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1.
Front Physiol ; 13: 960272, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36187800

ABSTRACT

Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type-9 (PCSK9) is a secreted protein that binds and mediates endo-lysosomal degradation of low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR), limiting plasma clearance of cholesterol-rich LDL particles in liver. Gain-of-function (GOF) point mutations in PCSK9 are associated with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). Approximately 30%-40% of PCSK9 in normolipidemic human plasma is bound to LDL particles. We previously reported that an R496W GOF mutation in a region of PCSK9 known as cysteine-histidine-rich domain module 1 (CM1) prevents LDL binding in vitro [Sarkar et al., J. Biol. Chem. 295 (8), 2285-2298 (2020)]. Herein, we identify additional GOF mutations that inhibit LDL association, localized either within CM1 or a surface-exposed region in the PCSK9 prodomain. Notably, LDL binding was nearly abolished by a prodomain S127R GOF mutation, one of the first PCSK9 mutations identified in FH patients. PCSK9 containing alanine or proline substitutions at amino acid position 127 were also defective for LDL binding. LDL inhibited cell surface LDLR binding and degradation induced by exogenous PCSK9-D374Y but had no effect on an S127R-D374Y double mutant form of PCSK9. These studies reveal that multiple FH-associated GOF mutations in two distinct regions of PCSK9 inhibit LDL binding, and that the Ser-127 residue in PCSK9 plays a critical role.

2.
Transfusion ; 58(7): 1726-1731, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29607499

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Research is needed to enhance cord blood (CB) transplantation outcomes and to develop new clinical applications. Based on quality criteria for transplantation, CB collected by public CB banks (CBBs) is often unsuitable for banking, but may still be valuable for research. Canadian researchers have described a need for a centralized program providing ethically sourced CB for research projects. To meet this need, Canadian Blood Services (CBS), in partnership with The Ottawa Hospital, launched the Cord Blood for Research Program (CBRP) in 2014. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: The CBRP developed processes for donor research consent and research project approval with oversight from CBS's CBB and appropriate research ethics boards. The CBRP distributes deidentified CB products to research projects across Canada. RESULTS: Since its inception, the CBRP has distributed more than 525 CB units to researchers, supporting 11 research projects. Of the mothers who donate their baby's CB, 77% have chosen to consent to its use for research if it is not bankable. The number of CB units currently available for research via the CBRP exceeds the requests from researchers. CONCLUSION: The CBRP reliably distributes quality CB products that do not qualify for banking to investigators across Canada in an ethical, legal, and transparent manner. This provides an opportunity for the public to directly support research, helps meet the need expressed by Canada's research community, and maximizes the donor's gift. More research is needed to clarify the factors influencing donor and researcher participation in the CBRP.


Subject(s)
Blood Banks , Fetal Blood , Research , Canada , Humans
3.
Transfus Med Rev ; 30(2): 53-68, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26962008

ABSTRACT

Testing donations for pathogens and deferring selected blood donors have reduced the risk of transmission of known pathogens by transfusion to extremely low levels in most developed countries. Protecting the blood supply from emerging infectious threats remains a serious concern in the transfusion medicine community. Transfusion services can employ indirect measures such as surveillance, hemovigilance, and donor questioning (defense), protein-, or nucleic acid based direct testing (detection), or pathogen inactivation of blood products (destruction) as strategies to mitigate the risk of transmission-transmitted infection. In the North American context, emerging threats currently include dengue, chikungunya, and hepatitis E viruses, and Babesia protozoan parasites. The 2003 SARS and 2014 Ebola outbreaks illustrate the potential of epidemics unlikely to be transmitted by blood transfusion but disruptive to blood systems. Donor-free blood products such as ex vivo generated red blood cells offer a theoretical way to avoid transmission-transmitted infection risk, although biological, engineering, and manufacturing challenges must be overcome before this approach becomes practical. Similarly, next generation sequencing of all nucleic acid in a blood sample is currently possible but impractical for generalized screening. Pathogen inactivation systems are in use in different jurisdictions around the world, and are starting to gain regulatory approval in North America. Cost concerns make it likely that pathogen inactivation will be contemplated by blood operators through the lens of health economics and risk-based decision making, rather than in zero-risk paradigms previously embraced for transfusable products. Defense of the blood supply from infectious disease risk will continue to require innovative combinations of surveillance, detection, and pathogen avoidance or inactivation.


