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Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 2007;27:E9-E15
Published online before print December 14, 2006, doi: 10.1161/01.ATV.0000255307.65939.59
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(Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 2007;27:E9.)
© 2007 American Heart Association, Inc.


Thrombosis

A Mechanistic Model for Paradoxical Platelet Activation by Ligand-Mimetic {alpha}IIbß3 (GPIIb/IIIa) Antagonists

Nicole Bassler; Christoph Loeffler; Pierre Mangin; Yuping Yuan; Meike Schwarz; Christoph E. Hagemeyer; Steffen U. Eisenhardt; Ingo Ahrens; Christoph Bode; Shaun P. Jackson; Karlheinz Peter

From the Centre for Thrombosis & Myocardial Infarction (N.B., C.E.H., S.U.E., K.P.), Baker Heart Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia; the Department of Cardiology (C.L., M.S., I.A., C.B.), Albert-Ludwigs-University, Freiburg, Germany; and the Australian Centre for Blood Diseases (P.M., Y.Y., S.P.J.), Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.

Correspondence to Karlheinz Peter, MD, Baker Heart Research Institute, PO Box 6492 St Kilda Road Central, Melbourne, Victoria 8008, Australia. E-mail karlheinz.peter{at}baker.edu.au

Objective— Integrins are attractive therapeutic targets. Inhibition of integrin {alpha}IIbß3 effectively blocks platelet aggregation. However, limitations with intravenous {alpha}IIbß3 antagonists and failure of oral {alpha}IIbß3 antagonists prompted doubts on the current concept of ligand-mimetic integrin blockade.

Methods and Results— Evaluating P-selectin expression on platelets by flow cytometry, we report a mechanism of paradoxical platelet activation by ligand-mimetic {alpha}IIbß3 antagonists and define three requirements: (1) Induction of ligand-bound conformation of {alpha}IIbß3, (2) receptor clustering, (3) prestimulation of platelets. Conformational change is inducible by clinically used ligand-mimetic {alpha}IIbß3 antagonists, RGD-peptides, and anti-LIBS antibodies. In a mechanistic experimental model, clustering is achieved by crosslinking integrins via antibodies, and preactivation is induced by low-dose ADP. Finally, we demonstrate that platelet adhesion on collagen represents an in vivo correlate of platelet prestimulation and receptor clustering, in which the presence of ligand-mimetic {alpha}IIbß3 antagonists results in platelet activation as detected by P-selectin, CD63, and CD40L expression as well as by measuring Ca2+-signaling. Blockade of the ADP receptor P2Y12 by AR-C69931MX and clopidogrel inhibits {alpha}IIbß3 antagonist-induced platelet activation.

Conclusion— These findings can explain limitations of ligand-mimetic anti-{alpha}IIbß3 therapy. They describe potential benefits of concomitant ADP receptor blockade and support a shift in drug development from ligand-mimetic toward allosteric or activation-specific integrin antagonists.

Limitations with intravenous and failure of oral {alpha}IIbß3 antagonists question the current concept of ligand-mimetic {alpha}IIbß3 blockade. We provide a model explaining paradoxical platelet activation as consequence of {alpha}IIbß3 antagonist-induced conformational change of {alpha}IIbß3. Concomitant blockade of the ADP-receptor P2Y12, activation-specific and allosteric blockade are described/discussed as alternative {alpha}IIbß3-blocking strategies.


Key Words: {alpha}IIbß3 • GPIIb/IIIa • {alpha}IIbß3 • antagonists • integrin • antiplatelet therapy