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1.
J Thromb Haemost ; 2024 Jun 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38925489

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) regulates tissue factor-triggered coagulation. Humans and mice express transcripts encoding for multidistributed (endothelial, platelet, and plasma) 3-Kunitz domain TFPIα and endothelial membrane-anchored 2-Kunitz TFPIß. Mice express a third transcript, γ, that encodes plasma lipoprotein-associated 2-Kunitz TFPI. In humans, proteolysis of α and/or ß produces plasma lipoprotein-associated 2-Kunitz TFPI at lower levels. In clinical trials, monoclonal antibodies that target all TFPI isoforms extend coagulation and correct bleeding in hemophilic patients but with some thrombosis risks. OBJECTIVES: To determine the impact of TFPI isoform-specific deletions on promoting clotting in hemophilic mice. METHODS: Engineered TFPI isoform-specific, hemophilic (factor VIII-null) mice were evaluated for clotting. RESULTS: Mice expressing any single TFPI isoform were healthy. Thrombin generation assays identified TFPIγ as the dominant anticoagulation isoform in mouse plasma. Hemostasis was assessed by serial bleeding times from a tail vein laceration. Repeatedly, after a clot forms, it was manually disrupted; the number of clots/disruptions occurring over a 15-minute period were reported. C57BL/6 and hemophilic mice clot on average 25.6 vs 5.4 times, respectively. On a hemophilia background, TFPIß or TFPIγ-specific deletion improved clotting to 14.6 and 15.2 times, respectively (P < .0001). TFPIα-specific deletion was without impact, clotting 5.1 times. Heterozygous deletion of TFPIß was effective, clotting 11.8 times (P < .0001). Heterozygous deletion of TFPIα or TFPIγ alone was ineffective, clotting 3.0 and 6.1 times, respectively, but heterozygous TFPIαγ deletion improved clotting to 11.2 times (P < .001). CONCLUSION: In hemophilic mice, endothelial TFPIß and plasma γ-derived 2-Kunitz TFPI individually contribute more to bleeding than total TFPIα.

2.
J Thromb Haemost ; 21(3): 629-638, 2023 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36696180

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection is associated with excessive coagulation, thrombosis, and mortality. OBJECTIVE: To provide insight into mechanisms that contribute to excessive coagulation in coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) disease. PATIENTS/METHODS: Blood from COVID-19 patients was investigated for coagulation-related gene expression and functional activities. RESULTS: Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from severe COVID-19 patients revealed a 5.2-fold increase in tissue factor (TF [F3 gene]) transcript expression levels (P < .05), the trigger of extrinsic coagulation; a 7.7-fold increase in C1-inhibitor (SERPING1 gene; P < .01) transcript expression levels, an inhibitor of intrinsic coagulation; and a 4.4-fold increase in anticoagulant thrombomodulin (TM [THBD gene]) transcript expression levels (P < .001). Bulk RNA-seq analysis of sorted CD14+ monocytes on an independent cohort of COVID-19 patients confirmed these findings (P < .05). Indicative of excessive coagulation, 41% of COVID-19 patients' plasma samples contained high D-dimer levels (P < .0001); of these, 19% demonstrated extracellular vesicle TF activity (P = .109). COVID-19 patients' ex vivo plasma-based thrombin generation correlated positively with D-dimer levels (P < .01). Plasma procoagulant extracellular vesicles were elevated ∼9-fold in COVID-19 patients (P < .01). Public scRNA-seq data sets from bronchoalveolar lung fluid and our peripheral blood mononuclear cell scRNA-seq data show CD14+ monocytes/macrophages TF transcript expression levels are elevated in severe but not mild or moderate COVID-19 patients. CONCLUSIONS: Beyond local lung injury, SARS-CoV-2 infection increases systemic TF (F3) transcript levels and elevates circulating extracellular vesicles that likely contribute to disease-associated coagulation, thrombosis, and related mortality.


Assuntos
Transtornos da Coagulação Sanguínea , COVID-19 , Vesículas Extracelulares , Trombose , Humanos , Vesículas Extracelulares/metabolismo , Leucócitos Mononucleares/metabolismo , SARS-CoV-2 , Tromboplastina/metabolismo
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