Protein C or Protein S deficiency associates with paradoxically impaired platelet-dependent thrombus and fibrin formation under flow

蛋白质 C 或蛋白质 S 缺乏与血小板依赖性血栓和纤维蛋白形成受损有关

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作者:Sanne L N Brouns, Bibian M E Tullemans, Cristiana Bulato, Gina Perrella, Elena Campello, Luca Spiezia, Johanna P van Geffen, Marijke J E Kuijpers, René van Oerle, Henri M H Spronk, Paola E J van der Meijden, Paolo Simioni, Johan W M Heemskerk

Background

Low plasma levels of protein C or protein S are associated with venous thromboembolism rather than myocardial infarction. The high coagulant activity in patients with thrombophilia with a (familial) defect in protein C or S is explained by defective protein C activation, involving thrombomodulin and protein S. This causes increased plasmatic thrombin generation.

Conclusion

Whole-blood flow perfusion over collagen, collagen-like peptide, and fibrin surfaces with low or high GPVI dependency indicated an unexpected impairment of platelet activation, thrombus phenotype, and fibrin formation but unchanged platelet adhesion, observed in patients with protein C deficiency and to a lesser extent protein S deficiency, when compared to controls. The defect extended from diminished phosphatidylserine exposure and thrombus contraction to delayed and suppressed fibrin formation. The mechanism was thrombomodulin independent, and may involve negative platelet priming by plasma components.

Methods

Whole blood from 23 patients and 15 control subjects was perfused over six glycoprotein VI-dependent microspot surfaces. By real-time multicolor microscopic imaging, kinetics of platelet thrombus and fibrin formation were characterized in 49 parameters.

Objective

Assess the role of platelets in the thrombus- and fibrin-forming potential in patients with familial protein C or protein S deficiency under high-shear flow conditions. Patients/

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