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Oxygen removal during pathogen inactivation with riboflavin and UV light preserves protein function in plasma for transfusion.

Authors :
Feys, H. B.
Aelst, B.
Devreese, K.
Devloo, R.
Coene, J.
Vandekerckhove, P.
Compernolle, V.
Source :
Vox Sanguinis. May2014, Vol. 106 Issue 4, p307-315. 9p. 6 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background and Objective Photochemical pathogen inactivation technologies ( PCT) for individual transfusion products act by inhibition of replication through irreversibly damaging nucleic acids. Concern on the collateral impact of PCT on the blood component's integrity has caused reluctance to introduce this technology in routine practice. This work aims to uncover the mechanism of damage to plasma constituents by riboflavin pathogen reduction technology ( RF- PRT). Methods Activity and antigen of plasma components were determined following RF- PRT in the presence or absence of dissolved molecular oxygen. Results Employing ADAMTS13 as a sentinel molecule in plasma, our data show that its activity and antigen are reduced by 23 ± 8% and 29 ± 9% ( n = 24), respectively, which corroborates with a mean decrease of 25% observed for other coagulation factors. Western blotting of ADAMTS13 shows decreased molecular integrity, with no obvious indication of additional proteolysis nor is riboflavin able to directly inhibit the enzyme. However, physical removal of dissolved oxygen prior to RF- PRT protects ADAMTS13 as well as FVIII and fibrinogen from damage, indicating a direct role for reactive oxygen species. Redox dye measurements indicate that superoxide anions are specifically generated during RF- PRT. Protein carbonyl content as a marker of disseminated irreversible biomolecular damage was significantly increased (3·1 ± 0·8 vs. 1·6 ± 0·5 nmol/mg protein) following RF- PRT, but not in the absence of dissolved molecular oxygen (1·8 ± 0·4 nmol/mg). Conclusions RF- PRT of single plasma units generates reactive oxygen species that adversely affect biomolecular integrity of relevant plasma constituents, a side-effect, which can be bypassed by applying hypoxic conditions during the pathogen inactivation process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00429007
Volume :
106
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Vox Sanguinis
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
95661960
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/vox.12106