence of both (active site-modified) factor IXa and factor X increased both the number and the affinity of binding sites on activated platelets for factor VIIIa (Ahmad et al. 2000). However classical receptors for the constituents of factor Xase have not been identified (Fay 2004).
R-HSA-5607043 (Reactome) Cleavage of factor VIII light chain promotes a change in the conformation of the C2 domain that facilitates dissociation from VWF and enhances the affinity of factor VIIIa for anionic phospholipid surfaces (Saenko et al. 1998). Membrane-bound thrombin-activated factor VIII (FVIIIa) functions as a cofactor for factor IXa in the factor Xase complex. Factors VIIIa and IXa associate with anionic phospholipid surfaces with high affinity (Gilbert et al. 1990, Mertens & Bertina 1984; Panteleev et al 2004). Kd values ranging from 0.01 to 4.8 nM have been reported for FVIII binding to phospholipids (Gilbert et al. 1990,1992; Spaargaren et al. 1995; Raut et al. 1999; Ahmad et al. 2000). Studies using physiologic surfaces provide evidence for coordinated binding interactions of the enzyme, cofactor and substrate to discrete surface structures. For example, the presence of both (active site-modified) factor IXa and factor X increased both the number and the affinity of binding sites on activated platelets for factor VIIIa (Ahmad et al. 2000). However classical receptors for the constituents of factor Xase have not been identified (Fay 2004).
R-HSA-5607058 (Reactome) F2R (PAR1) mediates multiple cytoprotective effects of Activated proein C (APC) (Riewald et al. 2002, Griffin et al. 2007). In most, but not all, reported studies of APC’s beneficial effects on endothelial cells, the cellular receptors EPCR and F2R are required. These cytoprotective effects include anti-apoptotic activities, anti-inflammatory activities, protection of endothelial barrier functions, and favorable alteration of gene expression profiles. This paradigm in which EPCR-bound APC activates F2R to initiate signaling is consistent with many in vitro and in vivo data. Localization of APC signaling to caveolin-1-rich microdomains (caveolae) may help differentiate mechanisms for cytoprotective APC signaling versus proinflammatory thrombin signaling. Additional mechanisms for APC effects on cells may involve other receptors. These effects include APC anti-inflammatory effects on leukocytes or cytoprotective effects on dendritic cells and neurons. Other receptors may include F2RL2 (PAR3), various integrins e.g., Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18), Beta-1 integrins, Beta-3 integrins, S1P1, or the apolipoprotein E receptor 2 (LRP8) (Mosnier et al. 2007).
R-HSA-9015111 (Reactome) Factor Xa (aka Factor X heavy chain), a cleavage product of coagulation factor X (F10), is a vitamin K-dependent glycoprotein able to convert prothrombin to thrombin during the blood clotting process. Factor Xa is a target for direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) drugs that are direct factor Xa inhibitors (the so-called 'xabans') which are used in the treatment and prevention of thromboembolic disorders (Galanis et al. 2014). Rivaroxaban (brand name Xarelto) was the first medically approved drug of this class (Abrams & Emerson 2009, Misselwitz et al. 2011). Rivaroxaban binds to and inhibits both free factor Xa and factor Xa bound in the prothrombinase complex (Roehrig et al. 2005). Other 'xabans' such as apixaban (Bhanwra & Ahluwalia 2014), edoxaban (Minor et al. 2015), eribaxaban (Bondarenko et al. 2013) and betrixaban (Zhang et al. 2009) share a similar mechanism of action to rivaroxaban (Nutescu et al. 2016).
R-HSA-9015122 (Reactome) Factor Xa (aka Factor X heavy chain), a cleavage product of coagulation factor X (F10), is a vitamin K-dependent glycoprotein able to convert prothrombin to thrombin during the blood clotting process. Factor Xa is a target for direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) drugs that are direct factor Xa inhibitors (the so-called 'xabans') which are used in the treatment and prevention of thromboembolic disorders (Galanis et al. 2014, Nutescu et al. 2016). Rivaroxaban (brand name Xarelto) binds to and inhibits both free factor Xa and factor Xa bound in the prothrombinase complex (Va:Xa) (Roehrig et al. 2005). Rivaroxaban was the first medically approved drug of this class (Abrams & Emerson 2009, Misselwitz et al. 2011). Other 'xabans' such as apixaban (Bhanwra & Ahluwalia 2014), edoxaban (Minor et al. 2015), eribaxaban (Bondarenko et al. 2013) and betrixaban (Zhang et al. 2009) share a similar mechanism of action to rivaroxaban (Nutescu et al. 2016).
R-HSA-9015379 (Reactome) In the blood coagulation process, prothrombin is proteolytically cleaved to form thrombin (factor IIa) which in turn, acts as a serine protease that converts soluble fibrinogen into insoluble strands of fibrin. Specifically, thrombin converts factor XI to XIa, factor VIII to VIIIa, factor V to Va, fibrinogen to fibrin, and factor XIII to XIIIa. The direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) synthetic organic drugs dabigatran (brand name Pradaxa), argatroban (brand name Acova, Novastan; Exembol in the UK) and melagatran are potent, competitive direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs). They reversibly and specifically bind both clot-bound and free thrombin (unlike warfarin or heparin), as well as inhibiting thrombin-induced platelet aggregation (Wienen et al. 2007, Stangier et al. 2007).

