Platelet Disorders |
1 Division of Internal and Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Perugia, Perugia
2 Medical Genetics, Department of Reproductive and Developmental Science, Institute for Maternal and Child Health, IRCCS "Burlo Garofolo", University of Trieste, Trieste
3 Telethon Institute of Genetics and Medicine, Naples
4 Department of Internal Medicine, University of Pavia and Istituto di Ricovero e Cura a Carattere Scientifico (IRCCS), Policlinico San Matteo Foundation, Pavia, Italy
Correspondence: Paolo Gresele, MD, PhD, Division of Internal and Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Perugia, Via E. dal Pozzo, 06126 Perugia, Italy. E-mail:grespa{at}unipg.it
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IIbβ3 are typical of Glanzmanns thrombasthenia, an inherited autosomal recessive bleeding disorder characterized by the failure of platelets to aggregate in response to all physiological agonists, but with no abnormalities in the number or size of platelets. Although large heterogeneity has been described for Glanzmanns thrombasthenia, no family has so far been described as having an autosomal dominant form of this disease. Design and Methods: We describe two Italian families with moderate thrombocytopenia with large platelets, defective platelet function and moderate/severe mucocutaneous bleeding, transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait and associated with a novel integrin β3-gene (ITGB3) mutation.
Results: The characteristics of our families are moderate macrothrombocytopenia and defective platelet function associated with a mild reduction of surface
Ib β3, impaired platelet aggregation to physiological agonists but not to ristocetin, normal clot retraction, reduced fibrinogen binding and expression of activated
IIbβ3 upon stimulation, normal platelet adhesion to immobilized fibrinogen but reduced platelet spreading and tyrosine phosphorylation, indicating defective
IIbβ3-mediated outside-in signaling. Molecular analysis revealed a novel mutation of ITGB3 that determines an in-frame deletion producing the loss of amino acids 647–686 of the βTD ectodomain of integrin β3. Haplotype analysis indicated that the two families inherited the mutation from a common ancestral chromosome.
Conclusions: This novel autosomal dominant macrothrombocytopenia associated with platelet dysfunction raises interesting questions about the role of integrin β3, and its βTD domain, in platelet formation and function.
Key words: glycoprotein IIb/IIIa, megakaryocytopoiesis, outside-in signaling, thrombo-cytopenia.
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IIb and β3, respectively. Platelets do not aggregate in response to any physiological agonist, but they do not show abnormalities in number or size1. GT is an autosomal recessive disease and is, therefore, phenotypically expressed in homozygotes or compound heterozygotes, given that 50% of normal
IIbβ3 is sufficient to guarantee unimpaired platelet function.1,2 However, one GT-like patient with a partial deficiency of
IIbβ3, a life-long bleeding history and alterations in platelet size was previously reported.3,4 More recently, a missense mutation affecting only one allele of ITGB3 was described in a family with macrothrombocytopenia.5 Thus, depending on the site and the extent of the
IIbβ3 mutation, defective platelet function or impaired thrombocytopoiesis may occur. Indeed, a role for
IIbβ3 in platelet release from megakaryocytes has been shown.6 We report here two unrelated Italian families with an autosomal dominant form of macrothrombocytopenia showing impaired platelet function associated with a previously undescribed ITGB3 mutation and a partial integrin β3 defect.
Patients
The proband, a 35-year old woman from southern Italy, had life-long moderate/severe bleeding, mainly mucocutaneous. She and some members of her family have been studied on several occasions over a 4-year period; on each occasion one or more controls, members of the research and hospital staff, were simultaneously studied. No abnormalities in blood clotting were detected but her template bleeding time7 was more than 20 min (normal 5.8±1.0). Electronic platelet counts (Genius S, Seac, Italy) were 26–79x109/L (by optical microscopy: 69–98x109/L); mean platelet volume was 14.2 fL (normal: 10.7±0.9 fL), with 84% normal-sized (controls: 97±1.5%), 14% large (controls: 2.4±1.4%) and 2% giant (controls: 0.2±0.4%) platelets on peripheral blood smears.8
Bone marrow showed mild megakaryocytic hyperplasia with all stages of maturation. Clinical and laboratory investigations of 36 members of the probands family identified 17 subjects with thrombocytopenia transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait (Online Supplementary Figure S1).
