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Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on May 8, 2003; DOI 10.1182/blood-2002-07-2175.
Blood, 1 September 2003, Vol. 102, No. 5, pp. 1670-1677 Drug-induced thrombocytopenia: localization of the binding site of GPIX-specific quinine-dependent antibodiesFrom the Centre for Thrombosis and Vascular Research, Department of Medicine, St George Clinical School, Kogarah, Australia, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, and National Heart Center, Singapore.
Immune thrombocytopenia is a common complication of therapy with a large number of drugs. The most widely studied drug-induced immune thrombocytopenia (DIT) is caused by quinine. In most cases of DIT, antibodies bind to the platelet membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX complex in a drug-dependent fashion and bring about increased platelet clearance by the reticuloendothelial system resulting in thrombocytopenia. Here, we report the characterization of the quinine-dependent antibody activity of sera from 13 patients with quinine-induced thrombocytopenia. In our series of patients, GPIX was the most prevalent target of quinine-dependent antibodies. To identify the structural determinants of GPIX recognized by quinine-dependent antibodies, 4 chimeric mouse/human GPIX constructs and stable Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell lines that expressed the chimeras in association with GPIb and GPIb
were produced. The analysis of 6 patient sera with the chimeric cell lines
provided evidence for localization of the anti-GPIX quinine-dependent antibody
binding site to the C-ext region (amino acid [aa] 64-135) of human GPIX.
Further characterization of the C-ext region of the GPIX indicated that
replacement of the Arg110 and Gln115 of the human GPIX with the corresponding
residues from mouse (Gln and Glu, respectively) resulted in a significant
reduction in the binding of GPIX antibodies in our series of patients, with
Arg110Gln, giving a more pronounced effect than Gln115Glu. Hence, these 2
residues, particularly Arg110, play an important role in the structure of the
antigenic site on GPIX recognized by anti-GPIX antibodies.
Drug-induced thrombocytopenia (DIT) is a relatively common and potentially serious side effect of therapy with a variety of structurally unrelated drugs. The clinical picture associated with DIT is characterized by thrombocytopenia, petechiae, purpuric lesions, and occasionally serious bleeding such as intracranial hemorrhage. The earliest recorded cases of DIT implicated quinine, a drug used widely for treatment of malaria as well as muscular cramps, as the causative agent.1 Over the years, efforts have been dedicated to elucidate the mechanisms through which the thrombocytopenic effects of quinine are brought about.2-12 The outcome of these efforts has provided us with the knowledge that quinine induces the production of antibodies that, in most cases, are directed against the platelet membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX complex, whereas antibody reactivity against another platelet GP complex, GPIIb-IIIa, has also been demonstrated. One proposed mechanism is that the binding of the drug to platelet surface GPs results in the exposure of new antigenic epitopes to which drug-dependent antibodies bind.13 This antibody binding leads to increased platelet clearance by the reticuloendothelial system, bringing about the frequently observed thrombocytopenia. In more recent years, a number of medications other than quinine have been shown to trigger thrombocytopenia through induction of antiplatelet antibodies. These medications include sulfonamide antibiotics, sulfamethoxazole and sulfisoxazole,14 rifampicin (used for treatment of tuberculosis),15-19 and ranitidine (a histamine-receptor antagonist).20,21 Similar to the specificity of the quinine-induced antibodies, the antibodies induced by these listed drugs were predominantly reactive against platelet GPIb-IX or GPIIb-IIIa. However, there is evidence that other platelet surface proteins, such as platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1 (PECAM-1), could be the target of drug-dependent antibodies.22 It has also been noted that in certain instances, thrombocytopenia could be the result of antibody activity dependent on the presence of the drug metabolites and not the drug itself,23 a phenomenon that can explain why it is not always possible to identify antiplatelet antibodies capable of binding to platelets in the presence of the suspect drug. In addition to platelet-specific GPs, quinine-dependent antibodies have been shown to be reactive against other cell types such as leukocytes (T and B lymphocytes and neutrophils) and endothelial cells.24-27 In the study of Glynne et al24 the quinine-dependent antibodies specific for endothelial cells were shown to be able to activate endothelial cells, thereby supporting an immunopathogenic role for quinine-dependent antibodies in the causation of the hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS).
