Measuring soluble platelet glycoprotein VI in human plasma by ELISA

Mohammad Al-Tamimi, Fi Tjen Mu, Masaaki Moroi, Elizabeth E. Gardiner, Michael C. Berndt, Robert K. Andrews

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

66 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Recent experimental evidence demonstrates that the platelet-specific collagen receptor, glycoprotein (GP)VI is essentially all uncleaved on normal circulating platelets, but is shed from the platelet surface in a metalloproteinase-dependent manner in response to GPVI ligands (including collagen), anti-GPVI antibodies or activation at the platelet Fc receptor, FcRIIa. This raises the question of whether shed ectodomain fragment in plasma could be a useful biomarker of thrombotic risk and/or autoimmune thrombocytopenia. In this study, we developed a sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for measuring soluble GPVI in human plasma, using rabbit anti-GPVI polyclonal antibody in the solid-phase, murine anti-GPVI monoclonal antibody (1A12) in the fluid-phase and horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-coupled anti-mouse antibody and enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) for detection. The ELISA was optimized for sensitivity, reproducibility, inter- and intra-assay precision, addition and recovery and detected GPVI in plasma with a lower detection limit of 1 ng/mL. Effects of different anti-coagulants (trisodium citrate, acid-citrate-dextrose or EDTA) were negligible. In ten healthy donors, soluble plasma GPVI levels were 18.9 4.1 ng/mL. Treating normal platelet-rich plasma with a GPVI ligand (collagen-related peptide, CRP), calmodulin inhibitor W7 (that induces GPVI shedding without platelet activation) or N-ethylmaleimide (that directly activates platelet sheddases), under conditions previously shown to induce GPVI shedding, also increased plasma GPVI levels by up to 7-fold, compared to previously reported autoimmune (anti-GPVI) patient plasma where soluble GPVI was 10-fold higher than normal. Characterization of this sensitive ELISA should facilitate analysis of functional/diagnostic role(s) for soluble GPVI in human plasma associated with thrombotic/immune dysfunction.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)143-149
Number of pages7
JournalPlatelets
Volume20
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2009
Externally publishedYes

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