👤 Daniel Saarela

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3
Articles
3
Name variants
Also published as: Janna Saarela, Mika Saarela
articles
Hanna H Pitkänen, Mikko Haapio, Mika Saarela +3 more · 2024 · Transfusion and apheresis science : official journal of the World Apheresis Association : official journal of the European Society for Haemapheresis · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE), with solvent/detergent (S/D)-treated plasma as replacement fluid, is an extracorporeal blood purification technique with major impact on both coagulation and lipids. Show more
Therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE), with solvent/detergent (S/D)-treated plasma as replacement fluid, is an extracorporeal blood purification technique with major impact on both coagulation and lipids. Our previous in vitro study showed that S/D-plasma enhances thrombin generation by lowering intact protein S (PS) levels. To evaluate the impact of altered lipid balance on coagulation phenotype during heparin-anticoagulated TPE with S/D-plasma, and to investigate whether the lowered intact PS levels with concomitant procoagulant phenotype, are recapitulated in vivo. Coagulation biomarkers, thrombin generation with Calibrated Automated Thrombogram (CAT), and lipid levels were measured before and after the consecutive 1st, 3rd and 5th episodes of TPE performed to six patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome or myasthenia gravis. The effects of in vitro dilution of S/D-plasma on thrombin generation were explored with CAT to mimic TPE. Patients did not have coagulation disorders, except elevated FVIII. Intact PS, lipoproteins, especially LDL, Apolipoprotein CIII (ApoC3) and ApoB/ApoA1 ratio declined (p < 0.05). In contrast, VLDL and triglyceride levels stayed intact. CAT lag time shortened (p < 0.05). In vitro dilution of S/D plasma with co-transfused Ringer's lactate and 4% albumin partially reduced its procoagulant phenotype in CAT, which is mainly seen as peak thrombin, and modestly shortened lag time. After the five settings of TPE using S/D-plasma in vivo, which associated with heparinization and reduced coagulation factor activities, our observations of declining natural anticoagulant intact PS and apolipoproteins refer to rebalance of the hemostatic and lipid profiles. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.transci.2024.103918
APOC3
Daniel Saarela, Pawel Lis, Sara Gomes +23 more · 2024 · The Journal of clinical investigation · added 2026-04-24
Lysosomes are implicated in a wide spectrum of human diseases, including monogenic lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs), age-associated neurodegeneration, and cancer. Profiling lysosomal content using t Show more
Lysosomes are implicated in a wide spectrum of human diseases, including monogenic lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs), age-associated neurodegeneration, and cancer. Profiling lysosomal content using tag-based lysosomal immunoprecipitation (LysoTagIP) in cell and animal models has substantially moved the field forward, but studying lysosomal dysfunction in patients remains challenging. Here, we report the development of the 'tagless LysoIP' method, designed to enable the rapid enrichment of lysosomes, via immunoprecipitation, using the endogenous integral lysosomal membrane protein TMEM192, directly from clinical samples and human cell lines (e.g., induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons). Isolated lysosomes were intact and suitable for subsequent multimodal omics analyses. To validate our approach, we applied the tagless LysoIP to enrich lysosomes from peripheral blood mononuclear cells derived from fresh blood of healthy donors and patients with CLN3 disease, an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative LSD. Metabolic profiling of isolated lysosomes revealed massive accumulation of glycerophosphodiesters (GPDs) in patients' lysosomes. Interestingly, a patient with a milder phenotype and genotype displayed lower accumulation of lysosomal GPDs, consistent with their potential role as disease biomarkers. Altogether, the tagless LysoIP provides a framework to study native lysosomes from patient samples, identify disease biomarkers, and discover human-relevant disease mechanisms. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1172/JCI183592
CLN3
Anna H Hakonen, Anne Polvi, Carola Saloranta +7 more · 2019 · American journal of medical genetics. Part A · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Fetal akinesia deformation sequence (FADS) and lethal multiple pterygium syndrome (LMPS) are clinically overlapping syndromes manifesting with reduced or absent fetal movement, arthrogryposis, and sev Show more
Fetal akinesia deformation sequence (FADS) and lethal multiple pterygium syndrome (LMPS) are clinically overlapping syndromes manifesting with reduced or absent fetal movement, arthrogryposis, and several anomalies during fetal life. The etiology of these syndromes is heterogeneous, and in many cases it remains unknown. In order to determine the genetic etiology of FADS in two fetuses with fetal akinesia, arthrogryposis, edema, and partial cleft palate, we utilized exome sequencing. Our investigations revealed a homozygous nonsense variant [c.1116C>A, p.(Cys372Ter)] in the SLC18A3 gene, which encodes for the vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) responsible for active transport of acetylcholine in the neuromuscular junction. This is the first description of a nonsense variant in the SLC18A3 gene, as only missense variants and whole gene deletions have been previously identified in patients. The previously detected SLC18A3 defects have been associated with congenital myasthenic syndromes, and therefore our findings extend the clinical spectrum of SLC18A3 defects to severe prenatal phenotypes. Our findings suggest that nonsense variants in SLC18A3 cause a more severe phenotype than missense variants and are in line with previous studies showing a lethal phenotype in VAChT knockout mice. Our results underline the importance of including SLC18A3 sequencing in the differential diagnostics of fetuses with arthrogryposis, FADS, or LMPS of unknown etiology. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.61186
FADS1