Original Article |
Department of Biomedical Sciences and Human Oncology, Section of General and Experimental Pathology, University of Bari, Bari, Italy
Correspondence: Mario Colucci, Department of Biomedical Sciences and Human Oncology, Section of General and Experimental Pathology Policlinico, Piazza G. Cesare 11 70124 Bari, Italy. E-mail:mario.colucci{at}dimo.uniba.it
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Design and Methods: Tissue factor expression by human blood mononuclear cells (MNC) and monocytes was induced by LPS stimulation. Fibrinolysis was spectrophotometrically evaluated by measuring the lysis time of plasma clots containing LPS-stimulated or control cells and a low concentration of exogenous tissue plasminogen activator.
Results: LPS-stimulated MNC (LPS-MNC) prolonged fibrinolysis time as compared to unstimulated MNC (C-MNC) in contact-inhibited but not in normal citrated plasma. A significantly prolonged lysis time was observed using as few as 30 activated cells/µL. Fibrinolysis was also impaired when clots were generated on adherent LPS-stimulated monocytes. The antifibrinolytic effect of LPS-MNC or LPS-monocytes was abolished by an anti-tissue factor antibody, by an antibody preventing thrombin-mediated thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor activation, and by a TAFIa inhibitor (PTCI). Assays of thrombin and TAFIa in contact-inhibited plasma confirmed the greater generation of these enzymes in the presence of LPS-MNC. Finally, the profibrinolytic effect of unfractionated heparin and enoxaparin was markedly lower (~50%) in the presence of LPS-MNC than in the presence of a thromboplastin preparation displaying an identical tissue factor activity.
Conclusions: Our data indicate that LPS-stimulated monocytes inhibit fibrinolysis through a tissue factor-mediated enhancement of thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor activation and make clots resistant to the profibrinolytic activity of heparins, thus providing an additional mechanism whereby tissue factor-expressing monocytes/macrophages may favor fibrin accumulation and diminish the antithrombotic efficacy of heparins.
Key words: monocytes, tissue factor, carboxypeptidase, clot lysis, heparin resistance.
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Monocytes/macrophages play a central role in fibrin deposition associated with numerous pathological conditions, including atherothrombosis and immune-inflammatory processes, mainly through the synthesis and surface expression of TF in response to a variety of agents and conditions that have a pathophysiological relevance.15–17 The influence of activated, TF-expressing monocytes/macrophages on TAFI-mediated inhibition of fibrinolysis has not been previously studied. In theory, considering that these cells are able to promote thrombin formation, they might be expected to be able to inhibit fibrinolysis by enhancing TAFI activation. However, this assumption is challenged by the results obtained with purified TF, showing that variations in TF concentrations, even over a very broad range, are not accompanied by changes in fibrinolysis time.8,14 In this scenario, it is difficult to foresee whether and to what extent cell-associated TF will be able to inhibit fibrinolysis. Our study was undertaken to evaluate and characterize the effect of TF-expressing monocytes on plasma fibrinolysis. We found that LPS-stimulated monocytes, at variance with unstimulated monocytes, inhibit fibrinolysis through a TF- and TAFI-mediated mechanism, on condition that activation of the contact phase of coagulation is prevented. We also show that: (i) the concentration of TF-expressing monocytes needed to inhibit clot lysis is low and comparable to the concentration in blood under various pathological conditions; (ii) fibrinolysis is also markedly inhibited when clots are generated on the surface of adherent activated monocytes, a condition resembling fibrin deposition onto macrophages adhering to extracellular matrix; (iii) clots containing TF-expressing monocytes are resistant to the profibrinolytic activity of unfractionated and low molecular weight heparins.
