In
coagulation, the
procoagulant protein
factor X can be activated into
factor Xa two ways. Extrinsic and intrinsic ways.
The activating complexes are called
tenase. Tenase is a contraction of "ten" and the suffix "-ase", which means, that the complex activate its substrate (inactive factor X) by cleaving it.
Extrinsic tenase complex is made up of
tissue factor,
factor VII, and
Ca2+ as an activating ion.
Intrinsic tenase complex contains the active
factor IX (IXa), its cofactor
factor VIII (VIIIa), the substrate (factor X), and they are activated by negatively charged surfaces (such as glass, active
platelet membrane, sometimes
cell membrane of
monocytes). These
vitamin K-dependent procoagulant factors dock to this surface through their
Gla domain with Ca
2+ bridges. This makes the activating process much faster and blocks the binding of inhibitors.
Category:Coagulation systemCategory:Articles lacking sources (Erik9bot)