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Paris Margaritis, Valder R. Arruda, Majed Aljamali, Rodney M. Camire, Alexander Schlachterman, Katherine A. High
Published in Volume 113, Issue 7
J Clin Invest. 2004; 113(7):1025–1031 doi:10.1172/JCI20106
Abstract | Full text | PDF
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Figure 1

Role of FVIIa in coagulation. Coagulation is initiated through the extrinsic pathway. FVIIa/TF catalyzes conversion of FX to FXa. FXa catalyzes conversion of prothrombin (FII) to thrombin (FIIa). Small amounts of thrombin formed through the extrinsic pathway promote coagulation through the intrinsic pathway. Under physiological conditions, the extrinsic pathway is dramatically downregulated by TF pathway inhibitor (TFPI), but the high circulating concentrations of FVIIa seen with infusion of the recombinant protein or the AAV-FVII-2RKR vector allow FX activation to occur despite TFPI.