A new method was studied for eliminating HLA class I antigens from the surface of platelets without damaging the cells. Platelets were exposed to an acid solution (pH 3.0) to eliminate the antigenicity of HLA class I antigens. The reduction in antigenicities of HLA class I common antigen and individual HLA class I antigens by acid treatment was marked. Patients' sera which contained multispecific HLA antibodies reacted with PBS-treated platelets, but not with acid-treated platelets. No changes were observed in the antigenicities of glycoprotein Ib or glycoprotein IIb/IIIa. The viability of acid-treated platelets was 83%. Ultrastructural investigations revealed no significant difference between the PBS-treated platelets and acid-treated platelets. The platelet function studies showed that the aggregation of acid-treated platelets induced by various agonists was only slightly reduced compared with PBS-treated platelets. We propose that acid-treated platelets are promising for clinical use in patients refractory to platelet transfusions and may be superior to chloroquine-treated platelets for analysis of the specificity of antiplatelet antibodies.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1423-0410.1989.tb00823.xDOI Listing

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