1. Introduction
Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are widely used drugs as a targeted strategy for cancer treatment with the aim of prolonging progression-free survival. Deregulated tyrosine kinase activity of the BCR-ABL oncoprotein is the biochemical hallmark of Philadelphia chromosome-positive (Ph+) hematological malignancies. Currently, several generations of BCR-ABL TKIs are in clinical use for treatment of these malignancies. Introduction of the second-generation TKIs, nilotinib and dasatinib as first-line treatment resulted in rapid and deep reduction of BCR/ABL1 allele transcripts, and this provided a possibility for long-term survival in CML [
1,
2]. In addition to CML, several other patient populations were identified that undoubtedly benefited from TKI treatment. Patients with Ph+ adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) may also benefit from an alternate TKI therapy [
3]. In the treatment of pediatric patients with Ph+ ALL the addition of TKIs to conventional chemotherapy has improved outcomes of patients [
4]. It has long been known that second-generation TKIs may have side effects as nilotinib can potentiate a prothrombotic state [
5] while dasatinib is known to cause platelet dysfunction e.g. impaired collagen-induced platelet adhesion and aggregation [
6,
7]. Although both drugs bind to the ATP binding site of the kinase domain of the BCR/ABL protein they have different off target inhibitory effect on several other tyrosine kinases. Dasatinib is a potent multikinase inhibitor, including c-KIT, EPHA2, platelet-derived growth factor receptor-β, and SFKs. Nilotinib is also a second generation TKI with a broad inhibitory spectrum of various tyrosine kinases (PDGFR, c-KIT, ARG, EPHB4), but it does not inhibit SFKs [
8]. Previous in vitro and ex vivo studies with dasatinib have demonstrated a faulty platelet aggregation. On the contrary nilotinib has no effect on platelet aggregation, at all. Therefore, we used nilotinib as a negative control in our experiments.
Sarcoma family kinases (SFKs) are critical regulators of platelet signaling and activation. These kinases play a central role in mediating rapid response of platelets to vascular injury. They transmit activation signals from several various platelet receptors. There are numerous members of this group and among the SFKs Lyn, Fyn, and Src have been implicated in activation of the GPVI receptor and the integrin receptor signaling and are frequently studied proteins as they are present in both human and mouse platelets [
9]. TKIs have a different off-target multikinase inhibitory effect. Comprehensive drug-protein interaction profiles were described [
10] to predict the potential side effects of BCR-ABL TKIs. It was found that the most prominent dasatinib-targeted SFKs are Lyn, Fyn, and Src, kinases and their negative regulator C-terminal Src kinase (Csk), but nilotinib does not bind to these kinases. During vascular injury it is primarily the subendothelial collagen that activates platelets and result in subsequent platelet aggregation. A population of the collagen-adhered platelets responds by surface exposure of the procoagulant phosphatidylserine (PS). This surface expressed PS facilitates the binding of coagulation factors and by this promotes thrombin generation [
11]. In addition, platelets participate in fibrin formation and regulate the process of clot retraction [
12].
We intended to investigate whether dasatinib also affects the platelet procoagulant activity and thereby coagulation. For this reason, we examined the in vitro and ex vivo effects of dasatinib on platelet procoagulant response in dasatinib treated platelets of healthy volunteers and in samples derived from CML patients on dasatinib therapy. We found that at therapeutic concentration dasatainib, but not nilotinib, has a strong inhibitory effect on platelet procoagulant activity and on clot retraction both in non activated as well as in convulxin activated platelets.
3. Discussion
The two investigated drugs in this study, although both belong to the second-generation of the TKIs, exert their off-target effect differently. Dasatinib is a Type I while Nilotinib is a Type II inhibitor. Type I inhibitors bind at the ATP-binding pocket, which is highly conserved across the human kinome, and to achieve greater selectivity than ATP, Type I inhibitors typically not only occupy the space where the ATP adenine group binds but also extends into different proximal regions. Type II inhibitors bind not only to the ATP adenine group area but also into the allosteric pocket with the benzamide substituent. Since the ATP-binding site on diverse kinases in the human body is structurally conserved, it is expected that these compounds may have unintended inhibitory actions at nontarget kinases. Indeed, several lines of evidence suggest that multi-target TKIs can have a wide range of side effects. Nilotinib activates the endothelium and platelets in vitro and in vivo and moreover potentiates platelet adhesion and thrombus formation [
5], thus may elicit prothrombotic or atherogenic effects [
13,
14]. Contrary to nilotinib, dasatinib was shown to elicit hemorrhagic adverse events in CML patients [
15,
16]. In vitro and ex vivo studies demonstrated its effect on primary hemostasis. Dasatinib reversibly inhibits collagen-induced platelet adhesion, activation, and aggregation, and these are mediated by inhibition of the Src kinase [
6]. Similarly to these findings, in our previous study we could observe an inhibitory effect of dasatinib on collagen-induced platelet aggregation and ATP secretion in in vitro experiments and ex vivo samples as well [
17].
