Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2021)

The Importance of Platelet Glycoside Residues in the Haemostasis of Patients with Immune Thrombocytopaenia

  • Andrés Ramírez-López,
  • María Teresa Álvarez Román,
  • Elena Monzón Manzano,
  • Paula Acuña,
  • Elena G. Arias-Salgado,
  • Mónica Martín Salces,
  • María Isabel Rivas Pollmar,
  • Víctor Jiménez Yuste,
  • Raul Justo Sanz,
  • Sara García Barcenilla,
  • Tamara Cebanu,
  • Elena González Zorrilla,
  • Nora V. Butta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10081661
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 1661

Abstract

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Loss of sialic acid from the carbohydrate side chains of platelet glycoproteins can affect platelet clearance, a proposed mechanism involved in the etiopathogenesis of immune thrombocytopaenia (ITP). We aimed to assess whether changes in platelet glycosylation in patients with ITP affected platelet counts, function, and apoptosis. This observational, prospective, and transversal study included 82 patients with chronic primary ITP and 115 healthy controls. We measured platelet activation markers and assayed platelet glycosylation and caspase activity, analysing samples using flow cytometry. Platelets from patients with ITP with a platelet count 3/µL presented less sialic acid. Levels of α1,6-fucose (a glycan residue that can directly regulate antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity) and α-mannose (which can be recognised by mannose-binding-lectin and activate the complement pathway) were increased in the platelets from these patients. Platelet surface exposure of other glycoside residues due to sialic acid loss inversely correlated with platelet count and the ability to be activated. Moreover, loss of sialic acid induced the ingestion of platelets by human hepatome HepG2 cells. Changes in glycoside composition of glycoproteins on the platelets’ surface impaired their functional capacity and increased their apoptosis. These changes in platelet glycoside residues appeared to be related to ITP severity.

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