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Platelet function
Platelet aggregation induced by collagen (1.2-4 µg/mL), adenosine diphosphate (ADP 2–4 µM), epinephrine (10–100 µM), U46619 (1–2 µM), arachidonic acid (0.6-4 mM), A23187 (4–40 µM), PMA (1–50 nM) and PAF (0.1–10 µM), was studied with a four-channel aggregometer (APACT4, Helena Bioscences, UK), using either platelet rich-plasma or washed platelets.10
Clot retraction was assessed using non-anticoagulated whole blood added to pre-warmed glass tubes (45x12 mm) and placed in a water bath at 37°C for 24 h; tubes were then inspected for clot retraction and results expressed as percentage of the original volume.11
The PFA-100® (Dade Behring, Marburg, Germany) was employed using both collagen/ADP (C/ADP) and collagen/epinephrine (C/EPI) cartridges in citrate whole blood samples; normal ranges were established using samples from 40 healthy volunteers.12
Platelet adhesion to a collagen-coated surface (collagen from equine tendon, 30 µg/cm2) under flow conditions was studied in a parallel plate perfusion chamber, at a wall shear rate of 3000s–1.13
Flow cytometry
The expression of platelet membrane glycoproteins (GP) was investigated by flow cytometry with the following monoclonal antibodies: P2 and SZ22 for integrin
IIb (CD41); SAP, SZ21 and AP3 for integrin β3 (CD61); A2A9/6 and AP2 for integrin
IIbβ3; SZ2 for GPIb
(CD42b); SZ1 for GPIX (CD42a); FA6-152 for GPIV (CD36); ALB6 for CD9; AMF7 for
vβ3 (CD51,
V-chain); 5.6E for PECAM-1 (CD31), and 11E4B-7-6 for glycophorin A. An isotypic antibody was used as a negative control. All antibodies were fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated, except for AP2 and AP3 which were unconjugated and their binding was determined using a secondary FITC-conjugated anti-mouse IgG. Mean fluorescence intensity and the percentage of positive cells were measured and normalized to those of GPIb
, in order to take into account the large volume of platelets.14 The activation of platelets, induced either by ADP (10 µM) or thrombin receptor activating peptide (TRAP-6, 20 µM) in whole blood, was assessed by measuring the expression of P-selectin on their surface.15
Moreover, the binding of PAC-1 (recognizing activated
IIbβ3) or of a FITC-conjugated monoclonal antibody anti-fibrinogen, was studied.16
All samples were analyzed in an EPICS XL-MCL flow cytometer (Coulter Corporation, Miami, FL, USA), equipped with an argon laser operating at 488 nm.
Western blotting
Washed platelets from the proband and control or chinese hamster ovary cells expressing
IIbβ3 (kindly provided by Prof. H. Deckmyn, University of Kortrijk, Belgium) were lysed and 20 µg of proteins for each sample were analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) (8% gel) for 4 h and 30 min at 20 mA. Separated proteins were transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane at 100 V for 90 min. Membranes were saturated with 5% fat-free dried milk in T-TBS and incubated overnight with an anti-integrin β3 mouse monoclonal antibody (Calbiochem, USA) and then incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse IgG for 2 h at room temperature. Immunoreactive bands were detected using peroxidase-conjugated IgG antibody and chemiluminescence detection.
Adhesion and spreading assays
Washed platelets resuspended in Tyrodes buffer (200x109/L) were incubated for 30 or 60 min on 100 µg/mL fibrinogen-coated dishes under static conditions, as previously described.17
The protein content of adherent platelets was determined with the Bradford assay, and results expressed as a percentage of the total added platelets. Platelet lysates were used for the detection of tyrosine phosphorylation by immunoblotting. Aliquots from total platelets or adherent platelets, containing the same amount of proteins, were added to an equal volume of SDS-sample buffer, heated at 95°C for 5 min and then subjected to SDS-PAGE on 7.5% acrylamide gels. Proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose and tested with an antibody against phosphotyrosine. After extensive washing, blots were revealed by chemiluminescence with an ECL kit and the bands corresponding to pp125FAK were quantified by using Quantiscan software (Biosoft, Cambridge, UK) and expressed as arbitrary units.
