Von Willebrand factor is a blood glycoprotein of the coagulation system. It is deficient or defective in von Willebrand disease and is involved in a large number of other diseases, including thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura, Heyde's syndrome, and possibly hemolytic-uremic syndrome.
Biochemistry
Synthesis
vWF is a large multimeric
glycoprotein present in
blood plasma and produced constitutively in
endothelium (in the
Weibel-Palade bodies),
megakaryocytes (α-granules of
platelets), and subendothelial
connective tissue.
Structure
The basic vWF monomer is a 2050
amino acid protein. Every monomer contains a number of specific domains with a specific function; elements of note are:
Monomers are subsequently N-glycosylated, arranged into dimers in the endoplasmic reticulum and into multimers in the Golgi apparatus by crosslinking of cysteine residues via disulfide bonds. With respect to the glycosylation, vWF is one of the few proteins that carry ABO blood group system antigens.
Multimers of vWF can be extremely large, >20,000 kDa, and consist of over 80 subunits of 250 kDa each. Only the large multimers are functional. Some cleavage products that result from vWF production are also secreted but probably serve no function.
Function
Von Willebrand factor is not an
enzyme and therefore has no catalytic activity. Its primary function is binding to other proteins, particularly Factor VIII and it is important in platelet adhesion to wound sites.
vWF binds to a number of cells and molecules. The most important ones are:
- Factor VIII is bound to vWF whilst inactive in circulation; Factor VIII degrades rapidly when not bound to vWF. Factor VIII is released from vWF by the action of thrombin.
- vWF binds to collagen, e.g., when it is exposed in endothelial cells due to damage occurring to the blood vessel.
- vWF binds to platelet gpIb when it forms a complex with gpIX and gpV; this binding occurs under all circumstances, but is most efficient under high shear stress (i.e., rapid blood flow in narrow blood vessels, see below).
- vWF binds to other platelet receptors when they are activated, e.g., by thrombin (i.e., when coagulation has been stimulated).
vWF appears to play a major role blood coagulation, and vWF deficiency or dysfunction (von Willebrand disease) therefore leads to a bleeding tendency, which is most apparent in tissues having high blood flow shear in narrow vessels. From studies it appears that vWF uncoils under these circumstances, decelerating passing platelets.
Catabolism
The biological breakdown (
catabolism) of vWF is largely mediated by a protein cryptically termed
ADAMTS13 (acronym of "
a disintegrin-like
and
metalloprotease with
thrombo
spondin type 1 motif no.
13"). It is a
metalloproteinase which
cleaves vWF between
tyrosine at position 842 and
methionine at position 843 (or 1605-1606 of the gene). This breaks down the multimers into smaller units, which are degraded by other
peptidases.
Role in disease
History
vWF is named after Dr.
Erik von Willebrand, a
Finnish doctor who in
1924 first described a hereditary bleeding disorder in families from the
Åland islands who had a tendency for cutaneous and mucosal bleeding, including
menorrhagia. Although von Willebrand could not identify the definite cause, he distinguished von Willebrand disease (vWD) from
haemophilia and other forms of
bleeding diathesis.
In the 1950s, vWD was shown to be caused by a plasma factor deficiency (instead of being caused by platelet disorders), and, in the 1970s, the vWF protein was purified.
Sources
- Sadler, J. E. Biochemistry and Genetics of von Willebrand factor. Annu Rev Biochem 1998; 67: 395-424. PMID 9759493.
See also
Hematology | Coagulation system
Facteur de von Willebrand