Subject(s)
Blood Safety , Blood-Borne Pathogens , Blood Safety/economics , Blood Safety/methods , Blood Safety/standards , Blood-Borne Pathogens/isolation & purification , Canada , Cell Culture Techniques , Cells, Cultured , Communicable Disease Control , Communicable Diseases, Emerging/epidemiology , Communicable Diseases, Emerging/prevention & control , Communicable Diseases, Emerging/transmission , Disease Outbreaks , Disease Transmission, Infectious/prevention & control , Donor Selection/legislation & jurisprudence , Donor Selection/methods , Donor Selection/organization & administration , Donor Selection/standards , Ebolavirus/genetics , Ebolavirus/isolation & purification , Erythrocytes/cytology , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/blood , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/epidemiology , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/prevention & control , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/transmission , Humans , Risk Management , Sequence Analysis/methods , Transfusion Reaction , Virus Inactivation
4.
Transfus Med Rev ; 29(3): 181-94, 2015 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25862281

ABSTRACT

Plasma obtained via whole blood donation processing or via apheresis technology can either be transfused directly to patients or pooled and fractionated into plasma protein products that are concentrates of 1 or more purified plasma protein. The evidence base supporting clinical efficacy in most of the indications for which plasma is transfused is weak, whereas high-quality evidence supports the efficacy of plasma protein products in at least some of the clinical settings in which they are used. Transfusable plasma utilization remains composed in part of applications that fall outside of clinical practice guidelines. Plasma contains all of the soluble coagulation factors and is frequently transfused in efforts to restore or reinforce patient hemostasis. The biochemical complexities of coagulation have in recent years been rationalized in newer cell-based models that supplement the cascade hypothesis. Efforts to normalize widely used clinical hemostasis screening test values by plasma transfusion are thought to be misplaced, but superior rapid tests have been slow to emerge. The advent of non-vitamin K-dependent oral anticoagulants has brought new challenges to clinical laboratories in plasma testing and to clinicians needing to reverse non-vitamin K-dependent oral anticoagulants urgently. Current plasma-related controversies include prophylactic plasma transfusion before invasive procedures, plasma vs prothrombin complex concentrates for urgent warfarin reversal, and the utility of increased ratios of plasma to red blood cell units transfused in massive transfusion protocols. The first recombinant plasma protein products to reach the clinic were recombinant hemophilia treatment products, and these donor-free equivalents to factors VIII and IX are now being supplemented with novel products whose circulatory half-lives have been increased by chemical modification or genetic fusion. Achieving optimal plasma utilization is an ongoing challenge in the interconnected worlds of transfusable plasma, plasma protein products, and recombinant and engineered replacements.


Subject(s)
Blood Component Transfusion/methods , Plasma , Blood Preservation/methods , Canada , Hemophilia A/therapy , Hemorrhage/etiology , Hemorrhage/therapy , Hemostasis , Hemostatic Techniques , Humans , Plasma/physiology
5.
J Biol Chem ; 288(12): 8279-8288, 2013 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23400816

ABSTRACT

Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type-9 (PCSK9) is a secreted protein that binds to the epidermal growth factor-like-A domain of the low density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) and mediates LDLR degradation in liver. Gain-of-function mutations in PCSK9 are associated with autosomal dominant hypercholesterolemia in humans. Size-exclusion chromatography of human plasma has shown PCSK9 to be partly associated with undefined high molecular weight complexes within the LDL size range. We used density gradient centrifugation to isolate LDL in plasma pooled from 5 normolipidemic subjects and report that >40% of total PCSK9 was associated with LDL. Binding of fluorophore-labeled recombinant PCSK9 to isolated LDL in vitro was saturable with a K(D) ∼ 325 nM. This interaction was competed >95% by excess unlabeled PCSK9, and competition binding curves were consistent with a one-site binding model. An N-terminal region of the PCSK9 prodomain (amino acids 31-52) was required for binding to LDL in vitro. LDL dose-dependently inhibited binding and degradation of cell surface LDLRs by exogenous PCSK9 in HuH7 cells. LDL also inhibited PCSK9 binding to mutant LDLRs defective at binding LDL. These data suggest that association of PCSK9 with LDL particles in plasma lowers the ability of PCSK9 to bind to cell surface LDLRs, thereby blunting PCSK9-mediated LDLR degradation.