For platelet spreading, washed platelets (40x109/L) were layered onto human fibrinogen-coated (100 µg/mL) glass coverslips.17 Adherent platelets were fixed, permeabilized and stained with FITC-conjugated phalloidin. Slides were then analyzed using a fluorescence microscope (Zeiss Axioplan fluorescence microscope) with a 100x objective lens, controlled by a Spot-2 cooled camera (Diagnostic Instruments) and digital images were acquired. Ten different fields were analyzed for each specimen. For scanning electron microscopy analysis, adherent platelets were fixed with 2.5% (v/v) glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer, pH 7.3, containing 2% sucrose. Fixed platelets were washed, and then processed for dehydration and gold-labeling, and scanning electron microscopy images were captured using a Philips XL30 scanning electron microscope.18
For all the assays the probands samples were compared with those of ten normal subjects.
Genome-wide search and mutational screening
The genome-wide search was performed using ABI PRISM Linkage Mapping Set v2.5 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). Pairwise linkage analysis and multipoint analysis based on an autosomal dominant transmission with complete penetrance, were performed using the LINKAGE19 and the Simwalk2 packages,20 respectively. Data handling was performed using Mega2.21
The coding exons, together with the donor and acceptor splicing sites of ITGB3 and ITGA2B (GenBank accession numbers NM_000212.2 and NM_000419.3), were amplified and sequenced. Genomic DNA of family members and of 150 controls was tested by denaturating high performance liquid chromatography (Models 3500A and 3500 HT; Transgenomic, Omaha, NE, USA) or restriction enzyme analysis, as the mutation identified creates a restriction enzyme site for PvuII.
Total RNA of one affected family member and three healthy controls was extracted from buffy coats using Trizol.22 The first strand cDNA was synthesized (SuperScriptTM II, Invitrogen Corporation, Paisley, UK) and amplified using oligonucleotides ITGB3/Ex12F (5-GAATGTGTGGAGTGTAAGAAG-3) and ITGB3/15R (5-TGACATTCTCCCAACCTACC-3) before sequence analysis.
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On transmission electron microscopy platelets were larger than normal (average diameter: 3.5±0.5 µm vs. 2.6±0.7 µm of controls, n=6, p<0.005) and revealed an increased number of
and
granules/platelet, compatible with the larger platelet size (
granules/platelet: 1.56±0.6 vs. 1.13±0.9, p<0.05;
granules/platelet: 10.9±5 vs. 6.1±2.7, p<0.005) (Figure 1). In the proband, platelet aggregation induced by ADP and epinephrine was severely impaired while that induced by collagen was reduced. Response to ristocetin, PMA or A23187 was normal; arachidonic acid-induced aggregation was absent (Figure 2). Spontaneous aggregation was always absent. The PFA-100® C/EPI closure time was unmeasurable (>300 sec vs. normal 135.3±27.5 sec) and the C/ADP closure time was markedly prolonged (213 sec vs. normal 89.9±20.8 sec).
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Figure 1. Platelet morphology as determined by optical microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. (A) Light microscopy (under oil immersion, 1000X) of a blood smear of control and probands platelets: platelets are indicated by arrowheads. (B) Trasmission electron microscopy of control and probands platelets (original magnification 13000X).
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Figure 2. Representative platelet aggregation tracings, in response to different agonists in platelet-rich plasma from the proband (P) and controls (C). Agonist concentrations are indicated in the figure.
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IIbβ3 which was reduced with all anti
IIbβ3-clones tested (Figure 3), even when values were corrected for platelet volume14 (Online Supplementary Table S1). Upon stimulation with TRAP-6 (20 µM), surface expression of
IIbβ3, normalized for GPIb
14, increased in the patients platelets, although it did not reach normal values, indicating a normal internal pool of
IIbβ3 (data not shown).
