Platelet surface receptor glycoprotein VI-dimer is overexpressed in stroke: The Glycoprotein VI in Stroke (GYPSIE) study results.
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Authors
McKinney, Harriet
Kempster, Carly
Thomas, Patrick
Batista, Joana
Malcor, Jean-Daniel
Bonna, Arkadiusz
McGee, Joanne
Bumanlag-Amis, Elaine
Rehnstrom, Karola
Ashford, Sophie
Soejima, Kenji
Ouwehand, Willem
Downes, Kate
Warburton, Elizabeth
Moroi, Masaaki
Jung, Stephanie
Publication Date
2022Journal Title
PLoS One
ISSN
1932-6203
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Induruwa, I., McKinney, H., Kempster, C., Thomas, P., Batista, J., Malcor, J., Bonna, A., et al. (2022). Platelet surface receptor glycoprotein VI-dimer is overexpressed in stroke: The Glycoprotein VI in Stroke (GYPSIE) study results.. PLoS One https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262695
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Platelet activation underpins thrombus formation in ischemic stroke. The active, dimeric form of platelet receptor glycoprotein (GP) VI plays key roles by binding platelet ligands collagen and fibrin, leading to platelet activation. We investigated whether patients presenting with stroke expressed more GPVI on their platelet surface and had more active circulating platelets as measured by platelet P-selectin exposure. METHODS: 129 ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke patients were recruited within 8h of symptom onset. Whole blood was analyzed for platelet-surface expression of total GPVI, GPVI-dimer, and P-selectin by flow cytometry at admission and day-90 post-stroke. Results were compared against a healthy control population (n = 301). RESULTS: The platelets of stroke patients expressed significantly higher total GPVI and GPVI-dimer (P<0.0001) as well as demonstrating higher resting P-selectin exposure (P<0.0001), a measure of platelet activity, compared to the control group, suggesting increased circulating platelet activation. GPVI-dimer expression was strongly correlated circulating platelet activation [r2 = 0.88, P<0.0001] in stroke patients. Furthermore, higher platelet surface GPVI expression was associated with increased stroke severity at admission. At day-90 post-stroke, GPVI-dimer expression and was further raised compared to the level at admission (P<0.0001) despite anti-thrombotic therapy. All ischemic stroke subtypes and hemorrhagic strokes expressed significantly higher GPVI-dimer compared to controls (P<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Stroke patients express more GPVI-dimer on their platelet surface at presentation, lasting at least until day-90 post-stroke. Small molecule GPVI-dimer inhibitors are currently in development and the results of this study validate that GPVI-dimer as an anti-thrombotic target in ischemic stroke.
Sponsorship
British Heart Foundation, SP/13/7/30575, Dr Stephanie M Jung
British Heart Foundation, RE/13/6/30180, Dr Isuru Induruwa
NIHR CL to Dr Isuru Induruwa
Funder references
British Heart Foundation (None)
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) (146281)
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) (Unknown)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262695
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/332460
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