Abstract 1140

Introduction:

Inorganic polyphosphates are negatively charged, linear phosphate polymers that influence hemostasis via accelerating factor V activation, triggering the contact pathway, and enhancing fibrin polymerization. The latter two effects require long-chain polyphosphates for optimal activity (>1000mers for activating the contact pathway and >250mers for enhancing fibrin polymerization). We explored whether short polyphosphates could inhibit the procoagulant effects of long polyphosphate polymers.

Methods:

Polyphosphate was size-fractionated by gel electrophoresis. “Long-chain polyphosphate” (LCP) was a heterogeneous polyphosphate preparation containing polymers ranging from 400 to several thousand phosphates long. Short-chain polyphosphate preparations were narrow fractions of homogeneous size. We also tested additional phosphate-containing molecules including ADP, ATP, monophosphate, pyrophosphate (PPi), and triphosphate. Clotting assays were performed using pooled normal plasma spiked with 0–20 μM LCP and 0–500 μM small (poly)phosphate; clotting was initiated by factor Xa plus CaCl2, or by CaCl2 alone (contact pathway). Fibrin was formed by clotting 2.6 mg/ml fibrinogen with 10 nM thrombin in the presence of 0–500 μM small (poly)phosphate plus 150 μM LCP and CaCl2.

Results:

Small polyphosphates (size range 23–83mer) reduced the ability of LCP to trigger the contact pathway of blood clotting, while monophosphate, PPi, triphosphate, ADP, and ATP all failed to influence the procoagulant activity of LCP. None of the small (poly)phosphates antagonized the ability of LCP to enhance factor V activation. Interestingly, monophosphate, PPi and triphosphate all inhibited the ability of LCP to enhance fibrin clot structure, with PPi being the most potent. Although ADP and ATP contain di- and tri-phosphates, they did not recapitulate the potent inhibitory activity of PPi. On the other hand, PPi had no measurable effect on the turbidity of fibrin clots formed in the absence of LCP.

Conclusions:

Short-chain polyphosphates inhibit the ability of LCP to initiate the contact pathway of coagulation. Platelet dense granules contain abundant PPi which is secreted in response to platelet agonists, although biological roles for platelet-secreted PPi are unclear. We propose that PPi is a novel modulator of fibrin clot structure, acting to regulate the effects of longer-chain polyphosphates on fibrin fibril formation.

Disclosures:

Smith:University of Illinois: Patents & Royalties. Morrissey:University of Illinois: Patents & Royalties.

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Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.

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