The GPIb-IX complex, the target of most drug-induced antibodies, is a major
platelet surface GP, comprising 4 distinct transmembrane polypeptide subunits:
GPIb
To begin to identify the structural determinants in GPIX recognized by
quinine-dependent antibodies, we generated 4 chimeric mouse/human GPIX
constructs and stable Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell lines that expressed
the GPIX chimeras in association with GPIb To identify C-ext region amino acids that played a crucial role in the formation of the antigenic site, the region was further investigated using hGPIX mutants carrying various combinations of mutations in this region. The outcome of these studies indicated that Arg110 and Gln115 of hGPIX are involved in the formation of the quinine-dependent anti-GPIX antibody binding site.
Materials Bovine serum albumin (BSA), quinine hydrochloride, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), Tris (tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane), ethyldiaminetrichloroacetic acid (EDTA), Tween-20, Triton-X and, TMB (3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine dihydrochloride) solution were purchased from Sigma (St Louis, MO). Cell culture medium DMEM (Dulbecco modified Eagle medium), fetal bovine serum (FBS), phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) tablets, Geneticin, hygromycin, and Trypsin/EDTA solution were from GIBCO-BRL (Grand Island, NY). All restriction enzymes were purchased from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA). The pfu Turbo polymerase and polymerase chain reaction (PCR)script cloning kit were from Stratagene (La Jolla, CA). For purification of DNA the Gel Extraction Kit from Qiagen (Hilden, Germany) was used. The mammalian expression vector pcDNA3.1/hygro was from GIBCO-BRL. Oligonucleotide primers were synthesized by Sigma Genosys (Sigma) and reverse phase cartridge purified. Antibodies
Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)labeled goat antihuman antibody
F(ab')2 fragmented, FITC-labeled goat antimouse antibody,
unconjugated goat antimouse immunoglobulin, and horseradish peroxidase
(HRP)conjugated goat antihuman immunoglobulin G (IgG; Fc fragment
specific) were from Sigma. The monoclonal antibodies (moAbs) AK2 and AK3
(directed against GPIb Cell lines
The CHO Patients Blood was obtained with informed consent from 13 patients with quinine-induced thrombocytopenia (6 males and 7 females, aged between 14 and 56 years), and their sera/plasma was prepared and used in this study. The selection of samples was conducted randomly using samples derived from patients presented at our hospital or from samples that had been forwarded to our laboratory for testing. The diagnosis of quinine-induced thrombocytopenia was made according to the following criteria: (1) patients had developed thrombocytopenia when they were receiving quinine, (2) other causes of thrombocytopenia were excluded, (3) patient thrombocytopenia had resolved after the cessation of the drug, and (4) the presence of quinine-dependent antiplatelet antibody was detected by a laboratory test ("Flow cytometry"). The study procedure has the approval of the hospital ethics committee. Flow cytometry All 13 patient sera were analyzed for the presence of quinine-dependent antiplatelet antibodies using flow cytometry as described previously.19 Briefly, platelets were isolated from citric acid-citrate-dextrose (ACD)anticoagulated normal O group blood through differential centrifugation as previously described and washed (10 mM Tris-HCL + 1 mM EDTA). Washed platelets (200 µL, 2 x 107 cells) were incubated with 100 µL 1:50 dilution of patient serum in the presence (final concentration 0.3 mM) or absence of quinine. Detection of binding was by a goat antihuman FITC-labeled antibody (1:200). Reactions in the absence of quinine and healthy pooled sera of AB type were used as negative control. Fluorescence was measured on a FACStar Plus flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson).
