Coagulation factor XII has been identified as a potential drug target that could prevent thrombosis without increasing the risk of bleeding. However, human data to support the development of factor XII-directed therapeutics are lacking. To assess the role of factor XII in venous thromboembolism, we examine genetic variation in the coding region of the F12 locus across 703,745 participants in the UK Biobank and NIH All of Us biorepositories. We find that heterozygous carriers of nonsense, frameshift, and essential splice site variants in F12 are protected against venous thromboembolism without an increased risk of bleeding or infection. We also show that F12 variant carriers generally experience a quantitative (type I) defect in circulating factor XII levels, though a subset of participants was also identified with possible qualitative (type II) deficiency. In vitro plasma-based thrombin generation is reduced at factor XII concentrations reflective of those seen in F12 variant carriers. We also show that F12 heterozygous mice are protected against venous thromboembolism and display an intermediate phenotype between wild-type and F12-null animals. We conclude that heterozygous loss of F12 represents a haploinsufficient state characterized by protection against venous thromboembolism and that therapeutically inhibiting factor XII is likely to be safe and effective. Lowering the levels of coagulation factor XII may prevent thrombosis without increasing the risk of bleeding. Here, Haj et al. use a large human dataset to show that this is the case for people carrying mutations that lower the levels of factor XII.
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Amelia K. Haj
David S. Paul
Sean J. Jurgens
Nature Communications
Harvard University
Massachusetts General Hospital
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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Haj et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68bb4d276d6d5674bcd01298 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-62789-5