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Comparative Thrombin Generation in Animal Plasma: Sensitivity to Human Factor XIa and Tissue Factor

Preclinical evaluation of drugs in animals helps researchers to select potentially informative clinical laboratory markers for human trials. To assess the utility of animal thrombin generation (TG) assay, we studied the sensitivity of animal plasmas to triggers of TG, human Tissue Factor (TF), and A...

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Autores principales: Liang, Yideng, Tarandovskiy, Ivan, Surov, Stepan S., Ovanesov, Mikhail V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10454801/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37629101
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241612920
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author Liang, Yideng
Tarandovskiy, Ivan
Surov, Stepan S.
Ovanesov, Mikhail V.
author_facet Liang, Yideng
Tarandovskiy, Ivan
Surov, Stepan S.
Ovanesov, Mikhail V.
author_sort Liang, Yideng
collection PubMed
description Preclinical evaluation of drugs in animals helps researchers to select potentially informative clinical laboratory markers for human trials. To assess the utility of animal thrombin generation (TG) assay, we studied the sensitivity of animal plasmas to triggers of TG, human Tissue Factor (TF), and Activated Factor XI (FXIa). Pooled human, mouse, rat, guinea pig, rabbit, bovine, sheep, and goat plasmas were used in this study. TF- or FXIa-triggered TG and clotting were measured via fluorescence and optical density, respectively. Thrombin peak height (TPH) and time (TPT), clot time (CT), and fibrin clot density (FCD) were all analyzed. The trigger low and high sensitivity borders (LSB and HSB) for each assay parameter were defined as TF and FXIa concentrations, providing 20 and 80% of the maximal parameter value, unless the baseline (no trigger) value exceeded 20% of the maximal, in which case, LSB was derived from 120% of baseline value. Normal human samples demonstrated lower TPH HSB than most of the animal samples for both TF and FXIa. Animal samples, except mice, demonstrated lower TPT LSB for FXIa versus humans. Most rodent and rabbit samples produced baseline TG in the absence of TG triggers that were consistent with the pre-activation of blood coagulation. FCD was not sensitive to both TF and FXIa in either of the plasmas. Animal plasmas have widely variable sensitivities to human TF and FXIa, which suggests that optimization of trigger concentration is required prior to test use, and this complicates the extrapolation of animal model results to humans.
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spelling pubmed-104548012023-08-26 Comparative Thrombin Generation in Animal Plasma: Sensitivity to Human Factor XIa and Tissue Factor Liang, Yideng Tarandovskiy, Ivan Surov, Stepan S. Ovanesov, Mikhail V. Int J Mol Sci Article Preclinical evaluation of drugs in animals helps researchers to select potentially informative clinical laboratory markers for human trials. To assess the utility of animal thrombin generation (TG) assay, we studied the sensitivity of animal plasmas to triggers of TG, human Tissue Factor (TF), and Activated Factor XI (FXIa). Pooled human, mouse, rat, guinea pig, rabbit, bovine, sheep, and goat plasmas were used in this study. TF- or FXIa-triggered TG and clotting were measured via fluorescence and optical density, respectively. Thrombin peak height (TPH) and time (TPT), clot time (CT), and fibrin clot density (FCD) were all analyzed. The trigger low and high sensitivity borders (LSB and HSB) for each assay parameter were defined as TF and FXIa concentrations, providing 20 and 80% of the maximal parameter value, unless the baseline (no trigger) value exceeded 20% of the maximal, in which case, LSB was derived from 120% of baseline value. Normal human samples demonstrated lower TPH HSB than most of the animal samples for both TF and FXIa. Animal samples, except mice, demonstrated lower TPT LSB for FXIa versus humans. Most rodent and rabbit samples produced baseline TG in the absence of TG triggers that were consistent with the pre-activation of blood coagulation. FCD was not sensitive to both TF and FXIa in either of the plasmas. Animal plasmas have widely variable sensitivities to human TF and FXIa, which suggests that optimization of trigger concentration is required prior to test use, and this complicates the extrapolation of animal model results to humans. MDPI 2023-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10454801/ /pubmed/37629101 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241612920 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Liang, Yideng
Tarandovskiy, Ivan
Surov, Stepan S.
Ovanesov, Mikhail V.
Comparative Thrombin Generation in Animal Plasma: Sensitivity to Human Factor XIa and Tissue Factor
title Comparative Thrombin Generation in Animal Plasma: Sensitivity to Human Factor XIa and Tissue Factor
title_full Comparative Thrombin Generation in Animal Plasma: Sensitivity to Human Factor XIa and Tissue Factor
title_fullStr Comparative Thrombin Generation in Animal Plasma: Sensitivity to Human Factor XIa and Tissue Factor
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Thrombin Generation in Animal Plasma: Sensitivity to Human Factor XIa and Tissue Factor
title_short Comparative Thrombin Generation in Animal Plasma: Sensitivity to Human Factor XIa and Tissue Factor
title_sort comparative thrombin generation in animal plasma: sensitivity to human factor xia and tissue factor
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10454801/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37629101
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241612920
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