Platelets, upon activation by various agonists, are known to form populations with different surface properties. These populations of activated platelets also have different functions depending on their activation state and surface properties. One population of stimulated platelets shows high level of activated integrin αIIbβ3 to which fibrinogen can bind and this results in platelet–platelet and platelet–leukocyte aggregation and clot-retraction. Another population exposes surface PS, and these cells are described as procoagulant platelets. The formation of PS-exposing platelets is linked to a prolonged, high cytosolic Ca2+ level that is required for swelling and phospholipid scrambling. In addition, these platelets are characterized by a calpain-mediated inactivation of the αIIbβ3 integrin and thus can not participate in clot retraction. Thus, there are major differences between aggregatory and procoagulant platelets.
Procoagulant platelets contribute to fibrin formation, which is initially linked to PS exposure and secondarily depend on integrin αIIbβ3 activation and transglutaminase-dependent fibrin cross-linking. Fibrin is preferentially localized near the sites of tissue factor and on procoagulant platelets. The procoagulant platelets are deposited on the thrombus surface during the contraction process that can be crucial for the spatial control of thrombin generation and fibrin formation [
18]. Coated-platelets are a subpopulation of thrombocytes formed after stimulation with collagen plus thrombin also express PS and possess procoagulant properties [
11,
19]. In platelets, signaling via the GPVI receptor is a major pathway for the formation of procoagulant platelets [
20].
In the present study, we demonstrate for the first time the effects of second-generation TKIs on the procoagulant activity of platelets. In our in vitro experiments, we used the clinically relevant concentrations of TKIs [
21]. The results of the in vitro experiments clearly showed that at the higher end of the therapeutic range, dasatinib markedly reduced the convulxin-induced activation response of isolated platelets, including PS exposure, thrombin formation, integrin activation and subsequent clot retraction. The inhibitory effect on PS exposure and PAC1 expression was also evident in non activated platelets. Furthermore, in the ex vivo study carried out in CML patients at 1 h after dasatinib ingestion, the inhibitory effect of dasatinib on procoagulant properties of platelets was also already observed in both activated and non-activated samples.
When platelets were activated via the GPVI receptor after dasatinib pretreatment, the effect of convulxin was completely abolished in the PS dependent tests, and integrin activation and the clot-retraction were also attenuated. Nilotinib had no effect on the procoagulant activity of platelets neither in the in vitro nor in the ex vivo experiments. This is in line with results of our previous work where we found that therapeutic concentration of dasatinib reduced the coated-platelet generation, and nilotinib had no effect [
17]. The inhibitory effect of dasatinib is not limited to the above activation markers; it also abolishes the alpha granule excretion in platelets that can be monitored by surface P-selectin expression (
Figure S1).
Dasatinib can target SFKs, namely Lyn, Fyn, and Src kinases that are all critical regulators of platelet signaling and activation. The activity of SFK is regulated through the phosphorylation of conserved tyrosine residues in the C-terminal tail that inhibits SFK activity and in the activation loop that maximally active SFK.
Therefore, we studied the phoshorylation status of Lyn, Fyn, and Src at both regulatory sites in platelets of dasatinib or nilotinib treated CML patients. From our results, we concluded that dasatinib but not nilotinib inhibits both the maximally active and inactive form of these kinases. This observation is in accordance with results of the activity-based kinase profiling where dasatinib was found to inhibit nearly twice as much kinases than nilotinib [
22]. The striking difference between the effect of dasatinib and nilotinib on platelet procoagulant activity suggests that the major effect of dasatinib may be mediated by SFK inhibition.
However, from these data, it cannot be concluded that dasatinib directly exerts its inhibitory effect on platelet procoagulant activity through inhibition of SFKs. Therefore, we examined the phosphorylation status of SFKs in dasatinib pretreated and convulxin activated platelets. In agreement with previous reports, we found a decreased phosphorylation level in both the C-terminal tail and the activation loop of SFKs [
23,
24] in platelets that were not pretreated with TKI but were activated by convulxin. In addition, we observed that already at the low end of the therapeutic concentration dasatinib (10 nM) considerably inhibited both form of SFKs in non activated platelets while at the high end (100 nM) of the dasatinib therapeutic range SFKs were totally inhibited. In line with previous changes, when platelets were pretreated with 10 nM dasatinib before activation, convulxin was able to exert its effect on both forms of SFKs, but 100 nM dasatinib completely abolished this effect. These effects were the same as we observed for PS expression in the in vitro experiments.
