Hydroxychloroquine inhibits hemolysis-induced arterial thrombosis ex vivo and improves lung perfusion in hemin-treated mice

Free labile hemin acts as a damage-associated molecular pattern during acute and chronic hemolysis and muscle injury, supporting platelet activation and thrombosis. To investigate the anti-thrombotic potential of hydroxychloroquine on hemolysis-induced platelet activation and arterial thrombosis. Th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of thrombosis and haemostasis 2024-07, Vol.22 (7), p.2018-2026
Hauptverfasser: Bourne, Joshua H., Perrella, Gina, El-Awaisi, Juma, Terry, Lauren V., Tinkova, Veronika, Hogg, Rebecca L., Gant, Poppy, Grygielska, Beata, Kalia, Neena, Kavanagh, Dean, Brill, Alexander, Dimitrov, Jordan D., Watson, Steve P., Rayes, Julie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Free labile hemin acts as a damage-associated molecular pattern during acute and chronic hemolysis and muscle injury, supporting platelet activation and thrombosis. To investigate the anti-thrombotic potential of hydroxychloroquine on hemolysis-induced platelet activation and arterial thrombosis. The effect of hydroxychloroquine on hemin-induced platelet activation and hemolysis-induced platelet recruitment and aggregation was measured in washed platelets and hemolyzed blood, respectively. Its effect on ferric-chloride (FeCl3)-induced arterial thrombosis and lung perfusion following hemin injection was assessed in wild-type mice. Erythrocyte lysis and endothelial cell activation cooperatively supported platelet aggregation and thrombosis at arterial shear stress. This thrombotic effect was reversed by hydroxychloroquine. In a purified system, hydroxychloroquine inhibited platelet build-up on immobilized von Willebrand factor in hemolyzed blood without altering initial platelet recruitment. Hydroxychloroquine inhibited hemin-induced platelet activation and phosphatidylserine exposure independently of reactive oxygen species generation. In the presence of hemin, hydroxychloroquine did not alter glycoprotein VI shedding but reduced C-type-lectin-like-2 expression on platelets. In vivo, hydroxychloroquine reversed pulmonary perfusion decline induced by exogenous administration of hemin. In arterial thrombosis models, hydroxychloroquine inhibited ferric-chloride–induced thrombosis in the carotid artery and reduced von Willebrand factor accumulation in the thrombi. Hydroxychloroquine inhibited hemolysis-induced arterial thrombosis ex vivo and improved pulmonary perfusion in hemin-treated mice, supporting a potential benefit of its use as an adjuvant therapy in hemolytic diseases to limit arterial thrombosis and to improve organ perfusion.
ISSN:1538-7836
1538-7836
DOI:10.1016/j.jtha.2024.04.008