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Blood collection
Informed consent to the use of their blood samples for the purposes of the present study was obtained from the recruited blood donors. Blood was collected from healthy, fasting human volunteers taking no drugs by venipuncture into 3.8% trisodium citrate (9 vol of blood + 1 vol of citrate), or into citrate plus CTI (final concentration in whole blood, 40 µg/mL). Because platelets are known to interfere with fibrinolysis,1 plasma with minimal platelet contamination (<103/µL) was obtained by centrifuging blood at 1,000 g for 15 min and then by centrifuging the resulting supernatant for 10 min at 12,000 g. Plasma samples were stored at –80°C until assay. Factor XII-deficient plasma was obtained from a congenitally factor XII-deficient woman, aged 43, with no personal or family history of bleeding. Her factor XII plasma level was < 1%, as assessed by clotting assay. All other clotting factors, as well as plasminogen,
2-plasmin inhibitor and TAFI, were within normal ranges (70–140%). The fibrinogen concentration was 210 mg/dL.
Mononuclear cell preparation and stimulation
For this study, cell preparations from 33 different donors were used. Mononuclear cells (MNC) were prepared from freshly collected blood by the density gradient centrifugation technique using Lympholyte-H, as previously described,19 and finally suspended in serum-free RPMI-1640 at the concentration of 3 x 106/mL. MNC activation was induced by incubation with 1 µg/mL LPS for 2 h at 37°C. In some instances, at the end of incubation, the cells were centrifuged for 10 min at 500 g, after which the conditioned medium was harvested by aspiration while the cell pellet was washed 3 times and finally suspended in fresh RPMI at the same initial concentration of 3 x 106/mL. TF activity of cell preparations was determined by a one stage clotting assay and expressed as arbitrary units as previously described.19
Adherent monocytes were prepared by seeding 300 µL of the MNC suspension in the wells of a tissue culture-treated 96-well microplate (NunclonTM Delta Surface, Nunc, Kamstrupvej, Denmark) and incubating for 3 h at 37°C in a 5% CO2 atmosphere, in the presence or absence of 1 µg/mL LPS. At the end of the incubation, non-adherent cells were removed by several washings with RPMI. The number of adherent cells per well was 1.2±0.16 x 105, as determined by the crystal violet colorimetric method.20
Clot lysis assay
The lysis of TF-induced plasma clots exposed to exogenous t-PA was studied using a turbidimetric assay8 modified as follows: 50 µL MNC suspension or Recombiplastin, 50 µL citrated plasma containing exogenous t-PA (75 ng/mL) and 50 µL CaCl2 (20 mM) were added to microplate wells. Final concentrations of MNC, t-PA and CaCl2 were 106/mL, 25 ng/mL and 6.6 mM, respectively. When adherent monocytes were present at the bottom of the wells, the same mixture (with RPMI in place of the MNC suspension) was gently layered onto them. The plate was incubated at 37°C and the changes in optical density (OD) at 405 nm were measured every minute up to 3 h in a microplate reader (Multiskan Ascent, American Instrument Exchange, Haverhill, MA, USA). Clotting time was defined as the time to reach the midpoint of clear-to-maximum turbid transition, whereas clot lysis time was the time from the midpoint of clear-to-maximum turbid transition to the midpoint of the maximum turbid-to-clear transition.
The role of cell TF in regulating fibrinolysis was investigated by treating the cells with a neutralizing mono-clonal anti-TF antibody (10 µg/mL), for 10 min at 37°C, just before assay. To evaluate the contribution of thrombin to the activation of TAFI, the plasma used for clot lysis assay was preincubated for 10 min with the anti-TAFI monoclonal antibody MA-T12D11 (120 µg/mL), which inhibits TAFI activation by the thrombin-thrombomodulin complex but not by plasmin.18 The role of TAFIa, activated either by thrombin or by other enzymes, was assessed by adding the specific TAFIa inhibitor, PTCI (25 µg/mL), to the clot lysis assay mixture. The effect of unfractionated heparin (UFH) and enoxaparin on clot lysis was evaluated by adding the test drug or its vehicle to the plasma prior to the assay. In these experiments, the influence of activated MNC on the profibrinolytic response to heparins was compared to that of control MNC and soluble TF (Recombiplastin). The latter was diluted in such a way as to display the same TF activity as the LPS-MNC preparation tested in parallel (i.e. the same clotting time in the one-stage clotting assay).19 The profibrinolytic activity of heparins was expressed as the lysis ratio, i.e. the ratio between the lysis time in the presence of the drug vehicle and the lysis time in the presence of the test drug. In this way, the higher the lysis ratio, the greater the profibrinolytic activity of heparin.