CHO Monoclonal antibody immobilization of platelet antigens (MAIPA)
To distinguish the antiGPIb-IX and anti-GPIIb/IIIa activity of the
sera, the MAIPA assay was performed using washed platelets according to
previously described
protocols.19,32
Briefly, platelets (2 x 107) were sequentially incubated with
50 µL serum and 20 µL respective moAb at 37°C for 30 minutes. The
cells were lysed using the TBS buffer (tris-buffered saline [TBS] containing
0.5% Triton-X, 0.05% Tween-20, ± quinine), and after centrifugation the
lysate was added (in duplicate) to the wells of a microtiter plate
(Immunotech) coated with goat antimouse immunoglobulin. After washing with TBS
buffer, antihuman IgG HRP conjugate was added to the wells. After 6 washes,
with TBS buffer of the TMB substrate solution was added. The color development
was stopped after 15 minutes and read at the dual wavelengths of 450 and 492
nm. Healthy pooled sera of the AB type were used as negative control. In
addition, CHO Generation of chimeric human/mouse GPIX genes Chimeric human/mouse GPIX genes were generated such that various segments of the human GPIX (hGPIX) gene were replaced with the corresponding segments of the mouse GPIX (mGPIX) gene. In this process, 3 distinct segments of the hGIPX gene were considered: the gene segment (117 nucleotides) to the 5' end of the LRM encoding nucleotides (aa 1-39, termed N), the LRM encoding nucleotides (aa 40-63), and the gene segment (294 nucleotides) to the 3' end of the LRM (aa 64-135, termed C-ext) (Figure 1). Identification of the LRM encoding nucleotides was based on the available information about the structure of human and mouse GPIX.33-35 On the basis of this consideration, chimera 1 (chim1) consisted of mouse N domain joined to human LRM and C-ext regions. Chimera 2 (chim2) composed the human N and C-ext regions in combination with mouse LRM, chimera 3 (chim3) encoded the human N and LRM tethered to mouse C-ext region, whereas chimera 4 (chim4) composed mouse N and LRM joined to human C-ext region (Figure 1).
The chim1, chim3, and chim4 genes were generated using the method of gene splicing by overlap extension. Mouse genomic DNA was isolated from blood using a genomic DNA extraction kit (Qiagen) and used as template for PCR amplification of the mGPIX gene with the following primers: forward, 5' CTGG ATG ACT ACC TGG GGC CTC C 3', and reverse, 5' ATG GGC TAG GCT CAG TTC CTG G 3'. The mGPIX gene was cloned into PCR-Script vector and sequenced. Segments of either mouse or human GPIX were PCR amplified such that they included regions of 18 to 24 nucleotides complementarity at their ends. A significant level of sequence identity between the human and mouse GPIX at the borders of their respective LRMs (Figure 2) enables this approach. PCR products thus generated were used in subsequent PCR experiments to assemble and amplify the chimeric genes. In all PCR experiments described in this paper, the proofreading polymerase enzyme, pfuTurbo, was used according to the manufacturer's instructions, and annealing temperatures were adjusted for different primers. All PCR products generated were cloned in the PCR-Script vector for sequencing, and the correct sequence was confirmed prior to the expression of the constructs.
The chim2 gene was generated through 2 rounds of mutagenesis of hGPIX gene to alter the 3 amino acids that differ between the human and mouse LRMs and convert the former to the latter (Figure 2). For introducing the mutations the QuickChange Site Directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene), a hGPIX clone, and mutagenic primers designed according to the instructions of the QuickChange kit were used. The QuickChange Site directed mutagenesis kit was also used to mutate hGPIX and generate the 6 C-ext GPIX mutant constructs (Figure 3).
Transfection and surface expression of the chimeric constructs
The 4 chimeric, the wild-type hGPIX, and the 6 C-ext GPIX mutants
constructs were excised from PCR-Script as KpnI/XhoI
fragments and cloned into pcDNA3.1/Hygro for cell surface expression. Maxiprep
DNA was prepared, and transfection of constructs into CHO
Antiplatelet activity of patient sera The presence of quinine-dependent antibodies in patient sera was assessed using flow cytometry. This assessment revealed that, from the 13 sera tested, 8 were positive for the presence of quinine-dependent antibodies to platelets and these sera did not react with platelets in the absence of quinine. The strength of the reaction was variable. Sera from 2 patients showed a strong reaction, sera from 3 patients were moderately positive, and the sera from the remaining patients were weakly positive. Further analysis of the patients' sera using the MAPIA assay demonstrated that all samples tested were positive for the presence of quinine-dependent antiplatelet antibodies. The MAIPA results indicated that all sera tested contained antibodies to the GPIb-IX complex, whereas 3 samples contained antibodies to the GbIIb/IIIa complex in addition to GPIb-IX (Table 1). The difference in the reactivity of sera was due to the use of diluted (1:50) sera in the flow cytometry experiments ("Patients, materials, and methods"). However, this dilution was necessary, because using undiluted serum in flow cytometry experiments gave rise to nonspecific binding in the absence of quinine in a number of instances. The use of undiluted serum samples in MAIPA experiments did not give rise to any nonspecific reaction. In MAIPA, unlike flow cytometry, the patient serum was incubated with platelets in a test tube, and the solubilized antibody-GP complex formed is transferred and captured to the microtiter wells. The serum is not exposed to the microtiter wells, into which the substrate is added.
