1. Long-term mTOR inhibitors administration evokes altered calcium homeostasis and platelet dysfunction in kidney transplant patients.
- Author
-
López E, Berna-Erro A, Bermejo N, Brull JM, Martinez R, Garcia Pino G, Alvarado R, Salido GM, Rosado JA, Cubero JJ, and Redondo PC
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Blood Platelets drug effects, Demography, Enzyme Activation drug effects, Everolimus, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Phosphorylation drug effects, Platelet Aggregation drug effects, Signal Transduction drug effects, Sirolimus administration & dosage, Sirolimus analogs & derivatives, Sirolimus pharmacology, TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases metabolism, Time Factors, Blood Platelets pathology, Calcium metabolism, Homeostasis drug effects, Kidney Transplantation, Protein Kinase Inhibitors administration & dosage, Protein Kinase Inhibitors pharmacology, TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
The use of the mammal target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitors has been consolidated as the therapy of election for preventing graft rejection in kidney transplant patients, despite their immunosuppressive activity is less strong than anti-calcineurin agents like tacrolimus and cyclosporine A. Furthermore, as mTOR is widely expressed, rapamycin (a macrolide antibiotic produced by Streptomyces hygroscopicus) is recommended in patients presenting neoplasia due to its antiproliferative actions. Hence, we have investigated whether rapamycin presents side effects in the physiology of other cell types different from leucocytes, such as platelets. Blood samples were drawn from healthy volunteers and kidney transplant patients long-term medicated with rapamycin: sirolimus and everolimus. Platelets were either loaded with fura-2 or directly stimulated, and immunoassayed or fixed with Laemmli's buffer to perform the subsequent analysis of platelet physiology. Our results indicate that rapamycin evokes a biphasic time-dependent alteration in calcium homeostasis and function in platelets from kidney transplant patients under rapamycin regime, as demonstrated by the reduction in granule secretion observed and subsequent impairment of platelet aggregation in these patients compared with healthy volunteers. Platelet count was also reduced in these patients, thus 41% of patients presented thrombocytopenia. All together our results show that long-term administration of rapamycin to kidney transplant patients evokes alteration in platelet function., (© 2013 The Authors. Published by Foundation for Cellular and Molecular Medicine/Blackwell Publishing Ltd.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF