Insights from the Evolution of Coagulation: A New Perspective on Anti-Inflammatory Strategies in the ICU—Focus on the Contact Activation System
Ruihua Wang, Feng Zhu

TL;DR
This paper explores how the contact activation system evolved and suggests it could be a target for anti-inflammatory treatments in ICU patients.
Contribution
The paper proposes a new evolutionary perspective on the contact activation system's role in inflammation and coagulation.
Findings
FXII deficiency causes minimal bleeding and F12 loss in marine mammals.
CAS inhibition may protect organs in ICU without increasing bleeding.
CAS components have non-coagulation roles like modulating endothelial permeability.
Abstract
This review reappraises the anti-inflammatory potential of the contact activation system (CAS) in intensive care through an evolutionary lens. The authors propose that coagulation factor XII (FXII) and related components evolved in terrestrial animals as a “foreign-surface sensing–immunothrombosis” module, helping to explain the minimal bleeding phenotype of FXII deficiency and the secondary loss of F12 in marine mammals. CAS shares components with the kallikrein–kinin system (KKS): alpha-coagulation factor XIIa (α-FXIIa) drives coagulation factor XI (FXI) activation to amplify coagulation, whereas betacoagulation factor XIIa (β-FXIIa) activates the KKS to generate bradykinin, promoting vasodilation and vascular leak. Beyond proteolysis, zymogen FXII signals via urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) to induce neutrophil extracellular trap formation (NETosis), thereby…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCoagulation, Bradykinin, Polyphosphates, and Angioedema · Mechanical Circulatory Support Devices · Blood Coagulation and Thrombosis Mechanisms
