| Literature DB >> 34083615 |
Benjamin Xiaoyi Li1,2, Xiangrong Dai3,4, Xiaohong Ruby Xu5,6,7, Reheman Adili5,6, Miguel Antonio Dias Neves5,6,7,8, Xi Lei5,6, Chuanbin Shen5,6,7, Guangheng Zhu5,6, Yiming Wang5,6,7,8, Hui Zhou5,6, Yan Hou5,6, Tiffany Ni5,6,7, Yfke Pasman5,6,7,8, Zhongqiang Yang4, Fang Qian4, Yanan Zhao9, Yongxiang Gao10, Jing Liu10, Maikun Teng10, Alexandra H Marshall5,6, Eric G Cerenzia5,6,11, Mandy Lokyee Li3, Heyu Ni12,13,14,15,16,17,18.
Abstract
The interaction of platelet GPIbα with von Willebrand factor (VWF) is essential to initiate platelet adhesion and thrombosis, particularly under high shear stress conditions. However, no drug targeting GPIbα has been developed for clinical practice. Here we characterized anfibatide, a GPIbα antagonist purified from snake (Deinagkistrodon acutus) venom, and evaluated its interaction with GPIbα by surface plasmon resonance and in silico modeling. We demonstrated that anfibatide interferds with both VWF and thrombin binding, inhibited ristocetin/botrocetin- and low-dose thrombin-induced human platelet aggregation, and decreased thrombus volume and stability in blood flowing over collagen. In a single-center, randomized, and open-label phase I clinical trial, anfibatide was administered intravenously to 94 healthy volunteers either as a single dose bolus, or a bolus followed by a constant rate infusion of anfibatide for 24 h. Anfibatide inhibited VWF-mediated platelet aggregation without significantly altering bleeding time or coagulation. The inhibitory effects disappeared within 8 h after drug withdrawal. No thrombocytopenia or anti-anfibatide antibodies were detected, and no serious adverse events or allergic reactions were observed during the studies. Therefore, anfibatide was well-tolerated among healthy subjects. Interestingly, anfibatide exhibited pharmacologic effects in vivo at concentrations thousand-fold lower than in vitro, a phenomenon which deserves further investigation.Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01588132.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34083615 PMCID: PMC8175443 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-91165-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Purification and structure of anfibatide with GPIbα. (A) MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry showed a mass to charge ratio (m/z) of 29,799.7. Three-dimensional models of (B) structure of anfibatide (purple) integrated with GPIb (orange) and (C) VWF-A1 domain (green) and GPIbα complex from PDB entry 1SQ0[45] (https://www.rcsb.org/structure/1SQ0). (D) α-Thrombin (blue) and GPIbα complex from PDB entry 1OOK[44] (https://www.rcsb.org/structure/1OOK). Red arrows point to the sulfotyrosine region of GPIbα, the α-thrombin binding site. Protein-complex figures generated using Schrodinger PyMol 2 software (https://pymol.org/2/).
Figure 2Anfibatide binding to GPIbα prevented VWF and thrombin binding as well as platelet aggregation induced by ristocetin/VWF and low-dose thrombin, but had no effect on blood clotting. (A) SPR analysis of anfibatide binding to disulfide-linked dimeric GPIbαN-Long (a chimera of human GPIbα residues − 2 to 288 with 133 residues of SV40 large T antigen) either with wild-type (WT) GPIbα sequence or with Tyr to Phe substitution of residues 276, 278 and 279 (3Y/F). GPIbαN-Long was captured onto the SPR chip by an immobilized anti-SV40-T mAb, followed by anfibatide at increasing concentrations. Data are presented as the ratio of anfibatide/GPIbαN-Long mass bound to the SPR chip during the equilibrium phase (prior to dissociation) and are fit to a one-site ligand binding model. Mass ratio ± SD, N = 3, Black: GPIbαN-Long WT; Orange: GPIbαN-Long 3Y/F. (B) Inhibition of α-thrombin (BP-αFIIa), VWF A1 domain or mAb LJ-Ib10 binding to GPIbα on human washed platelets by increasing anfibatide concentrations. Data are presented as % binding, relative to the binding of the ligand at a concentration equal to the KD of the ligand in the absence of anfibatide. The data was fit to the Cheng–Prusoff transformation[79]. Ligand binding % ± SD, N = 3, Black: BP-αFIIa; Orange: LJ-Ib10; Green: rVWF. (C) Platelet aggregation was induced by ristocetin (1.2 mg/mL) (P < 0.001), ADP (20 μM) (P > 0.05), TRAP (500 μM) (P > 0.05), or collagen (10 µg/mL) (P > 0.05) in anfibatide-treated (6 µg/mL) PRP or by thrombin (0.1–1 U/mL) in gel-filtered platelets. Curves are from representative light transmission aggregometry plots. (D) Clot formation was measured by thromboelastography in anfibatide-treated whole blood. Anfibatide (6 µg/mL) did not significantly alter the time to initial clot formation (R time, min ± SEM) or maximum clot strength (MA ± SEM). NS, no significant difference. Red: anfibatide-treated plasma. Black: untreated plasma (N = 6).
Figure 3Anfibatide inhibited platelet adhesion, aggregation and thrombus formation and dissolved preformed thrombi under flow conditions. Platelets in heparin-anticoagulated whole blood from healthy volunteers were fluorescently labeled with DiOC6 before perfusion over collagen at the wall shear rate of 1500 s−1 (A) or 300 s−1 (B) with or without anfibatide (6 µg/mL). (C) Control blood was first perfused at 1500 s−1 for 4 min to form thrombi; then, perfusion was continued with control or anfibatide-treated (6 µg/mL) blood. Representative images of fluorescent platelets (Left) are shown along with plots of the platelet mean (± SEM) fluorescence intensity as a function of time (Right; N = 12). P < 0.01 between control and treatment groups in all three figures. Two-tailed Student’s t-test was used to test for significant differences between 2 groups.