Commercially, dabigatran is formulated as a lipophilic prodrug, dabigatran etexilate, to promote gastrointestinal absorption before it is metabolised to the active drug. The kidneys excrete the majority (80%) of unchanged drug (Stangier et al. 2007). Argatroban is a synthetic inhibitor of thrombin derived from L-arginine, which has a relatively short period of binding only to thrombin’s active site (Hursting et al. 1997). It is given intravenously and is metabolised in the liver. Because of its hepatic metabolism, it may be used in patients with renal dysfunction. Melagatran is the active drug formed from the prodrug ximelagatran and is a competitive and rapid inhibitor of thrombin (Gustafsson et al. 1998). DuP 714 is a potent and specific thrombin inhibitor (Chiu et al. 1991).

A major downside of DOACs is that they don't have reversing antidotes if internal bleeding arises from their use. However, in the case of severe bleeding of patients on dabigatran, the antibody fragment idarucizumab reversed the anticoagulation effects of dabigatran within minutes (Pollack et al. 2015). This represents a novel anticoagulation reversing mechanism for a DOAC.
R-HSA-9603302 (Reactome) In the blood coagulation process, prothrombin is proteolytically cleaved to form thrombin (factor IIa) which in turn, acts as a serine protease that converts soluble fibrinogen into insoluble strands of fibrin. Specifically, thrombin converts factor XI to XIa, factor VIII to VIIIa, factor V to Va, fibrinogen to fibrin, and factor XIII to XIIIa. Direct thrombin inhibitors (DTIs) represent a new class

of promising anticoagulation agents. DTIs are increasingly being used instead of heparin to provide initial,

rapid anticoagulation. Unlike heparin, which requires a mediator (antithrombin) to potentiate anticoagulation, Peptide DTIs can inhibit free and bound thrombin directly. Lepirudin (brand name Refludan) is a recombinant hirudin derived from yeast cells (Weitz et al. 1990). Hirudin is a naturally occurring anticoagulant produced by the salivary glands of medicinal leeches. Bivalirudin (brand name Angiomax, Angiox) is a synthetic analog of hirudin, with a shorter period of binding to thrombin (Gladwell 2002). Desirudin (brand name Iprivask) is another recombinant hirudin derivative that directly inhibits free and fibrin-bound thrombin (Graetz et al. 2011).
R-HSA-9650473 (Reactome) The plasma protease C1-inhibitor (C1-INH, SERPING1)) like all extracellular serine proteinase inhibitors (serpins) is secreted via the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-Golgi pathway (Pan S et al. 2011). SERPING1 (C1-INH) is produced mainly in hepatocytes, reaching in healthy individuals a plasma concentration of 0.21–0.39 g/l (Prandini MH et al. 1986; Wouters D et al. 2008). SERPING1 can be produced and secreted from other cell types like peripheral blood monocytes, fibroblasts, and endothelial cells (Katz Y & Strunk RC 1989; Schmaier AH et al. 1989; Prada AE et al. 1998). SERPING1 is highly glycosylated plasma protein, bearing both N- and O-glycans (Stavenhagen K et al. 2018). SERPING1 belongs to the serine protease inhibitor (serpin) superfamily of structurally similar but functionally diverse proteins that use a conformational change to inhibit target enzymes (Silverman GA et al. 2001; Gettins PG 2002; Law RH et al. 2006). Serpins are globular proteins with a conserved structure of 7- 9 α-helices and 3 β-pleated sheets and a protruding reactive center loop (RCL) (Silverman GA et al. 2001; Gettins PG 2002; Law RH et al. 2006; Sanrattana W et al. 2019). In native serpins, the RCL, located outside the tertiary core of the serpin, forms a flexible stretch of approximately 20 amino acids, which provides structural flexibility in a solvent-exposed environment. They act on their target proteases by means of a suicide-substrate mechanism involving the cleavage of the RCL and its insertion into β-sheet A (Gettins PG 2002; Pan S et al. 2011; Khan MS et al. 2011). As a result, conformational changes take place in the serpins that ultimately trap and inactivate the targeted protease (Gettins PG 2002; Pan S et al. 2011; Khan MS et al. 2011; Sanrattana W et al. 2019). Serpins are conformationally labile and many of the disease-linked mutations of serpins result in misfolding or in formation of inactive, pathogenic polymers (Law RH et al. 2006). Under normal physiological conditions, SERPING1 (C1-INH) inhibits the activated forms of the serine proteases involved in the complement pathway (C1r and C1s), the contact system (FXIIa, FXIa, and kallikrein) as well as fibrinolytic proteases such as plasmin, tPA, and uPA (Sim et al. 1979; Arlaud et al. 1979; Kaplan AP & Ghebrehiwet B 2010).
R-HSA-9653249 (Reactome) The plasma protein factor XII (FXII, F12 or Hageman factor) is a serine protease that is mainly produced in the liver and circulates in plasma (40 μg/mL) as a single chain zymogen. Following contact with anionic surfaces such as extracellular RNA, endotoxin, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), polyphosphates released from activated platelets, collagen exposed on injured endothelium, heparin secreted from mast cells, and phosphatidylserine on apoptotic cells, FXII undergoes autoactivation to FXIIa (F12a) via proteolysis of the peptide bond R372-V373 in FXII zymogen (Renné T et al. 2012; Müller F et al. 2009; Oschatz C et al. 2011; Ivanov I et al. 2017; Mailer RKW et al. 2019). Active protease FXIIa is composed of a heavy (20-372) chain and a light (373-615) chain. The light chain harbors the enzymatic protease domain and is linked to the heavy chain by a single disulfide bridge. FXIIa then cleaves plasma prekallikrein to kallikrein, which in turn reciprocally activates additional molecules of FXII and amplifies FXIIa generation (Renné T et al. 2012). Kallikrein also cleaves high-molecular-weight kininogen (HK), releasing the vasoactive peptide bradykinin (BK) (Renné T et al. 2012). BK binds to kinin receptors (B2 and B1 receptors) and triggers inflammation (Leeb-Lundberg LM et al. 2005). The contact system is controlled mainly by C1 inhibitor (C1-Inh or SERPING1) that inhibits both FXIIa and kallikrein.

Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare life-threatening inherited edema disorder that is characterized by recurrent episodes of acute swelling involving the skin or the oropharyngeal, laryngeal, or gastrointestinal mucosa (Zuraw BL & Christiansen SC 2016; de Maat S et al. 2018; Magerl M et al. 2017). Increased vascular permeability in HAE is due to excessive formation of the proinflammatory peptide hormone bradykinin (BK) (Joseph K et al. 2008). Elevated plasma levels of BK are consistently found during acute swelling attacks in HAE patients (Schapira M et al. 1983; Cugno M et al. 2003). Angioedema initiated by bradykinin is usually associated with SERPING1 (С1-Inh) deficiency (HAE type I and HAE type II) (Kaplan AP & Joseph K 2014, 2016; Levi M et al. 2018). More rarely, HAE occurs in individuals with normal SERPING1 activity, and has been linked to mutations in other proteins, including FXII, plasminogen, and angiopoietin (Magerl M et al. 2017; Zuraw BL 2018; Ivanov I et al. 2019). Using genome-wide linkage analyses, HAE type III was shown to be associated with single missense mutations (c.1032C>A or c.1032C>G) in the F12 gene (Dewald G & Bork K 2006; Cichon S et al. 2006). Both point mutations translate into amino acid substitution of threonine 328 by either a lysine or an arginine residue (T328K or T328R). FXII-linked HAE is an autosomal dominant inherited disorder, and a mixture of wild type and T328-mutated FXII circulates in plasma of patients with HAE type III (Cichon S et al. 2006). An FXII-neutralizing antibody attenuated pathological BK formation in the plasma of patients with HAE type III and blunted edema in a genetically altered, humanized mouse model of HAE type III (Björkqvist J et al. 2015). Moreover, FXII T328K or T328R variants change protein O-linked glycosylation and introduce a new site that is sensitive to enzymatic cleavage by fibrinolytic and coagulation proteases such as plasmin, thrombin or FXIa (Björkqvist J et al. 2015; de Maat S et al. 2016; Ivanov I et al. 2019). FXII T328K or T328R variants are cleaved after residue 328 by proteases, removing the protein’s noncatalytic heavy chain (HC) region. Further, truncation of the pathological FXII T328K by plasmin was found to expose R372 for subsequent cleavage by plasma kallikrein in solution (de Maat S et al. 2016, 2019). The intrinsic capacity of the truncated form of FXII (329-615) variant to convert PK to kallikrein is greater than that of activated FXIIa leading to more kallikrein generated early during reciprocal activation (Ivanov I et al. 2019). Second, the truncated form of FXII (329-615) is a better kallikrein substrate than is FXII (Ivanov I et al. 2019). SERPING1 (C1-Inh), the major inhibitor of FXIIa, binds similarly to wild type (WT) and mutated FXIIa (Björkqvist J et al. 2015). However, the accelerated kallikrein/FXII activation in HAE patients carrying FXII variants appears to overwhelm the regulatory function of SERPING1 at normal plasma levels leading to uncontrolled bradykinin formation in a surface-independent manner (de Maat S et al. 2016; Ivanov I et al. 2019).

The Reactome event describes a truncation of FXII variants after the residue 328 catalyzed by activated thrombin.

R-HSA-9655046 (Reactome) In healthy individuals, cleavage of a single peptide bond converts factor XII (FXII, F12, Hageman factor) to activated FXII (FXIIa) (Fujikawa and McMullen 1983; McMullen and Fujikawa 1985). FXII undergoes autoactivation to FXIIa either by endogenous activator (nucleic acids RNA/DNA, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), polyphosphate and heparin) or artificial surfaces. FXIIa then activates four different pathways: 1) The inflammation kallikrein-kinin pathway by converting plasma pre-kallikrein (PK) into active plasma kallikrein, which cleaves both FXII into FXIIa and high molecular weight kininogen (HK) to bradykinin (BK). The latter binds to kinin receptors (B2 and B1 receptors) and triggers inflammation. 2) The complement system by activation of the C1qrs complex subunits C1r and C1s leading formation of the membrane attack complex by the classical complement pathway. 3) The fibrinolytic system by activation of pro-urokinase into urokinase that in turn cleaves plasminogen into plasmin, an enzyme that degrades fibrin clots. 4) The intrinsic coagulation pathway by FXI activation into FXIa leading to thrombin activation and fibrin generation. The contact system is controlled mainly by C1 inhibitor (C1-Inh or SERPING1) that inhibits both FXIIa and kallikrein.

