70 research outputs found

    Ongoing contact activation in patients with hereditary angioedema

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    Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is predominantly caused by a deficiency in C1 esterase inhibitor (C1INH) (HAE-C1INH). C1INH inhibits activated factor XII (FXIIa), activated factor XI (FXIa), and kallikrein. In HAE-C1INH patients the thrombotic risk is not increased even though activation of the contact system is poorly regulated. Therefore, we hypothesized that contact activation preferentially leads to kallikrein formation and less to activation of the coagulation cascade in HAE-C1INH patients. We measured the levels of C1INH in complex with activated contact factors in plasma samples of HAE-C1INH patients (N=30, 17 during remission and 13 during acute attack) and healthy controls (N=10). We did not detect differences in enzyme-inhibitor complexes between samples of controls, patients during remission and patients during an acute attack. Reconstitution with C1INH did not change this result. Next, we determined the potential to form enzyme-inhibitory complexes after complete in vitro activation of the plasma samples with a FXII trigger. In all samples, enzyme-C1INH levels increased after activation even in patients during an acute attack. However, the levels of FXIIa-C1INH, FXIa-C1INH and kallikrein-C1INH were at least 52% lower in samples taken during remission and 70% lower in samples taken during attack compared to samples from controls (p<0.05). Addition of C1INH after activation led to an increase in levels of FXIIa-C1INH and FXIa-C1INH (p<0.05), which were still lower than in controls (p<0.05), while the levels of kallikrein-C1INH did not change. These results are consistent with constitutive activation and attenuated depletion of the contact system and show that the ongoing activation of the contact system, which is present in HAE-C1INH patients both during remission and during acute attacks, is not associated with preferential generation of kallikrein over FXIa

    Intermittent C1-Inhibitor Deficiency Associated with Recessive Inheritance: Functional and Structural Insight

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    C1-inhibitor is a serine protease inhibitor (serpin) controlling complement and contact system activation. Gene mutations result in reduced C1-inhibitor functional plasma level causing hereditary angioedema, a life-threatening disorder. Despite a stable defect, the clinical expression of hereditary angioedema is unpredictable, and the molecular mechanism underlying this variability remains undisclosed. Here we report functional and structural studies on the Arg378Cys C1-inhibitor mutant found in a patient presenting reduced C1-inhibitor levels, episodically undergoing normalization. Expression studies resulted in a drop in mutant C1-innhibitor secretion compared to wild-type. Notwithstanding, the purified proteins had similar features. Thermal denaturation experiments showed a comparable denaturation profile, but the mutant thermal stability decays when tested in conditions reproducing intracellular crowding.Our findings suggest that once correctly folded, the Arg378Cys C1-inhibitor is secreted as an active, although quite unstable, monomer. However, it could bear a folding defect, occasionally promoting protein oligomerization and interfering with the secretion process, thus accounting for its plasma level variability. This defect is exacerbated by the nature of the mutation since the acquired cysteine leads to the formation of non-functional homodimers through inter-molecular disulphide bonding. All the proposed phenomena could be modulated by specific environmental conditions, rendering this mutant exceptionally vulnerable to mild stress

    Hereditary angioedema: Assessing the hypothesis for underlying autonomic dysfunction

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    Background Attacks of Hereditary Angioedema due to C1-inhibitor deficiency (Cl-INH-HAE) are often triggered by stressful events/hormonal changes. Objective Our study evaluates the relationship between autonomic nervous system (ANS) and contact/complement system activation. Methods Twenty-three HAE patients (6 males, mean age 47.5 +/- 11.4 years) during remission and 24 healthy controls (8 males, mean age 45.3 +/- 10.6 years) were studied. ECG, beat-by-beat blood pressure, respiratory activity were continuously recorded during rest (10') and 75degrees- head-up tilt (10'). C1-INH, C4, cleaved high molecular weight kininogen (cHK) were assessed; in 16 patients and 11 controls plasma catecholamines were also evaluated. Spectral analysis of heart rate variability allowed extraction of low-(LF) and high-(HF)frequency components, markers of sympathetic and vagal modulation respectively. Results HAE patients showed higher mean systolic arterial pressure (SAP) than controls during both rest and tilt. Tilt induced a significant increase in SAP and its variability only in controls. Although sympathetic modulation (LFnu) increased significantly with tilt in both groups, LF/HF ratio, index of sympathovagal balance, increased significantly only in controls. At rest HAE patients showed higher noradrenaline values (301.4 +/- 132.9 pg/ml vs 210.5 +/- 89.6 pg/ml, p = 0.05). Moreover, in patients tilt was associated with a significant increase in cHK, marker of contact system activation (49.5 +/- 7.5% after T vs 47.1 +/- 7.8% at R, p = 0.01). Conclusions Our data are consistent with altered ANS modulation in HAE patients, i.e. increased sympathetic activation at rest and blunted response to orthostatic challenge. Tilt test-induced increased HK cleavage suggests a link between stress and bradykinin production

    Aspects of hereditary angioedema genotyping in the era of NGS: The case of F12 gene = Wybrane aspekty genotypowania wrodzonego obrzȩku naczynioruchowego w erze NGS: Gen F12

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    Objective. To screen a cohort of patients diagnosed with non-FXII angioedema for carriage of variants of F12 gene. Material and methods. DNA samples from 191 patients suffering from primary angioedema with normal C1-INH, 54 samples from non- -affected family members, and 161 samples from C1-INH-HAE (154 type I, 7 type II) patients were included in the study. The F12 gene was genotyped by targeted NGS (100% coverage of translated regions). Sanger sequencing was performed for the verification of all identified variants and family segregation studies. Results. The pathogenic F12 variant c.983C&gt;A was detected in three patients from two unrelated families initially diagnosed as U-HAE. Six additional mutations were identified, four of which were characterized as benign (c.41T&gt;C, c.418C&gt;G, c.1025C&gt;T, c.530C&gt;T) and two of uncertain significance (c.1530G&gt;C, c.1768T&gt;G). Two synonymous variants (c.756C&gt;T and c.711C&gt;T), the common polymorphism c.619G&gt;C, and the functional polymorphism c.-4T&gt;C were detected in allele frequencies similar to those presented in the ExAC database for the European population. One more not yet reported synonymous variant (c. 1599A&gt;G) was also found. Conclusion. Analyzing the entire translated region of F12 gene is important in order to identify new variants that possibly affect HAE expressivity. Interestingly, genetic analysis of F12 supports not only the diagnosis of FXII-HAE but also the correct exclusion diagnosis of U-HAE

    Constraints on sub-GeV dark-matter-electron scattering from the DarkSide-50 experiment

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    FAPESP - FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULOWe present new constraints on sub-GeV dark-matter particles scattering off electrons based on 6780.0 kg d of data collected with the DarkSide-50 dual-phase argon time projection chamber. This analysis uses electroluminescence signals due to ionized electrons extracted from the liquid argon target. The detector has a very high trigger probability for these signals, allowing for an analysis threshold of three extracted electrons, or approximately 0.05 keVee. We calculate the expected recoil spectra for dark matterelectron scattering in argon and, under the assumption of momentum-independent scattering, improve upon existing limits from XENON10 for dark-matter particles with masses between 30 and 100 MeV/c(2).1211117FAPESP - FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULOFAPESP - FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO2016/09084-0AgĂȘncias de fomento estrangeiras apoiaram essa pesquisa, mais informaçÔes acesse artig
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