Assay of thrombin and TAFIa generation
The profile of thrombin and TAFIa generation was determined under similar conditions to those used for clot lysis. A 5 ml plastic tube containing the clot lysis mixture (1 mL) was incubated at 37°C in a waterbath and the forming clot was squeezed to allow subsampling. For the thrombin assay, aliquots of 100 µL were taken at predetermined intervals from the reaction mixture and transferred to a prewarmed tube containing 50 µL of bovine fibrinogen (6 mg/mL) dissolved in citrate-Tris buffer (0.38% sodium citrate). The clotting time was determined by the manual (tilt tube) technique and thrombin activity was calculated by reference to a calibration curve constructed with purified human thrombin. For the TAFIa assay, aliquots of 30 µL were withdrawn from the reaction mixture, transferred to a refrigerated tube preloaded with 30 µL assay buffer (see below) containing hirudin (60 U/mL, Knoll, Ludwigshafen, Germany) and trisodium citrate (1.82%) in order to stop both thrombin formation and activity, and kept on melting ice until the assay. TAFIa concentration was determined by a specific ELISA (Asserachrom TAFIa/ai, Diagnostica Stago, Asnières, France) which uses as capture antibody a monoclonal antibody that binds specifically to TAFIa and to its inactive derivative (TAFIai), which is spontaneously generated by a conformational change.2 The assay was carried out according to the manufacturers instructions, with the only exception that the sample was diluted 1000-fold in the assay buffer provided by the manufacturer instead of 100-fold. Results were expressed as percentage of total TAFI by reference to a calibration curve constructed with serial dilutions of plasma pretreated for 5 min at 37° C with thrombin (5 U/mL) plus thrombomodulin (1 µM) in order to convert all TAFI to TAFIa.7 Under our experimental conditions the concentration of TAFIa/ai detected in the starting samples (time zero) was negligible (<0.5%).
Statistical analysis
Data are presented as mean±SD. Differences were tested by paired Students t test or by ANOVA for repeated measures as appropriate.
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In order to test the effect of LPS-MNC on fibrinolysis we determined the lysis time of MNC-containing clots exposed to a low concentration of exogenous t-PA, using a turbidimetric assay. Figure 1A shows typical OD curves recorded with and without cells. As expected, clotting time was markedly shorter in the presence of LPS-MNC as compared to C-MNC or RPMI. Lysis time, instead, was not affected by cells, regardless of their pro-coagulant activity. Qualitatively similar results were obtained with LPS-MNC concentrations ranging from 0.001 x 106 to 10106/mL (data not shown).
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Figure 1. OD curves showing clot formation and t-PA-induced lysis of plasma clots in the presence of LPS-stimulated MNC (LPS-MNC), control MNC (C-MNC), or culture medium (RPMI). Clots were prepared from citrated normal plasma (A), from factor XII-deficient plasma (B), or from CTI-inhibited plasma (C). A representative experiment of 3–6 experiments with cells from different donors is shown. For the sake of clarity the figure shows only the OD values recorded every other minute.
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All the following experiments were carried out with both factor XII-deficient and CTI-inhibited plasma. However, because the results were similar, only the data on factor XII-deficient plasma are presented.
To evaluate the dose-dependency of the antifibrinolytic activity of activated MNC, we tested cell preparations containing different proportions of C-MNC and LPS-MNC derived from the same donor. Lysis time was significantly prolonged using as little as 3% of activated MNC and reached a maximum already at 12% of LPS-MNC (Figure 2). Clotting time, instead, decreased progressively over the entire range of LPS-MNC concentrations. Similar dose-response curves were obtained when serial dilutions of Recombiplastin were tested instead of cells (data not shown).
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Figure 2. Clotting time and lysis time changes as a function of the percentage of activated MNC. Mixtures of LPS-MNC and C-MNC were prepared in order to obtain the indicated percentage of LPS-MNC. Cell numbers were 3 x 106/mL in all preparations. Clot formation and t-PA-induced fibrinolysis of recalcified factor XII-deficient plasma were evaluated by a turbidimetric assay as reported in Methods. Results are the mean±SD of 3 experiments with cells from different donors. *denotes the lowest percentage of LPS-MNC causing a significant difference (p<0.05) in clotting time or lysis time, as compared to C-MNC.