Patients with hereditary angioedema (HAE) experience episodes of soft tissue swelling as a consequence of unregulated kallikrein activity or increased prekallikrein activation. Angioedema initiated by bradykinin is usually associated with SERPING1 deficiency. More rarely, HAE occurs in individuals with normal SERPING1 activity, and has been linked to mutations in other proteins, including FXII, plasminogen, and angiopoietin (Magerl M et al. 2017; Zuraw BL 2018; Ivanov I et al. 2019). The substitution of threonine 328 by either a lysine or an arginine residue (T328K or T328R) in the FXII proline-rich region have been identified in several families with HAE and normal SEPING1. FXII T328K or T328R variants change protein glycosylation and introduce a new site that is sensitive to enzymatic cleavage by fibrinolytic and coagulation proteases such as plasmin, thrombin or FXIa (de Maat S et al. 2016; Ivanov I et al. 2019). FXII T328K or T328R variants are cleaved after residue 328 by proteases, removing the protein’s noncatalytic heavy chain (HC) region. Truncation of the pathological FXII T309K by plasmin exposes R372 for subsequent cleavage by plasma kallikrein in solution (de Maat S et al. 2016, 2019). The intrinsic capacity of the truncated form of FXII (329-615) to convert PK to kallikrein is greater than that of activated FXII leading to more kallikrein generated early during reciprocal activation (Ivanov I et al. 2019). Second, the truncated form of FXII (329-615) is a better kallikrein substrate than is FXII (Ivanov I et al. 2019). Further, the accelerated PK/FXII activation in HAE patients carrying FXII variants appears to overwhelm the regulatory function of SERPING1 at normal plasma levels leading to uncontrolled bradykinin formation in a surface-independent manner (de Maat S et al. 2016; Ivanov I et al. 2019).

