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Title: Acetylated prothrombin as a substrate in the measurement of the procoagulant activity of platelets: elimination of the feedback activation of platelets by thrombin. Author: Jesty J, Bluestein D. Journal: Anal Biochem; 1999 Jul 15; 272(1):64-70. PubMed ID: 10405294. Abstract: Human prothrombin was acetylated to produce a modified prothrombin that upon activation by platelet-bound prothrombinase generates a form of thrombin that does not activate platelets but retains its amidolytic activity on a chromogenic peptide substrate. If normal prothrombin is used in such an assay, the thrombin that is generated activates the platelets in a feedback manner, accelerating the rate of thrombin generation and thereby preventing accurate measurement of the initial platelet procoagulant activity. Acetylation of prothrombin was carried out over a range of concentrations of sulfo-N-succinimidyl acetate (SNSA). Acetylation by 3 mM SNSA at room temperature for 30 min at pH 8.2 in the absence of metal ions produced a modified prothrombin that has <0.1% clotting activity (by specific prothrombin clotting assay), but it is activated by factor Xa (in the presence of either activated platelets or factor Va + anionic phospholipid) to produce thrombin activity that is measurable with a chromogenic substrate. Because the feedback action on the platelets is blocked, thrombin generation is linear, allowing quantitative measurement of the initial platelet activation state.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]