From the 13 patient sera, 7 samples showing the highest levels of activity
were tested against CHO
Reactivity of quinine-dependent antibodies against mouse platelets Preliminary flow cytometry experiments showed that if patient sera were used at a dilution of 1:150 and above, it was possible to maintain a significant level of quinine-dependent antibody binding to human platelets while abrogating any background reaction to mouse platelets (Figure 4). Hence, in subsequent experiments patient sera were used at these dilutions.
Mapping the binding site of GPIX-specific quinine-dependent antibodies
The wild-type (WT) GPIX and the 4 mouse/human chimeric constructs were
efficiently expressed on the surface of transfected CHO
The utilization of the cells expressing chimera 4 confirmed our initial observation, with regard to the location of SZ1 epitope on the C-ext region of GPIX, because SZ1 binding was restored when these cells were used in flow cytometry experiments. As anticipated, there was no binding of the cells expressing chimera 4 when FMC25 was used (Figure 5). Although the above data provide useful information about the binding sites of 2 widely used anti-GPIX antibodies, identification of the binding site of SZ1 is of specific significance because this antibody has been shown to be capable of cross-blocking the binding of quinine-dependent antibodies.11,12 This information suggests that the binding site of quinine-dependent antibodies also resides in the C-ext portion of GPIX. In agreement with this suggestion, when we assayed 6 patient sera against the 4 chimeric cells lines, it was observed that quinine-dependent antibody binding to the cells expressing chimera 3 was abolished, whereas the level of reactivity against chimeras 1 and 2 was similar to that against WT GPIX. It was also possible to restore the reactivity of patient sera against the cells expressing chimera 4 to levels comparable with WT GPIX (Figure 6). The results of these experiments strongly supported the proposition that the binding site of GPIX-specific quinine-dependent antibodies is located within the C-ext region (aa 64-135) of GPIX.
The contribution of the 18 amino acids divergent between the C-ext region of mouse and human GPIXs (Figure 3) was assessed by generating 6 hGPIX mutants. When the reactivity of FMC25 and SZ1 against CHO cells expressing the mutants was examined, it was observed that only the reactivity of SZ1 against the cells expressing the group 4 mutations (Arg110Gln and Gln115Glu) was significantly reduced (Figure 7).
Finally, the reactivity of patient sera against the 6 hGPIX mutant cell lines was investigated. All patient sera examined demonstrated significantly reduced binding to the hGPIX mutant harboring the Arg110 and Gln115 substitutions (mut4; Table 3).
Furthermore, it was observed that of the 2 substitutions in the mutant 4 the Arg110Gln (mut4.1) was able to reduce the binding of patient sera and SZ1 to levels equivalent with mut4, whereas the decrease in binding to the mutant harboring the Gln115 substitution (mut4.2) was only modest.
The platelet GPIb/IX complex has been shown to be the major target of drug (quinine)induced antibodies, and antibody reactivity against GPIIb/IIIa has also been implicated, in limited instances, to contribute to drug-induced thrombocytopenias. The possibility of dissecting the GPIb/IX complex into its major subunits, via expression of GPIb + or GPIb + IX on
the surface of CHO cells, has enabled further characterization of the binding
site of drug-dependent antibodies. In this regard, previous data from our
laboratory indicate that antibodies with specificity for GPIX constitute a
significant percentage of quinine-induced
antibodies.12 Data
presented here are an extension of our previous work detailing the specificity
of quinine-dependent antibodies. In our present series of patients, only 3 of
13 contained antibodies to GPIIb/IIIa as well as GPIb/IX. From the 13 samples
in this collection, 7 samples exhibiting the highest antibody titers (as
detected by flow cytometry) were assessed for binding to GPIb and GPIX.