R-HSA-9661625 (Reactome) Coagulation factor VIII (FVIII) is a large glycoprotein of 2351 aminoacids with a discrete domain structure: A1-A2-B-A3-C1-C2 (Wood WI et al. 1984; Vehar GA et al. 1984; Toole JJ et al. 1984). FVIII is synthesized by various tissues, including liver, kidney, and spleen, as an inactive single-chain protein of approximately 293 kDa (Wion KL et al. 1985; Levinson B et al. 1992). Primary human liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs), blood outgrowth endothelial cells (BOEC), glomerular microvascular endothelial cells (GMVECs) and umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were found to produce the FVIII protein, store it in Weibel-Palade bodies (WPB), and secrete in response to EC stimulation (van den Biggelaar M et al. 2009; Shahani T et al. 2014; Turner NA & Moake JL 2015). These findings are in agreement with the reports on the FVIII synthesis in human cultured ECs and in mice suggesting that ECs are the predominant source of plasma FVIII (Jacquemin M et al. 2006; Shahani T et al. 2010; Fahs SA et al. 2014). Evidence on the post-translational processing and secretion of FVIII has been generated from expression of the FVIII complementary DNA (cDNA) in transfected mammalian cells, such as Chinese hamster ovary (CHO), African green monkey kidney (COS-1), HeLa and the human hepatic SK-HEP1cell lines (Pipe SW et al. 1998; Herlitschka SE et al. 1998). Upon synthesis, FVIII is translocated into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), where it undergoes extensive processing including cleavage of a signal peptide and N-linked glycosylation at asparagine residues (Kaufman RJ et al. 1988, 1997; Kaufman RJ 1998). In the ER lumen of mammalian cells FVIII interacts with the protein chaperones calnexin (CNX), calreticulin (CRT), and immunoglobulin-binding protein (BiP or GRP78) that facilitate proper folding of proteins prior to trafficking to the Golgi compartment (Marquette KA et al. 1995; Swaroop M et al. 1997; Pipe SW et al. 1998; Kaufman RJ et al. 1997; Kaufman RJ 1998). Trafficking from the ER to the Golgi compartment is facilitated by LMAN1 and multiple combined factor deficiency 2 (MCFD2) cargo receptor complex (Zhang B et al. 2005; Zheng, C et al. 2010, 2013). Within the Golgi apparatus, FVIII is subject to further processing, including modification of the N-linked oligosaccharides to complex-type structures, O-linked glycosylation, and sulfation of specific Tyr-residues (Michnick DA et al. 1994; Kaufman RJ 1998). In addition, factor VIII is among the many proteins that undergoes intracellular proteolysis. Upon secretion from the cell, FVIII is cleaved at two sites in the B-domain to form a heterodimer consisting of the heavy chain containing the A1-A2-B domains in a metal ion-dependent complex with the light chain consisting of the A3-C1-C2 domains (Kaufman RJ et al. 1997; Kaufman RJ 1998). In the plasma, FVIII is stabilized through interaction with von Willebrand factor (Weiss HJ et al. 1977; Kaufman RJ et al. 1988; Chiu PL et al. 2015). Upon damage to blood vessel walls, thrombin cleaves FVIII and releases the B-domain to form an active FVIII heterotrimer (A1:A2:A3-C1-C2) that binds activated coagulation factor IX on the surface of platelet phospholipid to form the active factor Xase complex (Ahmad SS et al. 2003; Panteleev MA et al. 2006). This complex efficiently cleaves factor X to its active form, which activates prothrombin and leads to the formation of a stable fibrin clot. After conversion into its active conformation, and participation in the factor X activating complex, activated factor VIII rapidly looses its activity (Kaufman RJ et al. 1988; Lenting PJ et al. 1998). This process is governed by both enzymatic degradation and subunit dissociation. At the cellular level the FVIII expression is limited. Inefficient secretion of FVIII is caused by repression at the level of transcription (Lynch CM et al. 1993; Hoeben RC et al. 1995). In addition, a significant portion of the primary translation product is misfolded and ultimately degraded and FVIII is retained within ER through interaction with various ER chaperones including BiP (Marquette KA et al. 1995; Tagliavacca L et al. 2000). Mutations in the F8 gene often result in diminished or inactive plasma factor VIII protein and are the molecular genetic cause of the monogenic, X-linked, bleeding disorder hemophilia A (Al-Allaf FA et al. 2017; Castaman G & Matino D 2019).
R-HSA-9668253 (Reactome) In healthy individuals factor IXa (FIXa), in a complex with factor VIIIa on the surfaces of activated platelets, catalyzes the formation of activated factor X with high efficiency. A substitution of leucine for arginine at residue 384 in FIX (FIX R384L, also know as FIX Padua) is a gain-of-function mutation that resulted in elevated FIX clotting activity in a patient with venous thrombosis (Simioni P et al. 2009). The level of the FIX R384L protein in the patient plasma was normal, but the clotting activity from the proband was approximately eight times the normal level. In vitro, recombinant FIX R384L had a specific activity that was 5 to 10 times as high as that in the recombinant wild-type FIX (Simioni P et al. 2009). In addition, FIXa R384L showed a resistance to inhibition by protein S (PROS1), a plasma protein that directly binds and inhibits FIXa to modulate a clotting rate in vitro and in vivo (Plautz WE et al. 2018a,b). The ability of the FIX Padua variant to increase the clotting activity prompted researchers to try to produce chimeric FIX Padua concentrates for potential use in the treatment of patients with hemophilia B (Lozier JN 2012; Monahan PE et al. 2015; Spronck EA et al. 2019). Epidemiological studies in groups of patients with venous thrombosis failed to discover other cases with this FIX abnormality, indicating that the defect is rare (Koenderman JS et al. 2011; de Moraes Mazetto B et al. 2010). The Reactome event describes elevation of FIX activity due to gain-of-function mutation FIX R384L.
R-HSA-9670014 (Reactome) Factor VIII (FVIII) circulates in plasma as a heterodimer (domain structure A1-A2-B:A3-C1-C2) that requires thrombin cleavage to elicit procoagulant activity (Kaufman RJ et al. 1997). Upon activation by thrombin FVIII is converted to the labile FVIIIa, a heterotrimer of A1, A2 and A3C1C2 subunits, which serves as a cofactor for FIXa (Fay PJ 2006). At physiological concentrations, FVIIIa decays as a result of A2 subunit dissociation, which is weakly associated with the A1:A3-C1-C2 dimer by primarily electrostatic interactions (Fay PJet al. 1991; Fay PJ & Smudzin TM 1992; Parker ET et al 2006). Site-directed mutagenesis, functional and structural studies suggest that multiple residues at the A1-A2 and A2-A3 domain interfaces contribute to non-covalent interactions in stabilizing the protein (Parker ET & Lollar P 2007; Wakabayashi H & Fay PJ 2008, 2013; Wakabayashi H et al. 2008; Monaghan M et al. 2016). Retention of A2 polypeptide is required for normal stability of FVIIIa and dissociation of A2 correlates with FVIIIa inactivation and consequent loss of FXase activity.
