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Blood, Vol. 90 No. 12 (December 15), 1997:
pp. 4806-4811
By
From the Department of Medicine, Karlshamn Hospital, Karlshamn, Sweden; and the Department of Medicine and the Department of Clinical Chemistry and Transfusion Medicine, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, University of Göteborg, Göteborg, Sweden.
A 58-year-old man experienced episodes of fever, vomiting, and diarrhea over a 2-year period. The laboratory evaluation during these attacks consistently disclosed thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, and elevated liver enzymes. A liver biopsy performed at one of these attacks showed a typical picture of granulomatous hepatitis. In retrospect, all episodes seemed to be associated with the ingestion of quinine. Indeed, such a correlation was established by a challenge with quinine. By using flow cytometry, quinine-dependent IgG antibodies to platelets were detected in the patient serum. By a two-color flow cytometric assay, the patient serum was also found to hold quinine-dependent antibodies specific for neutrophils, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes. Moreover, serum absorbed with neutrophils in the presence of quinine continued to react with platelets, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes; serum that was absorbed with mononuclear cells continued to react with neutrophils and platelets. These experiments indicated that the antigen targets were different on platelets, neutrophils, and lymphocytes. Further, the patient serum in the presence of quinine immunoprecipitated surface-labeled platelet proteins with electrophoretic mobilities closely resembling those of glycoprotein (GP) Ib/IX and GPIIb/IIIa. By a modified monoclonal antibody-specific immobilization of platelet antigens assay, the patient serum in the presence of quinine reacted with platelet GPIb/IX and GPIIb/IIIa. Also, the patient serum in the presence of quinine immunoprecipitated an uncharacterized 15-kD double-band from surface-labeled granulocyte proteins. We conclude that our patient's thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, and lymphocytopenia were caused by quinine-dependent antibodies and that these antibodies recognized cell lineage-specific epitopes.
QUININE WAS FIRST implicated as a cause of purpura in the late 19th century,1 and has been regarded as one of the most common causative agents for drug-induced immune thrombocytopenia.2 The effect of quinine on other cells, beside platelets, might have been underestimated. Indeed, recent reports of quinine-induced pancytopenia,3,4 granulomatous hepatitis,5,6 disseminated intravascular coagulation,7 and hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)8,9 suggested the existence of drug-dependent immune-mediated effects on several cell lineages. Particularly, multiple quinine-dependent antibodies were found to target at platelets, red blood cells (RBCs), neutrophils, and T lymphocytes in patients with HUS and agranulocytosis.10 In the present study we report a patient having repeated episodes of thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, lymphocytopenia, and a typical picture of granulomatous hepatitis after the ingestion of quinine. Multiple quinine-dependent antibodies to platelets, neutrophils, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes were detected, and their corresponding targets on platelets and neutrophils were partially characterized.
Case Report
Flow Cytometry
RBC Agglutination Assay
Modified Monoclonal Antibody-Specific Immobilization of Platelet Antigens (MAIPA) The MAIPA assay has been described in detail elsewhere.14 Briefly, platelets from healthy blood donors (blood group O) were sensitized with patient or control sera in the presence or absence of quinine (f.c. 300 µmol/L) and washed and solubilized in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) containing 1% Triton X-100 (Pierce, Rockford, IL). Diluted sensitized platelet lysate was added in duplicate into the wells of a microtiter plate (Maxisorp; NUNC, Roskilde, Denmark) coated with the MoAbs SZ2 (Immunotech, Marseille, France), specific for glycoprotein (GP) Ib, or P2 (Immunotech), specific for GPIIb/IIIa. IgG bound to the captured GP was detected using alkaline phosphatase conjugated goat antihuman IgG (Fc-specific; Sigma Chemical Co, St Louis, MO). P-nitrophenyl-phosphate was used as substrate and the absorbance was recorded at 405 nm. All washing and incubation steps were performed in the presence or absence of 300 µmol/L quinine where appropriate. Sixty normal sera were analyzed as a control material for the modified MAIPA assay. Four of these normal sera were reanalyzed along with each plate to serve as an internal standard, and an absorbance above the mean absorbance +3 standard deviation (SD) recorded for the four normal sera was considered a positive reaction.Electrophoresis (Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate-Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis) and Immunoblotting One-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed by the method of Laemmli,15 and the gel was subsequently transblotted according to the method of Towbin et al.16 Details of platelet immunoblotting have been described elsewhere.17 All washing and incubation steps were performed in the presence or absence of 300 µmol/L quinine where appropriate.Immunoprecipitation of Surface-Labeled Target Proteins Details of immunoprecipitation have been described elsewhere.17 Washed