Published ahead of print on March 2, 2006, doi:10.1164/rccm.200506-916OC
© 2006 American Thoracic Society doi: 10.1164/rccm.200506-916OC
Fibrin Derived from Patients with Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension Is Resistant to LysisDivision of Pulmonary/Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, and Department of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program, University of California, San Diego, California Correspondence and requests for reprints should be addressed to Timothy A. Morris, M.D., Professor of Medicine, UCSD Medical Center, 200 West Arbor Drive, San Diego, CA 92103-8378. E-mail: t1morris{at}ucsd.edu
Rationale: Although acute pulmonary embolism is epidemiologically associated with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension, the factors responsible for resistance to thrombolysis and a shift toward vascular remodeling within the pulmonary arteries of patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension are unknown. Objective: Determine whether fibrin from patients is more resistant to plasmin-mediated lysis than fibrin from healthy control subjects.
Methods: Fibrinogen purified from patients and control subjects was used to prepare fibrin clots, which were subsequently digested with plasmin for various periods of time. The degradation of the
Measurements and Main Results: Densitometry of Coomassie-stained gels revealed significantly slower cleavage of all three polypeptide chains of fibrin from patients compared with control subjects (p < 0.05). In particular, release of N-terminal fragments from the
Conclusions: The relative resistance of patient fibrin to plasmin-mediated lysis may be due to alterations in fibrin(ogen) structure affecting accessibility to plasmin cleavage sites. The persistence of structural motifs of fibrin, such as the
Key Words: blood coagulation factors fibrinolysis pulmonary embolism thrombosis vascular diseases Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) is a rare outcome of acute pulmonary embolism characterized by the persistence of unresolved thromboemboli. For reasons that are still unclear, the emboli in patients with CTEPH do not resolve completely and instead are remodeled into fibrotic tissue that obstructs and narrows major pulmonary arteries, leading to increased pulmonary vascular resistance and right ventricular dysfunction. Without treatment, the disease is progressive and often fatal. In most instances, the only effective treatment of CTEPH is surgical resection of the chronic thromboembolic lesions (1). No thrombotic risk factor, either inherited or acquired, has been clearly associated with CTEPH (2), although a minority (1020%) are positive for lupus anticoagulant and/or antiphospholipid antibodies. Similarly, no abnormality of the fibrinolytic pathway (3) or of the pulmonary endothelium (4) has been found that accounts for incomplete resolution of emboli and progression to CTEPH. One possible explanation is that the fibrin network of emboli is resistant to plasmin-mediated fibrinolysis in affected individuals.
We performed this study to determine if fibrin polymers themselves from patients with CTEPH were abnormally resistant to lysis. Fibrinogen was purified from patients with CTEPH and healthy control subjects without a prior history of thrombotic events, and fibrin clots were prepared in vitro. The kinetics of plasmin-mediated lysis of the Some of the results of this study have been previously reported in the form of an abstract (5).
Materials Bovine thrombin (Hyphen BioMed, Andrésy, France) and human plasmin (Chromogenix, Milan, Italy) were obtained from Diapharma, Inc. (West Chester, OH). Human glu-plasminogen and a polyclonal rabbit antiserum specific for human glu-plasminogen were purchased from American Diagnostic (Stamford, CT). A murine monoclonal antibody (IgG2a) specific for human 2-antiplasmin was obtained from R&D Systems (Minneapolis, MN). A murine monoclonal antibody (IgG1) raised against a synthetic peptide identical to the first seven residues of the -chain of human fibrin was obtained as previously described (6). Nu-PAGE bis-tris polyacrylamide gels, reagents, and stains, as well as the Western Breeze blotting kit, were obtained from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA). All other chemicals were reagent grade or better.
Study Population
Blood Collection and Processing
Fibrinogen Purification
Formation of Fibrin and Digestion with Plasmin
Electrophoretic Analysis of Plasmin Digests
Determination of Plasminogen and
Fibrinogen Mixing Experiment
Characteristics of the Subjects The characteristics of the 10 consecutive patients with CTEPH (two males, eight females) enrolled in the study are presented in Table 1. Most patients were in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV at the time of evaluation. The patients also exhibited hemodynamic abnormalities characteristic of CTEPH. The diagnosis of CTEPH was confirmed by removal of substantial amounts of thromboembolic material during the thromboendarterectomy procedure. The patients were roughly matched to the healthy control subjects with regard to age and sex. The median age of the patients was 47 yr (range, 2169 yr), and the median age of the control group was 43 yr (range, 2153 yr; t test for age differences between groups, p = 0.08).
Fibrinogen Purity The characteristics of fibrinogen purified from patients with CTEPH and control subjects are presented in Table 2. Preparations from the two groups were similar with respect to purity ( 95%) and clottable protein ( 91%). A Coomassie-stained polyacrylamide gel showing A -, B -, and -chains of a representative fibrinogen sample from each group is shown in Figure 1. Protein bands comigrating with plasminogen or with thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor or other fibrinolytic inhibitors (e.g., 2-antiplasmin, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 [PAI-1]) were not detected in any of the samples on Coomassie-stained gels.
Kinetics of Fibrinolysis by Plasmin
The fate of the intact -chain of fibrin during digestion with plasmin was also investigated by Western blotting using a monoclonal primary antibody specific for the N-terminus of the -chain of fibrin. A blot of the gel depicted in Figure 2A is shown in Figure 3A. In agreement with the Coomassie-stained gel, there was a near complete loss of the intact -chain of control fibrin over the 6-h digestion period. A transient appearance of a pair of closely migrating peptide fragments ( 14 kD) derived from the N-terminus of the -chain was also observed. By 6 h, the larger of these two fragments disappeared completely. In contrast, noticeable amounts of the intact -chain and 14-kD peptide fragment pair from CTEPH fibrin persisted throughout the 6-h digestion period. Group differences, as determined by densitometric scanning of Western blots, are shown in Figure 3B. The intact -chain of the CTEPH group was more resistant to lysis than that of the control group (p < 0.02). In addition, the concomitant release of -chain N-terminal fragments ( 14 kD) in the CTEPH group was also retarded compared with the control group (p < 0.01).
Plasminogen and 2-Antiplasmin Content of Purified FibrinogenTo investigate the possibility that copurifying plasminogen or 2-antiplasmin may have influenced the lytic profiles of the fibrin clots, we quantified the amount of these proteins in our purified fibrinogen preparations by performing densitometry on Western blots using primary antibodies specific for plasminogen and 2-antiplasmin. Plasminogen accounted for less than 0.1% of the total protein in the fibrinogen preparations (range, 0.020.06%), and there was no significant correlation between the plasminogen content and the amount of intact -chain remaining after a 3-h plasmin digest of fibrin clots (r = 0.17, p = 0.48, Pearson correlation test). Furthermore, the average amount of plasminogen in the purified fibrinogen samples accounted for only 1.6% (range, 0.82.5%) of the plasmin used in the subsequent digestion experiments. Similarly, 2-antiplasmin accounted for less than 0.1% of the total protein in the fibrinogen preparations (range, 00.05%), and there was no significant correlation between the 2-antiplasmin content and the amount of intact -chain remaining after a 3-h plasmin digest of fibrin clots (r = 0.36, p = 0.12). Moreover, the average amount of 2-antiplasmin in the purified fibrinogen samples accounted for only 0.8% (range, 02.0%) of the plasmin used in the subsequent digestion experiments. Thus, it is unlikely that the differences observed in the plasmin-mediated lysis of control and CTEPH fibrin were due to differences in either the plasminogen or 2-antiplasmin content of these fibrinogen preparations.