R-HSA-9670049 (Reactome) Factor VIII (FVIII) circulates in plasma as a heterodimer (domain structure A1-A2-B:A3-C1-C2) that requires thrombin cleavage to elicit procoagulant activity (Kaufman RJ et al. 1997). Upon activation by thrombin FVIII is converted to a heterotrimic FVIIIa, which consists of A1, A2 and A3-C1-C2 subunits to serve as a cofactor for FIXa (Fay PJ 2006). At physiological concentrations, FVIIIa decays as a result of A2 subunit dissociation, which is weakly associated with the A1:A3-C1-C2 dimer by primarily electrostatic interactions (Fay PJet al. 1991; Fay PJ & Smudzin TM 1992; Parker ET et al 2006). Retention of A2 polypeptide is required for normal stability of FVIIIa and dissociation of A2 correlates with FVIIIa inactivation and consequent loss of FXase activity. Hemophilia A (HA)-associated mutations (R550H, A303E, S308L, N713I, R717W and R717L) within the predicted A1-A2 and A2-A3 interface are thought to disrupt potential intersubunit hydrogen bonds and have the molecular phenotype of increased rate of inactivation of FVIIIa due to increased rate of A2 subunit dissociation (Pipe SW et al. 1999, 2001; Hakeos WH et al. 2002). Patients with these mutations exhibit a clinical phenotype where the FVIII activity by one-stage clotting assay is at least two-fold higher than by two-stage chromogenic FXa generation assay (Pipe SW et al. 2001; Hakeos WH et al. 2002; Al-Samkari H & Croteau SE 2018). This effect directly relates to enhanced rates of loss of A2 subunit from FVIIIa, which has a more pronounced impact on activity values determined by the two-stage assay (Hakeos WH et al. 2002).
R-HSA-9670054 (Reactome) Factor VIII (FVIII) circulates in plasma as a heterodimer (domain structure A1-A2-B:A3-C1-C2) that requires thrombin cleavage to elicit procoagulant activity (Kaufman RJ et al. 1997). Upon activation by thrombin FVIII is converted to the labile FVIIIa, a heterotrimer of A1, A2 and A3C1C2 subunits, which serves as a cofactor for FIXa (Fay PJ 2006). At physiological concentrations, FVIIIa decays as a result of A2 subunit dissociation, which is weakly associated with the A1:A3-C1-C2 dimer by primarily electrostatic interactions (Fay PJ et al. 1991; Fay PJ & Smudzin TM 1992; Parker ET et al 2006). Retention of A2 polypeptide is required for normal stability of FVIIIa and dissociation of A2 correlates with FVIIIa inactivation and consequent loss of FXase activity. Hemophilia A (HA)-associated mutations (R550H, A303E, S308L, N713I, R717W and R717L) within the predicted A1-A2 and A2-A3 interface are thought to disrupt potential intersubunit hydrogen bonds and have the molecular phenotype of increased rate of inactivation of FVIIIa due to increased rate of A2 subunit dissociation (Pipe SW et al. 1999, 2001; Hakeos WH et al. 2002). Patients with these mutations exhibit a clinical phenotype where the FVIII activity by one-stage clotting assay is at least two-fold higher than by two-stage chromogenic FXa generation assay (Pipe SW et al. 2001; Hakeos WH et al. 2002; Al-Samkari H & Croteau SE 2018). This effect directly relates to enhanced rates of loss of A2 subunit from FVIIIa, which has a more pronounced impact on activity values determined by the two-stage assay (Hakeos WH et al. 2002).
R-HSA-9670673 (Reactome) Coagulation Factor IX (FIX) is expressed by hepatocytes (Yoshitake et al. 1985; Kurachi K & Kurachi S 1995). The newly synthesised FIX protein molecule comprising a pre- and pro-sequence (28 and 18 amino acids, respectively) and a mature peptide of 415 amino acids (total length, 461 amino acids) (Yoshitake et al. 1985; Kurachi K & Kurachi S 1995; Andersson LO et al. 1975; Anson DS et al. 1984). The pre-sequence (or signal sequence) directs FIX for secretion and the pro-sequence provides a binding domain for a vitamin K dependent (VKD) gamma (γ)-glutamyl carboxylase (GGCX) (Fryklund L et al. 1976; Galeffi P & Brownlee GG 1987; Lingenfelter SE & Berkner K 1996; Stanley TB et al. 1998). GGCX, an integral membrane protein located in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of hepatocytes, carboxylates certain glutamic acid residues in the adjacent GLA domain of FIX (Presnell and Stafford, 2002; Fryklund L et al. 1976; Galeffi P & Brownlee GG 1987). During the γ-carboxylation process, vitamin K hydroquinone is oxidized to vitamin K 2,3 epoxide and a carboxyl group is added to a glutamic acid residue (Wallin R eet al. 2002). In its native form, FIX contains 12 glutamic acid residues in the Gla domain; the first 10 residues are conserved in all VKD proteins, whereas the last two are unique to FIX (Gillis et al. 2008). FIX undergoes several other post-translational modifications before its secretion, including N- and O-linked glycosylation, sulfation, phosphorylation and hydroxylation (Agarwala KL et al. 1994; Bharadwaj D et al. 1995; Kaufman RJ 1998; Bond M et al. 1998; Enjolras N et al. 2004). These post-translational modifications occur within the ER and Golgi apparatus. In the ER, maturation and processing of secreted proteins are orchestrated by a group of molecules which facilitate protein folding and ensure that only correctly folded, assembled and modified proteins are transported along the secretory pathway. The proteins involved in the folding system are lectins such as calreticulin (CRT) or calnexin (CNX). A cellular unfolded protein response induces the ER-resident molecular chaperones such as glucose-regulated protein GRP78/BiP to prevent the aggregation of proteins in the ER. FIX was shown to co-immunoprecipitate with GRP78/BiP and CRT In cell lysates of transiently transfected human hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2) cells expressing FIX (Enjolras N et al. 2004). After transportation of the carboxylated pro-FIX into the Golgi apparatus, the propeptide (29-46) is removed by the paired basic amino acid cleaving enzyme (PACE) (Wasley LC et al. 1993). The removal of the propeptide by PACE influences the formation of Ca2+-induced secondary and tertiary structures of the Gla domain, thus it is required for normal function of FIX (Pipe, 2008). The mature FIX is secreted and circulates in the plasma as an inactive 57kDa zymogen form (47-461). Domains within the zymogen are identified according to structure or function as follows: the GLA domain is crucial for the interaction with phospholipid surfaces; two epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domains are critical for the interactions between factor IX and factor VIIIa; the activation peptide is released after proteolytic activation and the catalytic serine protease domain is required for normal function of FIX (Pipe 2008; Yoshitake S et al. 1985; Di Scipio RG et al. 1977; Rees DJ et al. 1988; Freedman SJ et al. 1995). Activation of factor IX involves cleavage of two peptide bonds, one on the C-terminal side of arginine 191 (the α-cleavage) the other on the C-terminal side of arginine 226 (the β-cleavage) (Di Scipio RG et al. 1978; Zögg T & Brandstetter H 2009). Activated factor IX comprising an N-terminal light chain and a C-terminal heavy chain held together by a disulphide bridge between cysteine resides 178 and 335 (Di Scipio RG et al. 1978; Zögg T & Brandstetter H 2009).
SERPINA5:Activated protein CArrowR-HSA-5591086 (Reactome)
SERPINA5R-HSA-5591086 (Reactome)
SERPINC1 activatorsArrowR-HSA-140872 (Reactome)
SERPINC1 activatorsR-HSA-140806 (Reactome)
SERPINC1:SERPINC1 activatorsArrowR-HSA-140806 (Reactome)
SERPINC1:SERPINC1 activatorsR-HSA-140791 (Reactome)
SERPINC1R-HSA-140806 (Reactome)
SERPIND1R-HSA-5578883 (Reactome)
SERPINE2:GAG:activated thrombin (factor IIa)ArrowR-HSA-5602080 (Reactome)
SERPINE2:GAGR-HSA-5602080 (Reactome)
SERPING1ArrowR-HSA-9650473 (Reactome)
SERPING1R-HSA-158357 (Reactome)
SERPING1R-HSA-158399 (Reactome)
SERPING1R-HSA-9650473 (Reactome)
TBarR-HSA-140599 (Reactome)
TBarR-HSA-140696 (Reactome)
TBarR-HSA-140840 (Reactome)
TBarR-HSA-158137 (Reactome)
TBarR-HSA-158419 (Reactome)
TF:F7ArrowR-HSA-140783 (Reactome)
TF:F7aArrowR-HSA-140748 (Reactome)
TF:F7aR-HSA-140825 (Reactome)
TF:F7amim-catalysisR-HSA-140736 (Reactome)
TF:F7amim-catalysisR-HSA-140823 (Reactome)
TF:F7mim-catalysisR-HSA-140777 (Reactome)
TFPI:TF:F7a:factor XaArrowR-HSA-140825 (Reactome)
TFPIR-HSA-140825 (Reactome)
THBDR-HSA-141046 (Reactome)
Va:Xa:Factor Xa inhibitorsArrowR-HSA-9015122 (Reactome)
Va:Xa:Factor Xa inhibitorsTBarR-HSA-140664 (Reactome)
Va:XaArrowR-HSA-140686 (Reactome)
Va:XaR-HSA-9015122 (Reactome)
Va:Xamim-catalysisR-HSA-140664 (Reactome)
Zn2+ArrowR-HSA-158354 (Reactome)
activated