It has long been observed that dasatinib treatment may lead to bleeding symptoms in CML, which may be due to various reasons. On the one hand, dasatinib treatment may be associated with mild thrombocytopenia and an increased risk of bleeding [
25]. We could not observe any clinical bleeding symptoms in our dasatinib treated patients and only 1 out of 5 was thrombocytopenic that further decreased by 29% upon dasatinib intake. On the other hand, dasatinib may cause platelet dysfunction but no association was found between bleeding symptoms and the impaired platelet function, and it was concluded that the occurrence of bleeding cannot be predicted by in vitro platelet aggregation tests [
26]. In addition, dasatinib may exert an effect on other elements in the circulation that can considerably modify the side effects in dasatinib-treated CML patients. Dasatinib triggers a transient increase in vascular leakage that probably contributes to adverse effects such as bleeding diathesis. The side effect of dasatinib on the induction of eryptosis in human erythrocytes should not be neglected. Eryptosis is characterized by cell shrinkage, PS externalization and loss of membrane integrity. Eryptosis might promote blood coagulation through PS externalization. The effect of dasatinib on circulation is complex, and the clinical outcome of bleeding might depend on which effect is ore pronounced, e.g, inhibition or promotion of PS expression on different types of cells [
27,
28].
In summary, our work demonstrates a novel off-target effect of dasatinib on platelet function and describes the mechanisms that may lead to the observed phenomena. Our results are in accordance with conclusions of previous studies since although significant platelet function impairment was also evident in patients, this did not translate into any clinically significant bleeding. Dasatinib treatment results in a strong inhibition of GPVI receptor agonist-induced platelet procoagulant activity in vitro and in CML patients, and this effect may contribute to hemorrhagic consequences of dasatinib treated patients with endothelial disruption or damage when GPVI activating agonists like subendothelial collagen is exposed.
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Materials
Dasatinib and nilotinib for in vitro experiments were from Cayman Chemical (Ann Arbor, MI, USA). The following directly conjugated monoclonal antibodies were purchased from Becton Dickinson (San Jose, CA, USA): annexin V-FITC, CD41a-PECy5, CD42a-FITC, CD62P-PE, PAC1-FITC. CD41-PE was from DAKO (Glostrup, Denmark). Dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), Sepharose CL-2B, anti-actin and biotin conjugated anti-rabbit IgG were from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA) and convulxin were from Pentapharm (Basel, Switzerland). For western blot we used the following polyclonal antibodies: p-Fyn Y530, p-Lyn Y396, p-Src Y529, and p-Src Y418 (Thermo Fischer Scientific, Rockford, IL, USA); p-Fyn Y416 and p-Lyn Y507 Biorbyt (San Francisco, CA, USA); and Cell Signaling Technology (Leiden, The Netherlands), respectively. Avidin-biotin complex kit was from Vector Laboratories (Burlingame, CA, USA), and ECL reagent was used from Millipore (Billerica, MA, USA).
4.2. Blood Drawing from Healthy Volunteers and Patients
Peripheral blood samples were drawn from five healthy volunteers into tubes containing 0.105 M sodium citrate.
Healthy volunteers were recruited from the staff of the Department of Laboratory Medicine. Patients with chronic phase CML on dasatinib (n = 5) or nilotinib (n = 5) therapy were included in the ex vivo study. All dasatinib treated patients were taking 100 mg QD, and nilotinib treated patients were on 400 mg BID. Patient’s blood was drawn immediately before and 1 h after witnessed drug administration. Subjects were recruited from the Hematology Outpatient Clinic at the Institute of Internal Medicine University of Debrecen. Antiplatelet therapy, if any, was suspended 7 days prior to examination. At the time the samples were taken, all CML patients were on continuous dasatinib/nilotinib treatment for at least 4 weeks. Informed consent was obtained from all participants (CML patients and healthy volunteers) in accordance with the local institution review board guidelines. Ethical agreements were provided by the local ethical committee of the University of Debrecen (identification code: RKEB/IKEB 4875-2017, approval date: September 25, 2017).
4.3. Preparation of Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) and Design of in Vitro and ex Vivo Study
PRP was prepared from whole blood by centrifugation at 170× g for 15 min at room temperature (RT). Platelet count of PRP was adjusted to 250 G/L by adding platelet poor plasma (PPP). PPP was obtained by centrifugation of the citrated blood sample at 1500× g for 15 min at RT.