Mixing Studies
These in vitro experiments demonstrate that fibrin clots from patients with CTEPH are resistant to fibrinolysis, when compared with fibrin clots from healthy control subjects. The lysis resistance was not due to the presence of copurifying plasminogen or 2-antiplasmin, both of which accounted for only a small fraction of the final plasmin concentration used in the digestion experiments. The lysis resistance also could not be explained by the presence of other potent fibrinolytic activators or inhibitors as detected by the mixing experiment. Because the lysis experiments were performed with plasmin, rather than plasminogen, the resistance could not be due to the presence of thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor, which confers resistance by removing plasminogen binding sites from fibrin (8). These findings have important implications for the understanding of the mechanisms responsible for CTEPH. Epidemiologically, the association between acute pulmonary thromboembolism and CTEPH is compelling. Approximately one-half of patients with CTEPH have a previously documented acute pulmonary thromboembolism (9). In the remainder, the previous thromboemboli are believed to have been clinically unrecognized, because even emboli large enough to be fatal often evade clinical detection antemortem (10). Furthermore, CTEPH has been reported in as many as 3.8% of patients with acute pulmonary thromboembolism (11), but is otherwise extremely rare in the general population (12). However, despite the strength of the clinical association between the two disorders, no mechanism has previously been identified through which the emboli in some patients evade normal thrombolytic processes to become large intravascular scars characteristic of CTEPH. Although CTEPH can be induced in animals after acute pulmonary embolism by inhibiting fibrinolysis with tranexamic acid (13), no abnormality of coagulation enzymes, fibrinolytic enzymes, or pulmonary endothelial cell fibrinolytic function has been identified previously that accounts for the incomplete thrombus resolution in patients with CTEPH. In a prospective study of 46 patients with CTEPH, the frequencies of antithrombin III, protein C, and protein S deficiencies, and factor V and factor II mutations were low and similar to those of control subjects (2), a finding confirmed by others (12, 14). With regard to the fibrinolytic pathway, a study of 32 patients with CTEPH revealed neither high resting plasma levels of PAI-1 activity nor a blunted response of tissue-type plasminogen activator (TPA) to venous occlusion (3). In a separate study of 13 patients, TPA and PAI-1 levels in conditioned medium from primary cultures of pulmonary artery endothelial cells obtained from patients with CTEPH during thromboendarterectomy did not differ significantly from those of cells obtained from organ donor control subjects (4). Moreover, endothelial cells from patients with CTEPH and control subjects did not differ in their ability to secrete TPA and PAI-1 in response to stimulation with thrombin (4). However, a study of occlusive organized tissue removed from patients with CTEPH during thromboendarterectomy revealed a prevalence of smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells exhibiting elevated PAI-1 antigen and mRNA levels, which the authors concluded could contribute to the stabilization of vascular thrombi during remodeling (15). One practical consequence of all of these findings is an inability to predict which patients with acute pulmonary thromboembolism will go on to develop CTEPH.
The resistance to lysis we observed in the fibrin from patients with CTEPH, especially in the connective tissue cellstimulating N-terminus of the
Fibrinolytic resistance that causes persistence of the N-terminus of the -chain of fibrin, as we observed in patients with CTEPH, is particularly interesting to us because this segment has been implicated in a variety of physiologic events, including cell signaling (16) and angiogenesis (17). In addition, platelet spreading and the growth of fibroblasts and endothelial cells onto fibrin polymers are stimulated by peptides found at the N-terminus of the -chain (18, 19). Thus, delayed fibrin degradation in this area could be an important step in the remodeling of an acute pulmonary embolus into chronic organized scar tissue.
Although these experiments are the first to systematically study fibrinolytic resistance in a series of patients with CTEPH, numerous genetic variants of human fibrinogen have been implicated in thrombotic diseases (20). Notably, fibrinogen Bellingham, which involves a These experiments do have limitations, which we plan to address in future studies. First, the comparison group was composed of healthy volunteers, rather than patients with acute pulmonary embolism who have completely resolved their thrombi. However, complete anatomic thrombus resolution after acute pulmonary embolism is not universal (23), so a valid comparison would need to take into account statistically the degree of perfusion recovery, as measured objectively after the acute pulmonary embolism. That study will be performed as a follow-up to the current one, which simply establishes that fibrin polymers from patients with CTEPH are abnormally resistant to lysis. Second, although our experiments demonstrate that fibrin derived from patients with CTEPH is resistant to lysis, they do not define the structural basis of the resistance. Although fibrinogen genetic polymorphisms could be responsible, the resistance could also be ascribed to variances in post-translational modifications. It is also possible that circulating fibrinogen is subjected to alteration in patients with CTEPH. These and other possibilities would result in predictable changes in the molecular structure of patient fibrinogen. We are performing detailed analyses of fibrinogen structures in patients with CTEPH to clarify the mechanisms responsible for it, and develop strategies to prevent or at least detect CTEPH at an early stage.
The authors thank Dr. Russell Doolittle for his insight and suggestions during this work. They would also like to take the opportunity to thank him for being a constant inspiration and example.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants R21-HL080302 and R21/33-CA099835. T.A.M. is also supported by the American College of Chest Physicians as the GlaxoSmithKline Distinguished Scholar in Thrombosis. Originally Published in Press as DOI: 10.1164/rccm.200506-916OC on March 2, 2006 Conflict of Interest Statement: None of the authors has a financial relationship with a commercial entity that has an interest in the subject of this manuscript. Received in original form June 14, 2005; accepted in final form February 28, 2006
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