IntroductionThe von Willebrand factor (VWF) is an essential component of hemostasis at sites of vascular injury. This hemostatically active adhesion ligand also plays a critical role in thrombus formation at the site of a ruptured atherosclerotic plaque and in platelet aggregation induced by high fluid shear stress in areas of severe vascular stenosis. The former results in myocardial infarction when it occurs in coronary arteries, whereas the latter is a major cause of thromboembolism associated with ischemic stroke. 1 VWF is the largest multimeric glycoprotein in the plasma. It is exclusively synthesized in endothelial cells and megakaryocytes initially as a monomeric glycoprotein. In the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus of these cells, the monomers form C-terminal disulfide-linked dimers. A various number of dimers subsequently form multimers through N-terminal disulfide linkages, a process assisted by the proteolytic release of a 714-amino acid propeptide. 2,3 The newly synthesized VWF multimers are either constitutively released into the circulation or stored in the Weibel-Palade bodies of endothelial cells and ␣-granules of megakaryocytes/platelets. 4,5 On stimulation, these granules secrete the stored VWF multimers that are rich in ultra-large and hemostatically hyperactive forms. 4,6 Ultra-large VWF multimers are also secreted under endothelial stress caused by inflammation but are rapidly and partially cleaved by the zinc metalloprotease AD-AMTS13 (a disintegrin and metalloprotease with thrombospondin type 1 repeats) into smaller, variable-sized multimers. 7-9 The hemostatic activity of VWF multimers is determined not only by multimer size, 4,10 but also by the quantity of VWF antigen in the circulation. The plasma level of VWF multimers is determined by a dynamic balance between the rate of production and that of clearance. Although acquired conditions are known to affect synthesis and secretion, 11 genetic factors play a major role in regulating VWF synthesis and clearance. It has been reported that genetic factors are responsible for up to 66% of variation in plasma VWF antigen level, of which 30% is related to ABO blood type. 12,13 The human VWF gene is located on chromosome 12. 14,15 It spans approximately 180 kb of nucleotides and contains 52 exons that encode a multidomain prepolypeptide of 2791 amino acids. [14][15][16] The VWF gene is highly polymorphic. 17 Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the coding and promoter sequences in the VWF gene have been extensively studied and found to influence the levels of VWF in the circulation. Furthermore, as a heavily glycosylated polypeptide, 16,18 the level of circulating VWF is also affected by the structure of its carbohydrate side chains, which are associated with ABO blood group, primarily because of the presence or absence of a functional glycosyltransferase that adds either a N-acetylgalactosamine or a D-galactose to a D-galactose side chain on the H antigen. 19 This structural variation in glycosylation has been reported to directly...