PRPs from healthy volunteers were used for in vitro experiments of dasatinib/nilotinib effects; the following PRP samples were prepared: (i) non activated, (ii) dasatinib or nilotinib pretreated non activated, (iii) convulxin activated, and (iv) dasatinib or nilotinib pretreated and convulxin activated. For pretreatment dasatinib was used at 10 and 100 nM while nilotinib was used at 5000 nM final concentration for 10 min at 37 °C. Pretreated platelets were activated by GPVI agonist convulxin at 12.5 ng/mL final concentration for 15 min at 37 °C without stirring.
In the ex vivo study PRPs of dasatinib or nilotinib, treated CML patients were activated with convulxin at 12.5 ng/mL final concentration for 15 min at 37 °C without stirring thus, (i) non activated and (ii) convulxin activated samples were created.
4.4. Flow Cytometric Assays
Platelet PS expression was determined by annexin V binding to platelet surface using FITC-conjugated annexin V and for platelet identification PE-conjugated CD41 monoclonal antibody was used. Five microliter of PRP was stained with 5 µL of annexin V-FITC and 5 µL of CD41-PE in 35 µL annexin V binding buffer (it provides calcium for binding of annexin V), and the mixture was incubated for 15 min at RT in the dark. Active conformation of the integrin αIIbβ3 was determined by binding of FITC-conjugated PAC1 and PECy5-conjugated CD41a antibodies.
Samples were diluted to 550 µL with buffer and measured immediately after staining by an FC500 flow cytometer, and results were analyzed with the Kaluza software (Beckman Coulter, Brea, CA, USA). P-selectin expression was determined by using PE-conjugated CD62 and CD42a-FITC antibodies. Convulxin activated or non activated platelets of dasatinib/nilotinib treated CML patients were fixed by paraformaldehyde and stained by above mentioned monoclonal antibodies.
4.5. Thrombin Generation Assay
Thrombin generation was measured in PRP using Fluoroskan Ascent FL fluorimeter with Thrombinoscope reagents and software (Thrombinoscope BV, Maastricht, The Netherlands). Assays were carried out according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Into wells of a black plate, 80 µL of pretreated PRP and 20 µL of standard preparation containing 1 pM recombinant tissue factor (PRP reagent)/ Thrombin calibrator were pipetted, and after incubation for 10 min at 37 °C, the thrombin generation was started by adding 20 µL of FluCa (fluorogenic substrate and calcium in buffer). Fluorescence was detected and the thrombin generation curve was generated. The kinetics of thrombin generation was characterized by lagtime, time to peak, while the quantity of generated thrombin was described by thrombin peak end endogenous thrombin potential (ETP).
4.6. Clot Retraction
In the in vitro experiments, 900 μL of PRP was preincubated with 100 μL of buffer control or different concentrations of dasatinib or nilotinib for 10 min at 37 °C in a water bath and subsequently was activated by convulxin for 15 min at 37 °C. In a glass tube, 1000 μL of TKI-pretreated and activated PRPs from an in vitro experiment, and similarly to this, 1000 μL PRPs from dasatinib/nilotinib treated CML patients were incubated with 100 μL of 250 mM CaCl2 (at a final concentration of 22.7 mM) for 60 min at 37 °C in a water bath. At the end of incubation, photos were taken to document clot formation and the volume of the extruded serum was determined.
4.7. Western Blot Analysis
Platelets of dasatinib or nilotinib treated CML patients were purified by gel filtration [
17] that was performed on Sepharose CL-2B column. In the in vitro experiments, control platelets were first gel filtrated and then were pretreated by dasatinib/nilotinib and subsequently activated by convulxin.
Gel filtrated platelets (4 × 107 from each sample) were lysed with lysis buffer containing 1% TritonX-100 in PBS supplemented with a cocktail of tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor from Sigma (St. Louis, MO, USA). Platelet lysates were separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and subjected to western blotting. Specific phosphorylation of Lyn, Fyn, and Src kinases were visualized, using phosphospecific antibodies (Ab) and biotinylated secondary Ab followed by avidin-biotin complex for 30 min. Bands were demonstrated by enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL).
4.8. Statistical Analysis
GraphPad Prism version 4.0 program was used for the statistical analysis. Data distribution was evaluated by Kolmogorov–Smirnov test. The statistical significance of the differences between groups of in vitro experiment was analyzed by one-way ANOVA in case of Gaussian distribution, and by Kruskal–Wallis test in case of non-Gaussian distribution, as appropriate. The statistical significance of the differences between before (0 h) and 1 h after drug administration groups of CML patients was analyzed by paired Student’s t-test in case of Gaussian distribution and by Wilcoxon rank test in case of non-Gaussian distribution. Differences were considered significant when p values were below 0.05.