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Preparation of Cryoprecipitate and Cryo-depleted Plasma for Proteomic Research Analysis.

Rosemary L SparrowRichard J SimpsonDavid W Greening
Published in: Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) (2023)
When frozen plasma is slowly thawed in cold conditions (1-6 °C), high-molecular-weight plasma proteins precipitate forming a concentrate known as cryoprecipitate. The concentrate is enriched with several important coagulation proteins, including fibrinogen, antihemophilic factor (factor VIII), von Willebrand factor, fibrin stabilizing factor (factor XIII), fibronectin, and small amounts of other plasma proteins. In current medical practice, clinical-grade preparations of cryoprecipitate are used mostly to correct fibrinogen deficiency caused by acute blood loss or due to functional abnormalities of the fibrinogen protein. In the past, cryoprecipitate was used to treat von Willebrand disease and hemophilia A (factor VIII deficiency), but the availability of more highly purified coagulation factor concentrates or recombinant protein preparations has superseded the use of cryoprecipitate for these coagulopathies. Cryo-depleted plasma (also called cryosupernatant) is the plasma supernatant remaining following removal of the cryoprecipitate from frozen-thawed plasma and contains all the remaining soluble plasma proteins. This protocol describes the research-scale preparation of cryoprecipitate and cryo-depleted plasma suitable for proteomic studies and is based on the procedures used to prepare clinical-grade cryoprecipitate.
Keyphrases
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  • simultaneous determination
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