Paula M. Jacobi
Medical College of Wisconsin
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Featured researches published by Paula M. Jacobi.
Nature Communications | 2013
Lily M. Du; Paquita Nurden; Alan T. Nurden; Timothy C. Nichols; Dwight A. Bellinger; Eric S. Jensen; Sandra L. Haberichter; Elizabeth P. Merricks; Robin A. Raymer; Juan Fang; Sevasti B. Koukouritaki; Paula M. Jacobi; Troy Hawkins; Kenneth Cornetta; Qizhen Shi; David A. Wilcox
It is essential to improve therapies for controlling excessive bleeding in patients with haemorrhagic disorders. As activated blood platelets mediate the primary response to vascular injury, we hypothesize that storage of coagulation Factor VIII within platelets may provide a locally inducible treatment to maintain haemostasis for haemophilia A. Here we show that haematopoietic stem cell gene therapy can prevent the occurrence of severe bleeding episodes in dogs with haemophilia A for at least 2.5 years after transplantation. We employ a clinically relevant strategy based on a lentiviral vector encoding the ITGA2B gene promoter, which drives platelet-specific expression of human FVIII permitting storage and release of FVIII from activated platelets. One animal receives a hybrid molecule of FVIII fused to the von Willebrand Factor propeptide-D2 domain that traffics FVIII more effectively into α-granules. The absence of inhibitory antibodies to platelet-derived FVIII indicates that this approach may have benefit in patients who reject FVIII replacement therapies. Thus, platelet FVIII may provide effective long-term control of bleeding in patients with haemophilia A.
Blood | 2012
Paula M. Jacobi; Joan Cox Gill; Veronica H. Flood; David Jakab; Kenneth D. Friedman; Sandra L. Haberichter
Type 2A VWD is characterized by the absence of large VWF multimers and decreased platelet-binding function. Historically, type 2A variants are subdivided into group 1, which have impaired assembly and secretion of VWF multimers, or group 2, which have normal secretion of VWF multimers and increased ADAMTS13 proteolysis. Type 2A VWD patients recruited through the T. S. Zimmerman Program for the Molecular and Clinical Biology of VWD study were characterized phenotypically and potential mutations identified in the VWF D2, D3, A1, and A2 domains. We examined type 2A variants and their interaction with WT-VWF through expression studies. We assessed secretion/intracellular retention, multimerization, regulated storage, and ADAMTS13 proteolysis. Whereas some variants fit into the traditional group 1 or 2 categories, others did not fall clearly into either category. We determined that loss of Weibel-Palade body formation is associated with markedly reduced secretion. Mutations involving cysteines were likely to cause abnormalities in multimer structure but not necessarily secretion. When coexpressed with wild-type VWF, type 2A variants negatively affected one or more mechanisms important for normal VWF processing. Type 2A VWD appears to result from a complex intersection of mechanisms that include: (1) intracellular retention or degradation of VWF, (2) defective multimerization, (3) loss of regulated storage, and (4) increased proteolysis by ADAMTS13.
Blood | 2015
Veronica H. Flood; Abraham C. Schlauderaff; Sandra L. Haberichter; Tricia L. Slobodianuk; Paula M. Jacobi; Daniel B. Bellissimo; Pamela A. Christopherson; Kenneth D. Friedman; Joan Cox Gill; Raymond G. Hoffmann; Robert R. Montgomery; Thomas C. Abshire; Amy L. Dunn; Carolyn M. Bennett; Jeanne M. Lusher; Madhvi Rajpurkar; Deborah Brown; A. Shapiro; Steven R. Lentz; Cindy Leissinger; Margaret V. Ragni; Jeffrey D. Hord; Marilyn J. Manco-Johnson; John J. Strouse; Anqi Ma; Leonard A. Valentino; Lisa N. Boggio; Anjali A. Sharathkumar; Ralph A. Gruppo; Bryce A. Kerlin
Von Willebrand factor (VWF) contains binding sites for platelets and for vascular collagens to facilitate clot formation at sites of injury. Although previous work has shown that VWF can bind type IV collagen (collagen 4), little characterization of this interaction has been performed. We examined the binding of VWF to collagen 4 in vitro and extended this characterization to a murine model of defective VWF-collagen 4 interactions. The interactions of VWF and collagen 4 were further studied using plasma samples from a large study of both healthy controls and subjects with different types of von Willebrand disease (VWD). Our results show that collagen 4 appears to bind VWF exclusively via the VWF A1 domain, and that specific sequence variations identified through VWF patient samples and through site-directed mutagenesis in the VWF A1 domain can decrease or abrogate this interaction. In addition, VWF-dependent platelet binding to collagen 4 under flow conditions requires an intact VWF A1 domain. We observed that decreased binding to collagen 4 was associated with select VWF A1 domain sequence variations in type 1 and type 2M VWD. This suggests an additional mechanism through which VWF variants may alter hemostasis.
