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Alloantibody developed in a factor XIII A subunit deficient patient during substitution therapy; characterization of the antibody
Author(s) -
Pénzes K.,
Vezina C.,
Bereczky Z.,
Katona É.,
Kun M.,
Muszbek L.,
Rivard G. E.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
haemophilia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.213
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1365-2516
pISSN - 1351-8216
DOI - 10.1111/hae.12786
Subject(s) - medicine , antibody , substitution (logic) , substitution therapy , protein subunit , characterization (materials science) , immunology , biochemistry , nanotechnology , materials science , computer science , programming language , chemistry , gene
In factor XIII A subunit ( FXIII A) deficiency, the development of alloantibodies is extremely rare. Only four reports have been published and the antibodies were not characterized. Aim The aim of this study was to describe the clinical course and the laboratory diagnosis of a FXIII ‐A deficient patient who developed alloantibodies. Methods FXIII activity was assessed with an ammonia release assay. FXIII ‐A, FXIII B subunit ( FXIII ‐B) and the complex plasma FXIII ( FXIII ‐A 2 B 2 ) antigens were determined by ELISA . The causative mutation was detected by fluorescent DNA sequencing. The binding of alloantibody to FXIII ‐A 2 and FXIII ‐A 2 B 2 was studied by surface plasmon resonance. The cleavage of FXIII ‐A by thrombin and Ca 2+ ‐induced activation of thrombin‐cleaved FXIII were followed by western blotting and activity measurement, respectively. Results FXIII activity, FXIII ‐A 2 B 2 and FXIII ‐A antigens were below the limit of detection in the patient's plasma. The severe FXIII ‐A deficiency was due to a novel homozygous mutation resulting in early stop codon (c.127C>T, p.Gln42 STOP ). The alloantibody bound to FXIII ‐A 2 and FXIII ‐A 2 B 2 with equally high affinity ( K d ~10 −8 ). It accelerated the elimination of administered FXIII concentrate from the circulation, interfered with thrombin and Ca 2+ ‐induced activation and inhibited FXIII activity. Attempts to eliminate the alloantibody resulted only in transient improvement. Patient developed intracerebral haemorrhage after a minor trauma and died in spite of aggressive replacement therapy with F XIII concentrate. Conclusion The anti‐ FXIII ‐A alloantibody caused an unmanageable bleeding complication. The antibody was of combined subtype which accelerated the elimination of FXIII and exerted a multiple inhibitory effect on FXIII activation/activity.