kininogen:C1q binding protein

tetramer
ArrowR-HSA-158311 (Reactome)
activated thrombin:thrombomodulinArrowR-HSA-141046 (Reactome)
activated thrombin:thrombomodulinmim-catalysisR-HSA-141040 (Reactome)
activated thrombin

(factor

IIa):SERPIND1
ArrowR-HSA-5578883 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)ArrowR-HSA-140664 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)ArrowR-HSA-140700 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)R-HSA-140791 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)R-HSA-141046 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)R-HSA-5578883 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)R-HSA-5602080 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)R-HSA-9015379 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)R-HSA-9603302 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)mim-catalysisR-HSA-140599 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)mim-catalysisR-HSA-140696 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)mim-catalysisR-HSA-140840 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)mim-catalysisR-HSA-158137 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)mim-catalysisR-HSA-158419 (Reactome)
activated thrombin (factor IIa)mim-catalysisR-HSA-9653249 (Reactome)
factor

XIa:GPIb:GPIX:GPV

complex
ArrowR-HSA-158300 (Reactome)
factor

XIa:GPIb:GPIX:GPV

complex
ArrowR-HSA-158419 (Reactome)
factor

XIa:GPIb:GPIX:GPV

complex
mim-catalysisR-HSA-158333 (Reactome)
factor IX activation peptideArrowR-HSA-140823 (Reactome)
factor IX activation peptideArrowR-HSA-158333 (Reactome)
factor IXaArrowR-HSA-140823 (Reactome)
factor IXaArrowR-HSA-158333 (Reactome)
factor IXaArrowR-HSA-5607023 (Reactome)
factor IXaR-HSA-158278 (Reactome)
factor IXaR-HSA-5607023 (Reactome)
factor V activation peptideArrowR-HSA-140696 (Reactome)
factor VArrowR-HSA-5607002 (Reactome)
factor VIII:von

