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Common anti-platelet therapies modulate procoagulant phospholipids in arterial disease

Protty, M.B., Tyrrell, V.J., Hajeyah, A.A., Li, Y., Choudhury, A., Mitra, R., Bosanquet, D. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2304-0489, Poole, A.W., Yousef, Z., Collins, P.W. and O’Donnell, V.B. 2023. Common anti-platelet therapies modulate procoagulant phospholipids in arterial disease. [Online]. medRxiv: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.03.22280948

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Abstract

Enzymatically oxygenated phospholipids (eoxPL) formed by lipoxygenases (LOX) and cyclooxygenase (COX) in platelets and leukocytes are pro-coagulant in multiple model systems. However, their generation in arterial thrombotic disease, and how their levels are modulated by common therapies is unknown. Here, eoxPL were first characterized in isolated platelets and leukocytes from an arterial vascular disease cohort, a healthy cohort administered low dose aspirin, and from retrieved human arterial thrombi. In both cohorts, aspirin reduced platelet COX-1-derived eoxPL, while elevating diacyl 12-LOX-derived eoxPL in males, through enhanced Lands’ cycle esterification. Conversely, P2Y12 inhibition reduced 12-LOX-derived eoxPL in leukocytes. Complex aspirin-dependent gender and seasonal effects on platelet eoxPL were seen in healthy subjects. Limb or coronary (STEMI) thrombi showed a platelet eoxPL signature while carotid thrombi had a white cell profile. Mice genetically lacking leukocyte 12/15-LOX, which are deficient in eoxPL, generated smaller carotid thrombi in vivo. In summary, pro-coagulant eoxPL generation is altered in human arterial vascular disease by commonly used cardiovascular therapies. These changes to the phospholipid composition of blood cells in humans at risk of thrombotic events may be clinically significant where the pro-coagulant membrane plays a central but poorly understood role in driving elevated thrombotic risk.

Item Type: Website Content
Date Type: Published Online
Status: Submitted
Schools: Medicine
Publisher: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Last Modified: 30 Jul 2024 09:30
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/169956

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