Termination of bleeding by a specific, anticatalytic antibody against plasmin

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Abstract

Background: Excessive, plasmin-mediated fibrinolysis augments bleeding and contributes to death in some patients. Current therapies for fibrinolytic bleeding are limited by modest efficacy, low potency, and off-target effects. Objectives: To determine whether an antibody directed against unique loop structures of the plasmin protease domain may have enhanced specificity and potency for blocking plasmin activity, fibrinolysis, and experimental hemorrhage. Methods: The binding specificity, affinity, protease cross-reactivity and antifibrinolytic properties of a monoclonal plasmin inhibitor antibody (Pi) were examined and compared with those of epsilon aminocaproic acid (EACA), which is a clinically used fibrinolysis inhibitor. Results: Pi specifically recognized loop 5 of the protease domain, and did not bind to other serine proteases or nine other non-primate plasminogens. Pi was ~7 logs more potent in neutralizing plasmin cleavage of small-molecule substrates and >3 logs more potent in quenching fibrinolysis than EACA. Pi was similarly effective in blocking catalysis of a small-molecule substrate as α2-antiplasmin, which is the most potent covalent inhibitor of plasmin, and was a more potent fibrinolysis inhibitor. Fab or chimerized Fab fragments of Pi were equivalently effective. In vivo, in a humanized model of fibrinolytic surgical bleeding, Pi significantly reduced bleeding to a greater extent than a clinical dose of EACA. Conclusions: A mAb directed against unique loop sequences in the protease domain is a highly specific, potent, competitive plasmin inhibitor that significantly reduces experimental surgical bleeding in vivo.

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Zhao, T., Houng, A., & Reed, G. L. (2019). Termination of bleeding by a specific, anticatalytic antibody against plasmin. Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 17(9), 1461–1469. https://doi.org/10.1111/jth.14522

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