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Figure 3. Flow cytometry of surface glycoproteins on platelets from the proband (black histograms) and controls (white histograms). The expression of CD9, vβ3, GPIb/IX/V, PECAM-1 or GPIV on the platelet surface was normal, or slightly increased. In contrast, expression of GPIIIa (integrin β3) and the complex GPIIb/IIIa ( IIbβ3) was reduced. The gray curve is a non-specific signal.
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Figure 4. A ( ) Adhesion to immobilized human fibrinogen. Washed platelets were allowed to attach to wells coated with 100 µg/mL fibrinogen for 30 and 60 min. After washing out non-adherent platelets, the protein content of adherent platelets was determined with the Bradford assay, and results were expressed as the percentage of total added platelets. The percentages of adherent platelets were similar in the proband (black columns) and in controls (white columns). (B) Spreading and protein phosphor ylation upon adhesion on immobilized fibrinogen. Washed platelets were layered onto fibrinogen-coated plates for 30 min. After washing away unbound platelets, adherent platelets were examined by fluorescence microscopy (B1) or by scanning electron microscopy (B2) and digital images (x100) were acquired. (C) Platelet spreading expressed as mean platelet area/pixel2. The probands platelets show an approximately 50% reduction of spreading (n=10, *p<0.05 vs. controls). (D) Protein phosphorylation. Densitometric analysis of pp125FAK, showing a significant reduction in the probands samples as compared to normal controls (*p<0.05 vs. controls). For all the assays the probands samples were compared to those of five normal subjects.
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Figure 5. Identification of the c.2134+1G>C mutation and its effect on the splicing of the ITGB3 gene. (A) Sequencing analysis of exon 13 and its flanking region from a control and from the proband, showing the nucleotide substitution G>C in the first position of intron 13 (lower case); (B) Reverse transcriptase-PCR of RNA extracted from peripheral blood of three controls (ctrl) and of patient IV-12 (proband) (Online Supplementary Figure S1): the proband presents an additional fragment of 486 bp corresponding to an in frame deletion of 120 bp of exon 13, as detected by sequence analysis; M, marker 100 bp (Biolabs); (C) Schematic representation of the alternative splicing of the ITGB3 gene due to the c.2134+1G>C mutation leading to a deletion of 40 amino acids (p.D647_E686del).
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Moreover, the expression level of normal β3 mRNA was quantified by real-time PCR using primers overlapping the deleted region: expression of the normal allele was reduced by approximately 50% in the proband (Online Supplementary Figure S2).
The mutated β3 was expressed in the probands platelets. Western blotting of control platelet lysate (Figure 6) showed a 90 kDa band, consistent with wild type β3, while platelet lysate from the proband showed normal β3 and a low molecular weight band product of mutated β3, of an expected molecular weight of approximately 85 kDa (Figure 6).
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Figure 6. Western blot of integrin β3. Control platelet lysate (lane 1) showed a band at the same level of the band of extract of chinese hamster ovary cells expressing normal IIbβ3 (lane 2). The probands platelet lysate showed two distinct bands (lane 3): a band corresponding to normal integrin β3 (~90 kDa) and a lower band of the molecular weight expected for the mutated protein (~85 kDa).
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IIbβ3 lower than 50% of control:24 in one of them we found the same mutation. This was a 34-year old woman from southern Italy, with moderate/severe bleeding since birth, electronic platelet counts of 48–93x109/L (by optical microscopy: 52–95x109/L), mean platelet volume 14.5fL, and 78% of normal-sized, 21% large and 1% giant platelets on blood smears.8 This patients 9-year old daughter had similar clinical and laboratory features. Platelet membrane glycoproteins and platelet aggregation showed the same alterations as the proband of the first family. Although no consanguinity was reported, microsatellites within the candidate region revealed that the affected members from the two families shared the same haplotype (Figure 7), indicating that the mutation occurred as a single event on an ancestral chromosome and that other cases with the same mutation are likely to be found in the Italian population.