Clinical Chemistry | 2013
Veronica H. Flood; Joan Cox Gill; Kenneth D. Friedman; Pamela A. Christopherson; Paula M. Jacobi; Raymond G. Hoffmann; Robert R. Montgomery; Sandra L. Haberichter
BACKGROUND von Willebrand factor (VWF) is a multimeric protein that binds platelets and collagen, facilitating hemostasis at sites of vessel injury. Measurement of VWF multimer distribution is critical for diagnosis of variant von Willebrand disease (VWD), particularly types 2A and 2B, but the typical measurement by gel electrophoresis is technically difficult and time-consuming. A comparison of VWF collagen binding (VWF:CB) and VWF multimer distribution was performed to evaluate the utility of VWF:CB as a diagnostic test. METHODS Participants were enrolled in the Zimmerman Program for the Molecular and Clinical Biology of VWD. VWF:CB was analyzed with type III collagen and multimer distribution by agarose gel electrophoresis. The study population included 146 healthy controls, 351 individuals with type 1 VWD, and 77 with type 2 VWD. Differences between individuals with multimer group results within (controls) and outside the reference intervals were assessed with Mann-Whitney tests. RESULTS The mean VWF:CB/VWF antigen ratio was 1.10 for individuals with multimer distribution within the reference intervals and 0.51 for those with multimer distribution outside the reference intervals (P < 0.001). Sensitivity of VWF:CB for multimer abnormalities was 100% for healthy controls, 99% for patients with type 1, and 100% for patients with type 2A and type 2B VWD using a VWF:CB/VWF antigen cutoff ratio of 0.6, and decreased to 99% for all patients with a ratio of 0.7. With the exception of individuals with novel or unclassified mutations, the VWF:CB was able to correctly categorize participants with variant VWD. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that VWF:CB may substitute for multimer distribution in initial VWD testing, although further studies are needed to validate the clinical utility of VWF:CB.
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2012
Giancarlo Castaman; S. H. Giacomelli; Paula M. Jacobi; Tobias Obser; Ulrich Budde; F. Rodeghiero; Reinhard Schneppenheim; Sandra L. Haberichter
Background: von Willebrand disease (VWD) is caused by mutations in von Willebrand factor (VWF) that have different pathophysiologic effect in causing low plasma VWF levels. Type 1 VWD includes quantitative plasma VWF deficiency with normal VWF structure and function.
Blood | 2015
Junmei Chen; Jesse Hinckley; Sandra L. Haberichter; Paula M. Jacobi; Robert R. Montgomery; Veronica H. Flood; Randall Wong; Gianluca Interlandi; Dominic W. Chung; José A. López; Jorge Di Paola
Von Willebrand disease (VWD) is an inherited bleeding disorder characterized by incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity. We evaluated a 24-member pedigree with VWD type 2 caused by a T>G mutation at position 3911 that predicts a methionine to arginine (M1304R) change in the platelet-binding A1 domain of von Willebrand factor (VWF). This mutation manifests as an autosomal-dominant trait, with clinical and biochemical phenotypic variability among affected individuals, including differences in bleeding tendency and VWF quantity, activity, and multimer pattern. Sequencing of all VWF coding regions in 3 affected individuals did not identify additional mutations. When expressed in heterologous cells, M1304R was secreted in lower quantities, failed to drive formation of storage granules, and was defective in multimerization and platelet binding. When cotransfected in equal quantities with the wild-type complementary DNA, the mutant complementary DNA depressed VWF secretion, although multimerization was only mildly affected. A llama nanobody (AU/VWFa-11) that detects the mutant A1 domain demonstrated highly variable binding to VWF from different affected members, indicating that the VWF contained different percentages of mutant monomers in different individuals. Thus, the observed variability in VWD phenotypes could in part be determined by the extent of mutant monomer incorporation in the final multimer structure of plasma VWF.
Blood | 2003
Sandra L. Haberichter; Paula M. Jacobi; Robert R. Montgomery
Thrombosis Research | 2016
Tara C White-Adams; Christopher J. Ng; Paula M. Jacobi; Sandra L. Haberichter; Jorge Di Paola
Blood | 2009
Lily M. Du; Timothy C. Nichols; Sandra L. Haberichter; Paula M. Jacobi; Eric S. Jensen; Juan Fang; Qizhen Shi; Robert R. Montgomery; David A. Wilcox
Blood | 2011
Sandra L. Haberichter; Paula M. Jacobi; Veronica H. Flood; Pamela A. Christopherson; Joan Cox Gill; Daniel B. Bellissimo; Kenneth D. Friedman