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Details on Person This Reactome event describes binding of the cell surface-bo...

Class:IdSummation:140784
_displayNameThis Reactome event describes binding of the cell surface-bo...
_timestamp2025-02-18 10:24:50
created[InstanceEdit:140579] D'Eustachio, P, 2004-08-24 14:00:00
literatureReference[LiteratureReference:9671056] Molecular mechanism of tissue factor-mediated acceleration of factor VIIa activity
[LiteratureReference:9671732] Activation of human factor VII in the initiation of tissue factor-dependent coagulation
[LiteratureReference:9671738] Quantitation of activated factor VII levels in plasma using a tissue factor mutant selectively deficient in promoting factor VII activation
[LiteratureReference:9671743] Characterization of factor VII association with tissue factor in solution. High and low affinity calcium binding sites in factor VII contribute to functionally distinct interactions
[LiteratureReference:9671731] Similar molecular interactions of factor VII and factor VIIa with the tissue factor region that allosterically regulates enzyme activity
[LiteratureReference:9671733] Purification and properties of human coagulation factor VII
[LiteratureReference:9671040] Cooperative interaction of divalent metal ions, substrate, and tissue factor with factor VIIa
[LiteratureReference:140745] The tissue factor pathway: how it has become a "prima ballerina"
[LiteratureReference:9769730] Synergies of phosphatidylserine and protein disulfide isomerase in tissue factor activation
[LiteratureReference:9671212] Role of Cell Surface Lipids and Thiol-Disulphide Exchange Pathways in Regulating the Encryption and Decryption of Tissue Factor
[LiteratureReference:9671038] Structural biology of factor VIIa/tissue factor initiated coagulation
[LiteratureReference:9917395] Structural modulation of factor VIIa by full-length tissue factor (TF1-263): implication of novel interactions between EGF2 domain and TF
[LiteratureReference:140782] Tissue factor and hemostasis
modified[InstanceEdit:9671055] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2019-12-18
[InstanceEdit:9671734] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2019-12-19
[InstanceEdit:9672418] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2019-12-26
[InstanceEdit:9673485] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2020-01-08
[InstanceEdit:9674480] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2020-01-13
[InstanceEdit:9917529] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2024-08-06
[InstanceEdit:9929751] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2024-11-28
[InstanceEdit:9934768] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2025-01-10
[InstanceEdit:9938607] Shamovsky, Veronica, 2025-02-18
textThis Reactome event describes binding of the cell surface-bound tissue factor (TF) to the circulating factor VII (FVII) zymogen.

FVII circulates in plasma mostly in the zymogen form; about 1% of plasma FVII is found in the active serine protease form FVIIa (FVIIa) (Morrissey JH et al. 1993). Upon tissue injury or inflammation, the coagulation process is initiated by exposure of the cell surface–anchored TF at an injury site to circulating blood (Langer F & Ruf W 2014; Ansari SA et al. 2019). The extracellular part of TF binds both FVII and FVIIa with very high affinity and specificity in a Ca²⁺-dependent manner (Ruf W et al. 1991; Kelley RF et al. 2004; Vadivel K& Bajaj SP 2012; Prasad R & Sen P 2018). The complex formed between TF and plasma FVII or FVIIa initiates the coagulation protease cascade by converting the zymogens FIX and FX to the active proteases FIXa and FXa, which are involved in the generation of thrombin. The allosteric binding of TF to FVIIa greatly increases the enzymatic activity of 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). 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, TF:FVIIa complexes also form, accelerating the process (Nemerson Y 1988). 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 SI and Rao LV 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.

(summation)[Reaction:140783] tissue factor (TF) + factor VII (F7) -> TF:F7 complex [Homo sapiens]
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