Soluble glycoprotein VI predicts abdominal aortic aneurysm growth rate and is a novel therapeutic target.

Journal: Blood
Published:
Abstract

A common feature in patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) is the formation of a nonocclusive intraluminal thrombus (ILT) in regions of aortic dilation. Platelets are known to maintain hemostasis and propagate thrombosis through several redundant activation mechanisms, yet the role of platelet activation in the pathogenesis of AAA-associated ILT is still poorly understood. Thus, we sought to investigate how platelet activation affects the pathogenesis of AAA. Using RNA sequencing, we identified that the platelet-associated transcripts are significantly enriched in the ILT compared with the adjacent aneurysm wall and healthy control aortas. We found that the platelet-specific receptor glycoprotein VI (GPVI) is among the top enriched genes in AAA ILT and is increased on the platelet surface of patients with AAAs. Examination of a specific indicator of platelet activity, soluble GPVI (sGPVI), in 2 independent cohorts of patients with AAAs is highly predictive of an AAA diagnosis and associates more strongly with aneurysm growth rate than D-dimer in humans. Finally, intervention with the anti-GPVI antibody (JAQ1) in mice with established aneurysms blunted the progression of AAA in 2 independent mouse models. In conclusion, we show that the levels of sGPVI in humans can predict a diagnosis of AAA and AAA growth rate, which may be critical in the identification of high-risk patients. We also identify GPVI as a novel platelet-specific AAA therapeutic target, with minimal risk of adverse bleeding complications, for which none currently exists.

Authors
Tyler Benson, Mindy Pike, Anthony Spuzzillo, Sarah Hicks, Sidra Ali, Michael Pham, Doran Mix, Seth Brunner, Caris Wadding Lee, Kelsey Conrad, Hannah Russell, Courtney Jennings, Taylor Coughlin, Anu Aggarwal, Sean Lyden, Kevin Mani, Martin Björck, Anders Wanhainen, Rohan Bhandari, Loren Lipworth Elliot, Cassianne Robinson Cohen, Francis Caputo, Sharon Shim, Odayme Quesada, Benjamin Tourdot, Todd Edwards, Michael Tranter, Elizabeth Gardiner, Nigel Mackman, Scott Cameron, A Owens