Factor V (pronounced
factor 5) is a
protein of the
coagulation system, rarely referred to as
proaccelerin or
labile factor. In contrast to most other coagulation factors, it is not enzymatically active but functions as a
cofactor. Deficiency leads to predisposition for
hemorrhage, while some mutations (most notably
factor V Leiden) predispose for
thrombosis.
Genetics
The
gene for factor V is located on the
first chromosome (1q23). It is genomically related to the family of multicopper oxidases, and is homologous to coagulation factor VIII. The gene spans 70 kb, consists of 25 exons, and the resulting protein has a relative molecular mass of approximately 330000.
Physiology
Factor V circulates in plasma as a single-chain molecule with a plasma half-life of about 12 hours. Half-lives up to 36 hours have been reported, though.
Factor V is able to bind to activated
platelets and is activated by
thrombin. On activation, factor V is spliced in two chains (heavy and light chain with molecular masses of 110000 and 73000, respectively) which are noncovalently bound to each other by
calcium. Factor V is active as a cofactor of the thrombinase complex. The activated
factor X (FXa) enzyme requires
Ca++ and activated factor V to convert prothrombin to
thrombin on the cell surface membrane.
Factor Va is degraded by
activated protein C, one of the principal physiological inhibitors of coagulation. In the presence of
thrombomodulin, thrombin acts to decrease clotting by activating Protein C; therefore, the concentration and action of protein C are important determinants in the negative feedback loop through which thrombin limits its own activation.
Role in disease
Various hereditary disorders of factor V are known. Deficiency is associated with a rare mild form of
hemophilia (termed parahemophilia or Owren parahemophilia), the incidence of which is about 1:1,000,000. It inherits in an
autosomal recessive fashion.
Other
mutations of factor V are associated with
venous thrombosis. They are the most common hereditary causes for
thrombophilia (a tendency to form
blood clots). The most common one of these,
factor V Leiden, is due to the replacement of an
arginine residue with
glutamine at amino acid position 506 (R506Q). All prothrombotic factor V mutations (factor V Leiden, factor V Cambridge, factor V Hong Kong) make it resistant to cleavage by activated protein C ("APC resistance"). It therefore remains active and increases the rate of thrombin generation.
History
Until the discovery of factor V, coagulation was regarded as a product of four factors:
calcium (IV) and thrombokinase (III) together acting on
prothrombin (II) to produce
fibrinogen (I); this model had been outlined by
Paul Morawitz in 1905.
The suggestion that an additional factor might exist was made by Dr Paul Owren (1905-1990), a
Norwegian physician, during his investigations into the bleeding tendency of a lady called Mary (1914-2002). She had suffered from
nosebleeds and
menorrhagia (excessive menstrual blood loss) for most her life, and was found to have a prolonged
prothrombin time, suggesting either
vitamin K deficiency or
chronic liver disease leading to prothrombin deficiency. However, neither were the case, and Owren demonstrated this by correcting the abnormality with plasma from which prothrombin had been removed. Using Mary's serum as index, he found that the "missing" factor, which he labeled V (I-IV having been used in Morawitz' model), had particular characteristics. Most investigations were performed during the
Second World War, and while Owren published his results in Norway in 1944, he could not publish them internationally until the war was over. They appeared finally in
The Lancet in 1947.
The possibility of an extra coagulation factor was initially resisted on methodological grounds by Drs Armand Quick and Walter Seegers, both world authorities in coagulation. Confirmatory studies from other groups led to their final approval several years later.
Owren initially felt that factor V (labile factor or proaccelerin) activated another factor, which he named VI. VI was the factor that accelerated the conversion from prothrombin to thrombin. It was later discovered that factor V was "converted" (activated) by thrombin itself, and later still that factor VI was simply the activated form of factor V.
The complete amino acid sequence of the protein was published in 1987. In 1994 factor V Leiden, resistant to inactivation by protein C, was described; this abnormality is the most common genetic cause for thrombosis.Interactions
Factor V has been shown to interact with Protein S.