A synthesis approach of mouse studies to identify genes and proteins in arterial thrombosis and bleeding.
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Authors
Baaten, Constance CFMJ
Meacham, Stuart
de Witt, Susanne M
Feijge, Marion AH
Adams, David J
Akkerman, Jan-Willem N
Cosemans, Judith MEM
Grassi, Luigi
Jupe, Steve
Kostadima, Myrto
Mattheij, Nadine JA
Prins, Martin H
Ramirez-Solis, Ramiro
Soehnlein, Oliver
Swieringa, Frauke
Weber, Christian
White, Jacqueline K
Ouwehand, Willem H
Heemskerk, Johan WM
Publication Date
2018-12-13Journal Title
Blood
ISSN
0006-4971
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Volume
132
Issue
24
Pages
e35-e46
Language
eng
Type
Article
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Baaten, C. C., Meacham, S., de Witt, S. M., Feijge, M. A., Adams, D. J., Akkerman, J. N., Cosemans, J. M., et al. (2018). A synthesis approach of mouse studies to identify genes and proteins in arterial thrombosis and bleeding.. Blood, 132 (24), e35-e46. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2018-02-831982
Abstract
Antithrombotic therapies reduce cardiovascular diseases by preventing arterial thrombosis and thromboembolism, but at expense of increased bleeding risks. Arterial thrombosis studies using genetically modified mice have been invaluable for identification of new molecular targets. Because of low sample sizes and heterogeneity in approaches or methodologies, a formal meta-analysis to compare studies of mice with single-gene defects encountered major limitations. To overcome these, we developed a novel synthesis approach to quantitatively scale 1514 published studies of arterial thrombus formation (in vivo and in vitro), thromboembolism, and tail-bleeding of genetically modified mice. Using a newly defined consistency parameter (CP), indicating the strength of published data, comparisons were made of 431 mouse genes, of which 17 consistently contributed to thrombus formation without affecting hemostasis. Ranking analysis indicated high correlations between collagen-dependent thrombosis models in vivo (FeCl3 injury or ligation/compression) and in vitro. Integration of scores and CP values resulted in a network of protein interactions in thrombosis and hemostasis (PITH), which was combined with databases of genetically linked human bleeding and thrombotic disorders. The network contained 2946 nodes linked to modifying genes of thrombus formation, mostly with expression in megakaryocytes. Reactome pathway analysis and network characteristics revealed multiple novel genes with potential contribution to thrombosis/hemostasis. Studies with additional knockout mice revealed that 4 of 8 (Apoe, Fpr2, Ifnar1, Vps13a) new genes were modifying in thrombus formation. The PITH network further: (i) revealed a high similarity of murine and human hemostatic and thrombotic processes and (ii) identified multiple new candidate proteins regulating these processes.
Keywords
Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Hemorrhage, Humans, Mice, Mice, Knockout, Thrombosis
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2018-02-831982
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/285824
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http://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved
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