Critical Care

official impact factor 4.60

This article is part of the supplement: The changing face of sepsis pathogenesis: implications for patient identification and management

Proceedings

The normal role of Activated Protein C in maintaining homeostasis and its relevance to critical illness

Charles T Esmon

Author Affiliations

Cardiovascular Biology Research Program, Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA

Critical Care 2001, 5(Suppl 2):S7-S12 doi:10.1186/cc1333

Published: 7 March 2001

Abstract

Thrombin is a multifunctional protein, with procoagulant, inflammatory and anticoagulant effects. Binding of thrombin to thrombomodulin results in activation of Protein C and initiation of the Activated Protein C anticoagulant pathway, a process that is augmented by the endothelial cell Protein C receptor (EPCR). Activated Protein C has demonstrated antithrombotic, anti-inflammatory, and profibrinolytic properties. Its antithrombotic activity is particularly important in the microcirculation, and Protein C deficiency is associated with microvascular thrombosis. Activated Protein C has also been shown to modulate inflammation. When the level of thrombomodulin or Protein C is reduced in sepsis there is a vicious cycle of coagulation and inflammation, with potentially lethal consequences. In vitro studies and animal models have shown that Activated Protein C blunts the inflammatory and coagulant response to sepsis through a variety of mechanisms.

Keywords:
Activated Protein C; coagulation; endothelial cell Protein C receptor (EPCR); inflammation; thrombomodulin