platelets, at a concentration of 1 × 109/mL, were incubated with 5 mmol/L N-hydroxysuccinimide-long chain biotin (NHS-LC-Biotin) in 0.01 mol/L PBS/EDTA for 30 minutes at ambient temperature. The platelets were then washed three times with PBS/EDTA and resuspended in the same buffer. One hundred µL biotinylated platelet suspension, at a concentration of 1 × 109/mL, were incubated with 100 µL of the patient serum in the presence of quinine for 60 minutes. Lymphocytes and neutrophils were biotinylated and fixed in 1% paraformaldehyde before sensitization. Control experiments consisting of patient serum plus buffer and normal sera with and without quinine were routinely performed in parallel. The cells were then washed four times with PBS/EDTA. The antibody-sensitized cells were solubilized in 100 µL 20 mmol/L TBS, containing 1% Triton X-100, Leupeptin 100 µg/mL, and 0.4 mmol/L phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. The IgG with target antigen was precipitated using Protein A beads (Protein A Sepharose CL-4B; Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology AB, Sollentuna, Sweden). All washing and incubation steps were performed in the presence or absence of 300 µmol/L quinine where appropriate. Bound biotin-labeled proteins were eluted by resuspending the final bead pellet in SDS-PAGE sample buffer (2% SDS with or without 5% 2-mercaptoethanol) and incubating the mixture at 100°C for 5 minutes. The mixture was then centrifuged, and the supernatants were electrophoresed on a 5% to 15% gradient SDS-PAGE gel using the discontinuous buffer system of Laemmli15 and both reducing and nonreducing conditions. Broad range biotinylated weight standards (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Richmond, VA) were included to allow localization of the major labeled proteins. After completion of the run, the gel was equilibrated in Towbin buffer,16 and then transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane (Bio-Rad Laboratories). The membrane was blocked with TBS, pH 7.5, containing 0.05% Tween-20 and 3% bovine serum albumin, and then incubated with avidin-biotin-alkaline phosphatase complex (Vectastain ABC-AP kit; Vector Laboratories Inc, Burlingame, CA). After additional washings in TBS-Tween, the bands were developed with the NBT/BCIP substrate.Statistical Methods Standard statistical methods were used for calculation of mean value and SD. The difference between mean values was evaluated with the Student's t-test for unpaired data and a P value <.05 was considered statistically significant.
Detection of Multiple Quinine-Dependent Antibodies In flow cytometric studies, the patient serum plus quinine resulted in strong antibody binding to platelets (Fig 1 and Table 2). More interestingly, the patient serum in the presence of quinine also reacted with CD3+ T lymphocytes, CD19+ B lymphocytes, CD13+ neutrophils, and CD33+ neutrophils (Table 2). Similar reaction patterns were unequivocally observed on reacting the patient serum plus quinine with platelets, neutrophils, and lymphocytes from six different donors. Neither the patient serum alone nor normal human sera with or without quinine reacted with any of these cell types.
Absorption Studies To determine the heterogeneity of these multiple drug dependent antibodies we absorbed the patient serum with neutrophils or mononuclear cells in the presence of quinine. The reactivity of the absorbed patient serum with platelets, neutrophils, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes was then reanalyzed using the flow cytometric assays. The results are summarized in Table 3. The patient serum that had been absorbed with neutrophils, in the presence of quinine, no longer reacted with neutrophils, but continued to react with platelets, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes. The patient serum that had been absorbed with mononuclear cells in the presence of quinine lost its reactivity with T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes while still reacting with platelets and neutrophils.
Biochemical Analysis The patient serum was further tested for its reactivity with platelet GP complexes in the modified MAIPA assay. When quinine was added to the patient serum, IgG antibodies bound to both GPIb/IX and GPIIb/IIIa (Fig 2); no reactivity was discernible in the absence of the drug. Normal sera with and without quinine did not react with any of these GP complexes.
In the present study, we reported a rare case of simultaneous occurrence of quinine-induced thrombocytopenia, neutropenia, lymphocytopenia, and granulomatous hepatitis. The notion that quinine was the causative agent was based on the following findings: (1) in retrospect all episodes seemed to be associated with ingestion of quinine, (2) a quinine challenge elicited the symptoms, and (3) serological studies disclosed quinine-dependent antibodies to platelets, neutrophils, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes. Our patient seemed unique in that even lymphocytopenia was elicited by the drug, and quinine-dependent antibodies binding to both T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes were disclosed by a two-color flow cytometric assay.
Submitted March 10, 1997;
accepted August 12, 1997.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be hearly marked
``advertisment'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734 solely to
indicate this fact. The authors thank Ms Iréne Andersson for expert technical assistance.
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