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Figure 7. Haplotype construction using different microsatellites in two families carrying the c.2134+1G>C mutation (m) of the ITGB3 gene. (A) Branch of the pedigree used for linkage analysis; alleles of microsatellites indicated in bold are the same as those reported in Online Supplementary Figure S1. (B) Mother and daughter of the second family; alleles in italics are not informative. The largest haplotype potentially shared by affected individuals is boxed. Asterisks indicate microsatellites of the ABI PRISM Linkage Mapping set 2.5 (see Materials and Methods). nd, allele not determined.
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The p.D647_E686del mutation we found produces the loss of 40 amino acids of a region of integrin β3 located in the carboxyterminal tail of the ectodomain called βTD.27 Little is known about the function of this domain. Although random mutagenesis of βTD has produced mainly gain-of-function mutants, with a permanently activated
IIbβ3,28 the loss of amino acids 657–692, which partially overlaps the deletion in our families, was shown to prevent intracellular
IIbβ3 complex formation.29 We have shown the concomitant presence of both the normal and a mutated β3 protein in platelet lysates of the proband; thus, a loss-of-function hypothesis, with a dominant negative effect resulting from the p.D647_E686del mutation, can be made. The β3 mutation in our family leads to impaired
IIbβ3-mediated outside-in signaling. The patients platelets adhere to fibrinogen but fail to spread on it and tyrosine phosphorylation is impaired too, suggesting that the signal transduction pathways activated by the
IIbβ3 ligation and clustering are altered in our patient.30
In addition to platelet dysfunction our patient also had macrothrombocytopenia. It has been reported that the interaction of fibrinogen with
IIbβ3 is capable of stimulating proplatelet development in megakaryocytes and that the integrin is necessary for proplatelet formation.6
Recently, an ITGB3 mutation associated with autosomal dominant macrothrombocytopenia was described, and the β3 dysfunction was shown to cause defective megakaryopoiesis,5 in accordance with a role of
IIbβ3 in platelet formation and release.6 Differently from our cases, however, this mutation resulted in a significant constitutive, partial activation of
IIbβ3 and was not associated with bleeding. Moreover, unlike GT patients, our families manifest additional features, such as macrothrombocytopenia, defective response to arachidonic acid but a normal clot retraction. It has previously been reported that some variant
IIbβ3 molecules retain clot retraction capacity, even if aggregation is prevented.31
We cannot exclude that the platelet defects in our families are associated with an unidentified mutant allele in linkage disequilibrium with c.2134+1G>C; however, all candidate genes of known autosomal dominant thrombocytopenias were normal in our families (data not shown), and it is unlikely that two independent mutational events causing the same disease occurred in two different families and in the same relatively small region.
In conclusion, we have reported here a novel autosomal dominant macrothrombocytopenia with platelet dysfunction associated with a previously undescribed ITGB3 mutation. Although the full comprehension of the pathogenic mechanisms caused by p.D647_E686del requires further investigations, this novel hereditary thrombocytopenia raises interesting questions about the β3 domains involved in thrombocytopoiesis and outside-in signaling.
PG contributed patients to the study, designed and supervised the research and wrote the paper; EF, SG, TC, AMM, and GG collected patients material, carried out experimental studies and analyzed data; LC performed RT-PCR and real-time PCR of platelet mRNA; CLB contributed patients to the study; PN carried out experimental studies; FDB, AS, PDA and ADE performed sequencing and molecular analysis and analyzed data; CLB and AS revised the final manuscript.
The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
The online version of this article contains a supplementary appendix.
Funding: this work was supported in part by grants to PG from the Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Perugia (Project n. 2007.0130.020) and to CLB and AS from the Italian Ministry of Health (Italy-USA Program –"Rare Diseases").
Received for publication October 31, 2008. Revision received December 3, 2008. Accepted for publication December 19, 2008.
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S. Momi, E. Falcinelli, S. Giannini, L. Ruggeri, L. Cecchetti, T. Corazzi, C. Libert, and P. Gresele Loss of matrix metalloproteinase 2 in platelets reduces arterial thrombosis in vivo J. Exp. Med., October 26, 2009; 206(11): 2365 - 2379. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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