We studied serum thrombopoietin (TPO) levels and circulating numbers of platelet during five courses of myelosuppressive post-remission chemotherapy in three patients with acute leukemia in complete remission. Serum TPO levels were measured by a newly developed and sensitive sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. In all courses, serum TPO levels changed reciprocally with the platelet counts. When platelets were transfused into patients near the time of platelet nadir, the TPO levels dropped temporarily, while platelet counts temporarily increased. In addition, platelets obtained after transfusion in a thrombocytopenic patient showed lower binding to biotinylated TPO than donor platelets prior to the transfusion. The finding indicated that the TPO receptors were saturated with endogenous TPO of the patient with a high serum TPO level. These results suggest that the platelet mass directly regulates serum TPO levels by receptor-mediated absorption and is one of the major regulators of serum TPO levels in humans.
Platelet adhesion to vascular subendothelium, mediated in part by interactions between collagen and glycoprotein VI (GPVI) complexed with Fc receptor γ-chain, is crucial for thrombus formation. Antiplatelet therapy benefits patients with various thrombotic and ischemic diseases, but the safety and efficacy of existing treatments are limited. Recent data suggest GPVI as a promising target for a novel antiplatelet therapy, for example, GPVI-specific Abs that deplete GPVI from the surface of platelets. Here, we characterized GPVI-specific autoAbs (YA-Abs) from the first reported patient with ongoing platelet GPVI deficiency caused by the YA-Abs. To obtain experimentally useful human GPVI-specific mAbs with characteristics similar to YA-Abs, we generated human GPVI-specific mouse mAbs and selected 2 representative mAbs, mF1201 and mF1232, whose binding to GPVI was inhibited by YA-Abs. In vitro, mF1201, but not mF1232, induced human platelet activation and GPVI shedding, and mF1232 inhibited collagen-induced human platelet aggregation. Administration of mF1201 and mF1232 to monkeys caused GPVI immunodepletion with and without both significant thrombocytopenia and GPVI shedding, respectively. When a human/mouse chimeric form of mF1232 (cF1232) was labeled with a fluorescent endocytosis probe and administered to monkeys, fluorescence increased in circulating platelets and surface GPVI was lost. Loss of platelet surface GPVI mediated by cF1232 was successfully reproduced in vitro in the presence of a cAMP-elevating agent. Thus, we have characterized cAMP-dependent endocytosis of GPVI mediated by a human GPVI-specific mAb as what we believe to be a novel antiplatelet therapy.
Prevention of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is important in patients undergoing major orthopedic surgery. Although the detection of an elevated D-dimer level is useful for predicting DVT, it is not efficacious in postoperative patients being treated with anti-Xa agents. The soluble platelet glycoprotein VI (sGPVI) level is a marker of activated platelets, but not bleeding. Therefore, sGPVI levels are usually examined as a predictor of DVT in such patients. In the present study, 83 orthopedic patients were treated with 30 mg of edoxaban for prophylaxis of DVT. Fourteen patients developed DVT and 17 patients discontinued the prophylaxis due to decreased hemoglobin levels. Plasma levels of sGPVI in the patients were significantly higher after surgery than before surgery. On day 1, the sGPVI levels increased, while the platelet counts decreased. There were no significant differences in D-dimer, soluble fibrin, or FDP levels in orthopedic patients with and without DVT before surgery and on days 1, 4, and 8. Plasma sGPVI levels were significantly higher in the patients with DVT than in those without DVT on days 1 and 4. Plasma levels of D-dimer were significantly higher in patients with withdrawal than in those without. However, there were no significant differences in sGPVI levels between those with and without withdrawal. As D-dimer levels are known to increase in patients with withdrawal, this parameter is not useful for evaluating the risk of DVT in these patients. In contrast, the sGPVI level is not increased in those with withdrawal and may therefore be useful for evaluating the risk of DVT in postoperative patients treated with an anticoagulant.
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