Contact activation of the plasma coagulation cascade. I. Procoagulant surface chemistry and energy
- 1 August 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Biomedical Materials Research
- Vol. 29 (8) , 1005-1016
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jbm.820290813
Abstract
Contact activation of the intrinsic pathway of porcine blood plasma coagulation is shown to be a steep exponential‐like function of procoagulant surface energy, with low activation observed for poorly water‐wettable surfaces and very high activation for fully water‐wettable surfaces. Test procoagulants studied were a system of oxidized polystyrene films with varying wettability (surface energy) and glass discs bearing close‐packed self‐assembled silane monolayers (SAMs) with well‐defined chemistry consisting of 12 different terminating chemical functionalities. A monotonic trend of increasing coagulation activation with increasing water wettability was observed for the oxidized polystyrene system whereas results with SAM procoagulants suggested a level of chemical specificity over and above the surface energy trend. In particular, it was noted that coagulation activation by SAMs terminated with CO2H was much higher than anticipated based on surface wettability whereas NH3⊕‐terminated SAMs exhibited very low procoagulant activity. SAMs terminated in (CH2)2(CF2)7CF3 behaved as anticipated based on surface energy with very low procoagulant activity and did not exhibit special properties sometimes attributed to perfluorinated compounds. Quantitative ranking of the inherent coagulation activation properties of procoagulant surfaces was obtained by application of a straightforward phenomenological model expressed in a closed‐form mathematical equation relating coagulation time to procoagulant surface area. Fit of the model with a single adjustable parameter to experimental measurements of porcine platelet‐poor plasma coagulation time was very good, implying that assertions and simplifications of the model adequately simulated reality. Two important propositions of the model were that (1) the number of putative “activating sites” scaled linearly with procoagulant surface area, and (2) contact activation of the plasma coagulation cascade was catalytic in the sense that these activating sites were not consumed or “poisoned” by irreversible or slowly reversible protein adsorption during coagulation. An extension of the coagulation model proposed that procoagulant activation properties scale exponentially with the surface density of polar (acid‐base) sites, which, in turn, was related to procoagulant wettability. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Peptide, protein, and cellular interactions with self‐assembled monolayer model surfacesJournal of Biomedical Materials Research, 1993
- A graphical method for predicting surfactant and protein adsorption propertiesLangmuir, 1993
- Fibrinogen blocks the autoactivation and thrombin-mediated activation of factor XI on dextran sulfate.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992
- Practical use of concentration-dependent contact angles as a measure of solid-liquid adsorption. 2. Experimental aspectsLangmuir, 1992
- Practical use of concentration-dependent contact angles as a measure of solid-liquid adsorption. 1. Theoretical aspectsLangmuir, 1992
- Synthesis and cell attachment activity of bioactive oligopeptides: RGD, RGDS, RGDV, and RGDTJournal of Biomedical Materials Research, 1991
- Monolayer transformation by nucleophilic substitution: Applications to the creation of new monolayer assembliesLangmuir, 1990
- Proteins at InterfacesACS Symposium Series, 1987
- Surface and Interfacial Aspects of Biomedical PolymersPublished by Springer Nature ,1985
- Biomaterials: Interfacial Phenomena and ApplicationsAdvances in Chemistry, 1982