Figure 4Study design. All randomly-assigned participants were included in the primary outcome analysis. Dose units are μg per 60 kg body weight. N: number of volunteers per group.
Figure 5Plasma concentration–time curves of anfibatide in healthy volunteers after single intravenous bolus injection at dose levels of 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4 and 5 µg/60 kg, respectively (Time = 0–8 h, A; Time = 0–48 h, B). Mean ± SEM.
Figure 6Anfibatide inhibited ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation. Human platelet aggregation induced by ristocetin was studied by platelet aggregometry in single (A, N = 8–9/each) and multiple dose groups (B, N = 6–12/each). The mean inhibitory rate of anfibatide on platelet aggregation over time has been shown. CRI, constant rate infusion; Mean ± SEM.
Anfibatide pharmacodynamic effects in healthy volunteers.
| Groups | Number/group | Emax (%) | Tmax (h) | Tmin (h) | AUEC (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (µg/60 kg) | 10 | 79.5 ± 14.2 | 0.201 ± 0.171 | 4.4 ± 1.4 | 149.4 ± 82.9 |
| 1.5 (µg/60 kg) | 10 | 80.7 ± 16.9 | 0.176 ± 0.289 | 4.6 ± 0.8 | 183.4 ± 66.2 |
| 2 (µg/60 kg) | 10 | 89.9 ± 11.9 | 0.085 ± 0.000 | 5.9 ± 0.3 | 231.5 ± 72.5 |
| 3 (µg/60 kg) | 9 | 92.3 ± 9.1 | 0.131 ± 0.138 | 7.1 ± 1.1 | 299.8 ± 70.9 |
| 4 (µg/60 kg) | 10 | 97.8 ± 1.9 | 0.210 ± 0.200 | 8.0 ± 0.0 | 338.9 ± 95.6 |
| 5 (µg/60 kg) | 10 | 96.7 ± 2.4 | 0.210 ± 0.200 | 8.0 ± 0.0 | 324.0 ± 90.8 |
| 3 µg/60 kg + CRI at 1.5 h | 6 | 81.3 ± 18.4 | 1.72 ± 2.99 | 27.5 ± 0.0 | 1248.7 ± 236.9 |
| 3 µg/60 kg + CRI | 12 | 82.2 ± 7.1 | 8.03 ± 8.58 | 28 ± 0.0 | 1694.4 ± 214.7 |
| 5 µg/60 kg + CRI | 12 | 94.9 ± 6.7 | 6.69 ± 8.88 | 28 ± 0.0 | 2190.1 ± 303.3 |
CRI, constant rate infusion; Emax, maximal effect on inhibition of ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation; Tmax, time to Emax; Tmin, time of minimal inhibitory effect on platelet aggregation; AUEC, area under the effect curve.
Anfibatide did not significantly change platelet count.
| Group no | Dose (µg/60 kg) | Platelet count (× 109/L) (mean ± SD) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Before administration of anfibatide | 24 h after administration of anfibatide | ||
| 1 | 0.33 | 201.50 ± 12.02 | 207.50 ± 3.54 |
| 2 | 0.66 | 226.00 ± 79.20 | 238.00 ± 94.75 |
| 3 | 1.0 | 280.80 ± 79.29 | 269.40 ± 68.05 |
| 4 | 1.5 | 220.20 ± 69.59 | 218.90 ± 69.01 |
| 5 | 2.0 | 240.10 ± 49.59 | 256.00 ± 48.05 |
| 6 | 3.0 | 223.00 ± 59.57 | 224.22 ± 48.62 |
| 7 | 4.0 | 218.30 ± 47.73 | 229.30 ± 40.82 |
| 8 | 5.0 | 219.90 ± 41.92 | 216.30 ± 41.49 |
| 9 | 3 + CRI at 1.5 h | 238.33 ± 58.91 | 253.00 ± 45.16 |
| 10 | 3 + CRI | 232.83 ± 49.12 | 243.08 ± 47.31 |
| 11 | 5 + CRI | 195.33 ± 40.76 | 213.75 ± 59.31 |
Platelet counts of each individual were measured before and 24 h after administration of anfibatide in single (Group 1–8, N = 8–9) and multiple dose groups (Group 9–11, N = 6–12).
CRI, constant rate infusion; Mean ± SD.
Figure 7Anfibatide had no significant effect on coagulation measured by prothrombin time (A), thrombin time (B), activated thromboplastin time (C), and international normalized ratio (D). anfibatide did not significantly change circulating d-dimers (E), representing fibrinolysis. (CRI indicates constant rate infusion). Mean ± SD.
Figure 8Anfibatide did not significantly prolong bleeding time. Bleeding time was monitored in both single (A, N = 8–9/each) and multiple dose groups (B, N = 6–12/each), and each bleeding time measured was determined to the nearest 30 s. Majority of the subjects in the single dose groups (except 5 subjects) had a lower bound close to 4 min, while those in the multiple dose groups had a lower bound ranging from 2 to 4 min. None of the subjects in the single and multiple dose groups had a bleeding time of more than 9 min. Bleeding time of all subjects was within the normal range of 2 to 9 min. CRI: constant rate infusion.