Abstract

Epidemiological studies indicate a high risk of stroke, heart failure and myocardial infarction in patients with multiple sclerosis, especially in its secondary progressive (SPMS) phase. Some ischaemic events are directly associated with abnormal platelet functions and their prothrombotic activity. Recent reports, including this study, confirm the increased activation of circulating platelets in SPMS, and also show increased platelet reactivity, among other responses, as well as strong aggregation. In this current study, we conducted a comparative analysis of the platelet proteome in SPMS patients and in healthy controls, to demonstrate the quantitative and qualitative differences likely to affect functional changes observed in SPMS. During densitometry evaluation of 2‐D fluorescence difference gel electrophoresis, we observed differences between the electrophoretic patterns of SPMS platelets and the control samples. To determine a detailed characterisation of the proteome changes in the SPMS patients’ blood platelets, in the next stage, we performed mass spectrometry of selected spots and indicated the increased presence of four proteins (fibrinogen, α‐2 macroglobulin, septin‐14 and tubulin β‐1 chain). The most important of these is the increased amount of prothrombotic protein, fibrinogen, which seems to confirm the accuracy of the imaging and potentially explains the increased risk of platelet‐origin thrombotic events. This study provides new knowledge of the potential existence of the molecular mechanisms responsible for the acceleration of the platelet pro‐coagulant function in SPMS. This can help to identify new targets for therapy, which can then be used not only in the second stage of the disease.

Highlights

  • Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an immune‐mediated, demyelinating dis‐ ease of the central nervous system (CNS)

  • The disease starts with a primary progressive stage (PPMS), which is characterized from the beginning by progres‐ sion without any remission states

  • After several years of the dis‐ ease's duration, when the axons have lost their ability to regenerate, in more than 80% of cases RRMS turns into a secondary progressive stage (SPMS), in which the patient suffers irreversible progressive disability

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Summary

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Michal Bijak1 | Alicja Olejnik2 | Bozena Rokita2 | Agnieszka Morel1 | Angela Dziedzic1 | Elzbieta Miller3,4 | Joanna Saluk‐Bijak[1]. Funding information Narodowe Centrum Nauki, Grant/Award Number: UMO-2016/21/B/NZ4/00543; University of Lodz, Grant/Award Number: 506/1136

| INTRODUCTION
| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
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