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Figure 3. Role of TF, thrombin and TAFI in the inhibition of fibrinolysis by LPS-MNC. t-PA-induced lysis of factor XII-deficient plasma clots was measured in the presence of LPS-MNC and C-MNC. The assay was carried out without addition of inhibitors (None), after treatment of cells with an anti-TF monoclonal antibody (Anti-TF), after treatment of plasma with an anti-TAFI monoclonal antibody that selectively inhibits thrombin-mediated TAFI activation (MA-T12D11), or in the presence of the TAFIa inhibitor PTCI. Results represent lysis time and are expressed as the mean±SD of 3 experiments with cells from different donors. *p<0.05 vs. all.
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Figure 4. Inhibition of fibrinolysis by adherent monocytes. Control (C-M) and LPS-stimulated adherent monocytes (LPS-M) were prepared as reported in Methods. Clots were generated onto the surface of adherent cells by adding t-PA-containing recalcified factor XII-deficient plasma and the lysis time was measured by the changes in OD. LPS-M were also tested after treatment of adherent cells with anti-TF monoclonal antibody (LPS + Anti-TF), after treatment of plasma with an anti-TAFI monoclonal antibody that selectively inhibits thrombin-mediated TAFI activation (LPS-M + MA-T12D11), or in the presence of the TAFIa inhibitor PTCI (LPS-M + PTCI). Results are expressed as the mean + SD of 3 experiments with monocytes from different donors. *p<0.05 vs. all.
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Figure 5. Effect of LPS-MNC and C-MNC on thrombin (left panels) and TAFIa generation (right panels) in recalcified plasma. Experiments were performed with factor XII-deficient plasma (upper panels) and with normal plasma collected on citrate (lower panels). The reaction mixture, consisting of cells, recalcified plasma and t-PA (see Methods for details), was incubated at 37°C, and subsamples were taken at the indicated intervals for enzyme assay. Thrombin activity was measured by clotting assay and TAFIa/ai by a specific ELISA. The arrows indicate the clotting time of the reaction mixture. Data are expressed as the mean of 2 separate experiments with cells from different donors.
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Figure 6. Influence of LPS-MNC and TF (Recombiplastin) on the profibrinolytic activity of unfractionated (UFH) and low molecular weight heparin (enoxaparin). Recombiplastin was used at a dilution displaying the same TF activity as the LPS-MNC preparation tested in parallel. Results show the lysis ratio, calculated as the ratio between the lysis time in the absence of heparin and the lysis time in the presence of each heparin concentration. The dotted line represents the mean lysis ratio recorded after complete inactivation of TAFIa by PTCI. Data are expressed as the mean±SD of 3 experiments. *p<0.05 vs. LPS-MNC.
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The antifibrinolytic activity of TF-positive MNC and soluble TF could be unmasked only if the contact phase of coagulation was blocked as in FXII-deficient plasma or in plasma derived from blood collected on CTI, an inhibitor of FXIIa.21 In normal citrated plasma, indeed, LPS-MNC failed to prolong the lysis time, despite their ability to shorten the clotting time in a concentration-dependent manner. This is in line with the observation that the addition of thromboplastin to recalcified plasma, no matter how concentrated, did not prolong the lysis time.14 The most plausible explanation for this result is that the artifactual activation of the intrinsic pathway occurring in vitro produces sufficient amounts of thrombin, and by consequence of TAFIa, to inhibit the fibrinolytic process. As a matter of fact, the addition of LPS-MNC to normal plasma caused only a shift to the left of the thrombin and TAFIa generation curves, without affecting the formation rate and peak concentration of the enzymes. As a consequence, the clotting time was shorter but the lysis time remained unchanged because TAFIa generation, as in the sample containing unstimulated cells, took place shortly after the formation of the fibrin clot. In contact-inhibited plasma, instead, the presence of LPS-MNC resulted in a more rapid and abundant generation of thrombin and TAFIa, which explains the prolongation of the fibrinolysis time. These findings underscore the impact of the experimental conditions on thrombin-dependent inhibition of fibrinolysis. There is a general consensus that contact-inhibited plasma is a better approximation to the in vivo situation, in which activation of the intrinsic coagulation pathway plays a minor role, if any, at least in physiological hemostasis.26
An aberrant in vivo expression of TF by circulating monocytes and tissue macrophages is thought to be an important factor in blood clotting activation and fibrin formation associated with intravascular and extravascular pathological processes, respectively.15–17 In particular, an increase in TF-expressing circulating monocytes has been documented in various conditions, including human low-dose endotoxemia, venous thrombosis accompanying different diseases and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), especially sepsis-associated DIC.27–30 In these conditions, the number of blood TF-positive monocytes, as assessed by flow cytometry, was reported to range between 5-60%, the highest values being present in septic patients with DIC. Therefore, an important question to be addressed is whether fibrinolysis can be inhibited by a concentration of TF-expressing cells comparable to that attainable in vivo. Our experiments with mixtures of unstimulated and stimulated MNC indicate that this is so, for they showed that as little as 3% of LPS-MNC was sufficient to significantly prolong clot lysis time and that approximately 12% of activated cells caused maximal inhibition of fibrinolysis. Considering the final concentration of MNC in our model (106/mL) and an average of 20% of monocytes, the minimum concentration of TF-expressing cells producing an appreciable antifibrinolytic effect was ~ 6/µL, which corresponded to a TF concentration of approximately 5 pM, as calculated by comparison with Recombiplastin.31 As regards tissue macrophages, there is substantial evidence that in vivo, the expression of TF on their surface is directly responsible for blood clotting activation within a ruptured atherosclerotic plaque16 as well as at extravascular sites in a variety of immune-inflammatory diseases.15–17 Under these circumstances, clotting is triggered by macrophages adhering to the extracellular matrix and fibrin builds up on the surface of these cells. The finding that LPS-stimulated monocytes adhering to the bottom of the culture well inhibited the lysis of plasma clots generated onto the cell surface, through a mechanism again involving TF and TAFI, suggests that activated macrophages bound to the extracellular matrix may be able to protect fibrin from plasmin-mediated proteolysis by a TAFI-mediated mechanism.
Another important finding of our study is that LPS-MNC made the clot resistant to the profibrinolytic activity of unfractionated heparin and of a low molecular weight heparin, enoxaparin. These anticoagulants have been shown to stimulate fibrinolysis by virtue of their inhibitory effect on thrombin formation and TAFI activation11 but their profibrinolytic activity may be down-regulated by cells such as platelets.7 We found that both unfractionated heparin and enoxaparin exerted a weaker profibrinolytic activity in the presence of LPS-MNC than in the presence of a Recombiplastin dilution displaying the same TF activity. In this respect, TF-expressing monocytes behave differently from soluble TF, likely because TF localization within the cell membrane and/or other cell-derived factors contribute to induce heparin resistance. In conclusion, our data indicate that TF-expressing monocytes, both in suspension and adherent, inhibit fibrinolysis through a TF-mediated enhancement of TAFI activation. This effect, along with the other known antifibrinolytic mechanisms deriving from the synthesis and release of plasminogen activator inhibitors by activated monocytes/macrophages,22 suggests that these cells may promote pathological fibrin accumulation not only by activating coagulation but also by delaying fibrin removal. In addition, our findings suggest that activated monocytes/macrophages might diminish the efficacy of antithrombotic treatment with unfractionated as well as low molecular weight heparins. Finally, they lend further support to the emerging concept that inhibition of the TAFI pathway might represent an additional approach to the management of thrombotic disease.
MC designed and supervised the study; FS and CTA performed the experiments, analyzed the data and wrote the first draft of the manuscript; MC and NS critically revised the article for important intellectual content; all authors approved the final version of the manuscript.
The authors reported no potential conflicts of interest.
Received for publication September 1, 2008. Revision received December 12, 2008. Accepted for publication January 2, 2009.
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