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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
January
Polymer aids in blood clotting,
pointing way to new treatment
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
Philip Lee Williams, University of Georgia
706-542-8501; phil@franklin.uga.edu
1/9/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| James
H. Morrissey, a biochemist in the College of Medicine,
and colleagues at the University of Georgia have discovered
that a linear polymer known as polyphosphate speeds
blood clotting and helps clots last longer. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— A serendipitous comparison prompted by an old scientific image
and involving an ancient but understudied molecule may lead to a new
treatment strategy for injuries or illnesses in which blood clotting
is paramount to survival.
In a paper to appear in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
researchers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and
the University of Georgia report that a linear polymer known as polyphosphate
speeds blood clotting and helps clots last longer. The paper was posted
online this week on the PNAS Web site.
Polyphosphate was shown to have three important roles, said James H.
Morrissey, a biochemist in the U. of I. College
of Medicine at Urbana-Champaign. The inorganic compound accelerates
two parts of the coagulation cascade – the contact-activation
pathway and factor V, a protein that forms thrombin – leading
to fibrin and clots. Finally, he said, polyphosphate delays the breakdown
of clots, which causes renewed bleeding.
“The net effect is accelerating the rate at which blood clots
form and then prolonging how long they last,” Morrissey said.
The successful research already has landed the U. of I. a three-year,
$300,000 grant from the Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust to establish
the Center for Hemostasis Research. The grant, which began Nov. 1, involves
three U. of I. labs with Morrissey in the lead.
The PNAS report comes about a year after former Illinois scientist Roberto
Docampo, now a professor of cellular biology at Georgia’s Center
for Tropical and Emerging Global Diseases, documented in the Journal
of Biological Chemistry (Oct. 22, 2004) that dense granules in human
platelets contain polyphosphate.
In the early 1990s, Docampo determined that a tiny granule, a subcellular
pouch, in yeast, fungi and bacteria – long thought to be for storage
– was a fully operational organelle. It contained pyrophosphatase,
a pump-like enzyme that allows proton transport. He named it the acidocalcisome
for its acidic and calcium components.
Docampo has since found virtually identical pyrophosphate-containing
pouches in numerous prokaryotic organisms, challenging the theory on
the origin of eukaryotic organelles and suggesting a targeted approach
to killing many disease-causing organisms.
“Because I saw electron microscopy pictures of the blood platelets’
dense granules taken many years ago that were almost identical to the
pictures we took of the acidocalcisomes of different protozoa,”
he said, “I thought it would be a good idea to test if they were
similar in other aspects. When we found that polyphosphate was released
from platelets upon stimulation, I immediately thought about a potential
role in coagulation.”
In collaboration with Morrissey, an expert on blood clotting, Docampo
and a team of U. of I. graduate and postdoctoral students tested the
effect of adding polyphosphate to platelet-poor plasma in a series of
in-vitro experiments to see if it enhanced blood clotting. The results
were dramatic, Morrissey said, adding that the presence of polyphosphate
may help explain how platelets accelerate the process of blood clotting.
The National Institutes of Health funded the collaborative project.
Polyphosphate is in every living organism, but scientists thought it
to be a molecular fossil conserved from prebiotic time. “This
is something that has mainly been studied in bacteria,” Docampo
said. “There is almost no data on polyphosphates in vertebrates,
including humans. No role was seen for them, so there was little interest
in studying them.”
The Center for Hemostasis Research will carry the new discovery further.
Morrissey and Illinois colleagues Stephen Sligar, a professor of biochemistry,
and Lawrence B. Schook, a professor of animal
sciences, will lead a variety of experiments. Among them, they will
test the use of polyphosphate as an additive to topical agents as well
as new nanotechnologies in an animal model to develop effective treatments
for situations involving uncontrollable bleeding.
Such scenarios, Morrissey said, could include treatment for wounds sustained
on battlefields or in accidents, or for hemophilia and other diseases
with coagulation deficits.
“The big picture is that we’ve found a new function for
an ancient molecule,” he said. “Polyphosphate has been around
for billions of years. Roberto’s discovery that the granules in
platelets are like the granules in trypanosomatids was a key breakthrough.”
Docampo’s recognition of the acidocalcisome in various organisms
has enabled scientists to detect muscle-like motors that operate a variety
of movements within cells, said Arthur Kornberg, who won the 1959 Nobel
Prize in Medicine or Physiology for discovering mechanisms in the synthesis
of ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid.
“Roberto has discovered a novel structure of major metabolic importance
that regulates the levels of calcium and phosphate within all cells,”
said Kornberg, an emeritus professor of biochemistry in Stanford University’s
School of Medicine. “This acidocalcisome has been identified in
cells as diverse as bacteria, the protozoa of tropical diseases and
the blood-clotting elements of human blood.”
Although no longer at Illinois, Docampo said he’s thrilled that
the research will be continuing through the Carver grant to the U. of
I. “It’s theoretically possible to use this discovery to
find ways to help the body’s own blood-clotting mechanisms,”
he said. “It could be potentially very useful to save lives. Many
people with severe injuries die from blood loss not directly resulting
from their injuries. This research could open doors to helping in that
regard.”
In his new lab at Georgia, Docampo will continue to study the purification
of polyphosphate present in platelets and on the enzymes involved in
its metabolism.
Co-authors with Morrissey and Docampo on the PNAS paper were Peter Rohloff,
an Illinois M.D./Ph.D student who worked in Docampo’s former lab
in the U. of I. College of Veterinary
Medicine, Morrissey’s postdoctoral assistants Stephanie A.
Smith and Nicola J. Mutch, and Deepak Baskar, a graduate student in
Morrissey’s lab.
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