Subject(s)
Lipoproteins, LDL/blood , Proprotein Convertases/blood , Proteolysis , Receptors, LDL/metabolism , Serine Endopeptidases/blood , Binding, Competitive , Cell Line, Tumor , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Lipoproteins, HDL/blood , Lipoproteins, LDL/chemistry , Lipoproteins, VLDL/blood , Proprotein Convertase 9 , Proprotein Convertases/chemistry , Protein Binding , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Receptors, LDL/chemistry , Serine Endopeptidases/chemistry
6.
Blood ; 117(16): 4358-66, 2011 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21346256

ABSTRACT

Type 1 VWD is the mild to moderate reduction of VWF levels. This study examined the mechanisms underlying 2 common type 1 VWD mutations, the severe R1205H and more moderate Y1584C. In vitro biosynthesis was reduced for both mutations in human and mouse VWF, with the effect being more severe in R1205H. VWF knockout mice received hydrodynamic injections of mouse Vwf cDNA. Lower VWF antigen levels were demonstrated in both homozygous and heterozygous forms for both type 1 mutations from days 14-42. Recombinant protein infusions and hydrodynamic-expressed VWF propeptide to antigen ratios demonstrate that R1205H mouse VWF has an increased clearance rate, while Y1584C is normal. Recombinant ADAMTS13 digestions of Y1584C demonstrated enhanced cleavage of both human and mouse VWF115 substrates. Hydrodynamic-expressed VWF shows a loss of high molecular weight multimers for Y1584C compared with wild-type and R1205H. At normal physiologic levels of VWF, Y1584C showed reduced thrombus formation in a ferric chloride injury model while R1205H demonstrated similar thrombogenic activity to wild-type VWF. This study has elucidated several novel mechanisms for these mutations and highlights that the type 1 VWD phenotype can be recapitulated in the VWF knockout hydrodynamic injection model.


Subject(s)
Mutation , von Willebrand Diseases/genetics , von Willebrand Factor/genetics , ADAM Proteins/metabolism , ADAMTS13 Protein , Animals , Cell Line , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Metalloendopeptidases/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Phenotype , Protein Multimerization , Recombinant Proteins/administration & dosage , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Thrombosis/genetics , von Willebrand Factor/administration & dosage , von Willebrand Factor/metabolism
7.
Blood ; 115(23): 4862-9, 2010 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20371742

ABSTRACT

Type 2B von Willebrand disease (2B VWD) results from von Willebrand factor (VWF) A1 mutations that enhance VWF-GPIbalpha binding. These "gain of function" mutations lead to an increased affinity of the mutant VWF for platelets and the binding of mutant high-molecular-weight VWF multimers to platelets in vivo, resulting in an increase in clearance of both platelets and VWF. Three common 2B VWD mutations (R1306W, V1316M, and R1341Q) were independently introduced into the mouse Vwf cDNA sequence and the expression vectors delivered to 8- to 10-week-old C57Bl6 VWF(-/-) mice, using hydrodynamic injection. The resultant phenotype was examined, and a ferric chloride-induced injury model was used to examine the thrombogenic effect of the 2B VWD variants in mice. Reconstitution of only the plasma component of VWF resulted in the generation of the 2B VWD phenotype in mice. Variable thrombocytopenia was observed in mice expressing 2B VWF, mimicking the severity seen in 2B VWD patients: mice expressing the V1316M mutation showed the most severe thrombocytopenia. Ferric chloride-induced injury to cremaster arterioles showed a marked reduction in thrombus development and platelet adhesion in the presence of circulating 2B VWF. These defects were only partially rescued by normal platelet transfusions, thus emphasizing the key role of the abnormal plasma VWF environment in 2B VWD.


Subject(s)
Blood Platelets/metabolism , Mutation, Missense , Platelet Adhesiveness , von Willebrand Disease, Type 2/metabolism , von Willebrand Factor/metabolism , Amino Acid Substitution , Animals , Chlorides/toxicity , Disease Models, Animal , Ferric Compounds/toxicity , Humans , Integrin alpha2/genetics , Integrin alpha2/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Noxae/toxicity , Thrombocytopenia/genetics , Thrombocytopenia/metabolism , Thrombosis/chemically induced , Thrombosis/genetics , Thrombosis/metabolism , Thrombosis/therapy , von Willebrand Disease, Type 2/genetics , von Willebrand Disease, Type 2/therapy , von Willebrand Factor/genetics
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