From the 7 samples tested against CHO b and CHO IX cells, 6 showed
reactivity to GPIX alone, and only 1 sample contained antibodies to both
GPIb and GPIX. An additional aspect of the importance of GPIX, as the target of quinine-induced antibodies, is related to the observations that this glycoprotein also contains the epitope(s) of antibodies in thrombocytopenia induced by other structurally unrelated drugs such as ranitidine and rifampicin.19,21 These observations prompted our effort to identify the GPIX epitope of the quinine-dependent antibodies.
To achieve the objective of this study, we opted for the approach of
creating chimeric human/mouse GPIX proteins and expressing them on the surface
of CHO
Transfection of the chimeric and the mutant hGPIX constructs into
CHO As mentioned previously, the SZ1 antibody has been shown to interact with an epitope on GPIX31 which is either identical to or overlapping the target region of quinine-dependent antibodies.30 Therefore, it was expected that patient-derived quinine-dependent anti-GPIX antibodies would be reacting against the chimeric cell lines in a pattern similar to SZ1. This expectation was fulfilled when 6 patient sera were examined in flow cytometry assays using the 4 chimeric cell lines. The binding of all sera tested to chimeras 1, 2, and 4 was similar to their binding of WT GPIX, whereas no binding to the cells expressing chimera 3 (C-ext substitution) was observed (Figure 6 and Table 4). This finding strongly suggested that the binding site of quinine-dependent anti-GPIX antibodies resides in the region of GPIX that is encoded by amino acids 64 to 135 of the protein. The fine mapping of the binding site of quinine-dependent anti-GPIX antibodies was ensued via the generation of 6 hGPIX C-ext region mutants. In the mutants, the 18 amino acid differences in the C-ext region of human and mouse GPIX was divided into 6 groups (Figure 3). In the design of the 6 mutants, the linear sequence of the 2 polypeptides and clusters of divergent amino acids were considered. This approach was inevitable, considering the lack of structural information on GPIX which would enable the prediction of conformational motifs. Our initial investigations with the C-ext mutants, however, yielded information about 2 amino acids in hGPIX (Arg110 and Gln115) which could exert a significant effect on the structure of the binding site to which quinine-dependent anti-GPIX antibodies bind. We noted a significant reduction in antibody binding when these 2 amino acids were replaced by the equivalent mouse residues.
Furthermore, when the contribution of the individual substitutions in the C-ext mut4 was examined, it was noted that the Arg110Gln substitution could be considered to be solely responsible for reduced levels of quinine-dependent antibody binding to C-ext mut4 (Table 3).
This is the first report detailing the identification of the
quinine-dependent epitope. Like the SZ1 epitope, the quinine-dependent epitope
is likely to be conformational in nature. However, it is most surprising that
the drug-related epitope is so restricted and specific that a single amino
acid substitution, Arg Furthermore, anti-GPIX antibodies in thrombocytopenias induced by other drugs such as rifampicin19 and ranitidine21 bind to a similar region as the one induced by quinine. These drugs, used in the treatment of unrelated conditions, do not share any structural similarities. Future studies (for example by crystallographical analysis) of the structure of this region of GPIX may reveal interesting microstructural characteristics that contribute to the pathogenicity of these drug-related conditions. They may also provide useful insights to the pathogenesis of thrombocytopenia induced by not only quinine but also other drugs such as ranitidine and rifampicin.
Submitted July 19, 2002; accepted April 12, 2003.
Prepublished online as Blood First Edition Paper, May 8, 2003; DOI
10.1182/blood-2002-07-2175.
Supported by The National Health and Medical Research Council, Australia,
and National Medical Research Council, Singapore.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge
payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby
marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section
1734.
Reprints: B. H. Chong, Department of Medicine, St George Clinical School, Level 2, Pitney Bldg, St George Hospital, Short St, Kogarah, NSW 2177, Australia; e-mail: beng.chong{at}unsw.edu.au.
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