Willebrand factor

multimer
ArrowR-HSA-158118 (Reactome)
factor VIII:von

Willebrand factor

multimer
R-HSA-158137 (Reactome)
factor VIIIArrowR-HSA-9661625 (Reactome)
factor VIIIR-HSA-158118 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa A1:A3-C1-C2ArrowR-HSA-9670014 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa A1:A3-C1-C2ArrowR-HSA-9670054 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa A1 variant:A3-C1-C2ArrowR-HSA-9670049 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa A2 polypeptideArrowR-HSA-9670014 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa A2 polypeptideArrowR-HSA-9670049 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa B A3 acidic polypeptideArrowR-HSA-158137 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa with defective A1 domainR-HSA-9670049 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa with defective A2 domainR-HSA-9670054 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa:factor IXaArrowR-HSA-158278 (Reactome)
factor VIIIa:factor IXamim-catalysisR-HSA-158164 (Reactome)
factor VIIIaArrowR-HSA-158137 (Reactome)
factor VIIIaArrowR-HSA-5607043 (Reactome)
factor VIIIaR-HSA-158278 (Reactome)
factor VIIIaR-HSA-5607002 (Reactome)
factor VIIIaR-HSA-5607043 (Reactome)
factor VIIIaR-HSA-9670014 (Reactome)
factor VIIaArrowR-HSA-140769 (Reactome)
factor VIIaR-HSA-140748 (Reactome)
factor VR-HSA-140696 (Reactome)
factor VaArrowR-HSA-140696 (Reactome)
factor VaR-HSA-140686 (Reactome)
factor VaR-HSA-141026 (Reactome)
factor Vi intermediate formArrowR-HSA-141026 (Reactome)
factor Vi intermediate formR-HSA-5591040 (Reactome)
factor ViArrowR-HSA-5591040 (Reactome)
factor X activation peptideArrowR-HSA-140736 (Reactome)
factor X activation peptideArrowR-HSA-140777 (Reactome)
factor X activation peptideArrowR-HSA-158164 (Reactome)
factor X activation peptideArrowR-HSA-9668253 (Reactome)
factor XI:GPIb-IX-V complexArrowR-HSA-158145 (Reactome)
factor XI:GPIb-IX-V complexR-HSA-158300 (Reactome)
factor XI:GPIb-IX-V complexR-HSA-158419 (Reactome)
factor XIII A chain activation peptideArrowR-HSA-140599 (Reactome)
factor XIII cleaved tetramerArrowR-HSA-140599 (Reactome)
factor XIII cleaved tetramerR-HSA-140847 (Reactome)
factor XIIIR-HSA-140599 (Reactome)
factor XIIIaArrowR-HSA-140847 (Reactome)
factor XIIIamim-catalysisR-HSA-140851 (Reactome)
factor XIIR-HSA-158313 (Reactome)
factor XIIa:C1InhArrowR-HSA-158357 (Reactome)
factor XIIaArrowR-HSA-158313 (Reactome)
factor XIIaR-HSA-158357 (Reactome)
factor XIIamim-catalysisR-HSA-158300 (Reactome)
factor XIR-HSA-158145 (Reactome)
factor XR-HSA-140736 (Reactome)
factor XR-HSA-140777 (Reactome)
factor XR-HSA-158164 (Reactome)
factor XR-HSA-9668253 (Reactome)
factor Xa:Factor Xa inhibitorsArrowR-HSA-9015111 (Reactome)
factor Xa:Factor Xa inhibitorsTBarR-HSA-140700 (Reactome)
factor XaArrowR-HSA-140736 (Reactome)
factor XaArrowR-HSA-140777 (Reactome)
factor XaArrowR-HSA-158164 (Reactome)
factor XaArrowR-HSA-9668253 (Reactome)
factor XaR-HSA-140686 (Reactome)
factor XaR-HSA-140825 (Reactome)
factor XaR-HSA-9015111 (Reactome)
factor Xamim-catalysisR-HSA-140700 (Reactome)
factor Xamim-catalysisR-HSA-140769 (Reactome)
fibrin monomerArrowR-HSA-140840 (Reactome)
fibrin monomerR-HSA-140842 (Reactome)
fibrin multimer, crosslinkedArrowR-HSA-140851 (Reactome)
fibrin multimerArrowR-HSA-140599 (Reactome)
fibrin multimerArrowR-HSA-140842 (Reactome)
fibrin multimerR-HSA-140851 (Reactome)
kallikrein:C1InhArrowR-HSA-158399 (Reactome)
kallikrein:alpha2-macroglobulinArrowR-HSA-158340 (Reactome)
kallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramerArrowR-HSA-158251 (Reactome)
kallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramerR-HSA-158311 (Reactome)
kallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramermim-catalysisR-HSA-158311 (Reactome)
kallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramermim-catalysisR-HSA-158313 (Reactome)
prekallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramerArrowR-HSA-158218 (Reactome)
prekallikrein:kininogen:C1q binding protein tetramerR-HSA-158251 (Reactome)
prolylcarboxypeptidase dimermim-catalysisR-HSA-158251 (Reactome)
sequestered tissue factorR-HSA-140761 (Reactome)
thrombin:SERPINC1:SERPINC1 activatorsArrowR-HSA-140791 (Reactome)
thrombin:SERPINC1:SERPINC1 activatorsR-HSA-140870 (Reactome)
thrombin:SERPINC1:SERPINC1 activatorsmim-catalysisR-HSA-140870 (Reactome)
thrombin:cleaved

SERPINC1:SERPINC1

activators
ArrowR-HSA-140870 (Reactome)
thrombin:cleaved

SERPINC1:SERPINC1

activators
R-HSA-140872 (Reactome)
thrombin:cleaved SERPINC1ArrowR-HSA-140872 (Reactome)
von Willibrand factor multimerArrowR-HSA-158137 (Reactome)
von Willibrand factor multimerR-HSA-158118 (Reactome)
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