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Aspirin effects on platelet gene expression are associated with a paradoxical, increase in platelet function
Author(s) -
Myers Rachel A.,
Ortel Thomas L.,
Waldrop Alexander,
Dave Sandeep,
Ginsburg Geoffrey S.,
Voora Deepak
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
british journal of clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.216
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1365-2125
pISSN - 0306-5251
DOI - 10.1111/bcp.15127
Subject(s) - aspirin , platelet , platelet activation , pharmacology , transcriptome , medicine , biology , gene expression , gene , biochemistry
Aspirin has known effects beyond inhibiting platelet cyclooxygenase‐1 (COX‐1) that have been incompletely characterized. Transcriptomics can comprehensively characterize the on‐ and off‐target effects of medications. We used a systems pharmacogenomics approach of aspirin exposure in volunteers coupled with serial platelet function and purified platelet mRNA sequencing to test the hypothesis that aspirin's effects on the platelet transcriptome are associated with platelet function. We prospectively recruited 74 adult volunteers for a randomized crossover study of 81‐ vs . 325 mg/day, each for 4 weeks. Using mRNA sequencing of purified platelets collected before and after each 4‐week exposure, we identified 208 aspirin‐responsive genes with no evidence for dosage effects. In independent cohorts of healthy volunteers and patients with diabetes, we validated aspirin's effects on five genes: EIF2S3 , CHRNB1 , EPAS1 , SLC9A3R2 and HLA‐DRA . Functional characterization of the effects of aspirin on mRNA as well as platelet ribosomal RNA demonstrated that aspirin may act as an inhibitor of protein synthesis. Database searches for small molecules that mimicked the effects of aspirin on platelet gene expression in vitro identified aspirin but no other molecules that share aspirin's known mechanisms of action. The effects of aspirin on platelet mRNA were correlated with higher levels of platelet function both at baseline and after aspirin exposure—an effect that counteracts aspirin's known antiplatelet effect. In summary, this work collectively demonstrates a dose‐independent effect of aspirin on the platelet transcriptome that counteracts the well‐known antiplatelet effects of aspirin.

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