Neutrophil Structural and Functional Alterations After High Mechanical Shear Stress Exposure

Author:

Arias Katherin12ORCID,Sun Wenji2,Han Dong2,Griffith Bartley P.2,Wu Zhongjun J.12

Affiliation:

1. Fischell Department of Bioengineering, A. James Clark School of Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland

2. Department of Surgery, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.

Abstract

Patients on mechanical circulatory support are prone to infections, increasing morbidity and mortality. These circulatory support devices generate high mechanical shear stress (HMSS) that can causes trauma to blood. When leukocytes become damaged, their immune response function may be impaired or weakened, leading to increased infection vulnerability. This study examined neutrophil structural and functional alterations after exposure to 75, 125, and 175 Pa HMSS for 1 second. Human blood was exposed to three levels of HMSS using a blood shearing device. Neutrophil morphological alteration was characterized by examining blood smears. Flow cytometry assays were used to analyze expression levels of CD62L and CD162 receptors, activation level (CD11b), and aggregation (platelet-neutrophil aggregates). Neutrophil phagocytosis and rolling were examined via functional assays. The results show neutrophil structure (morphology and surface receptors) and function (activation, aggregation, phagocytosis, rolling) were significantly altered after HMSS exposure. These alterations include cell membrane damage, loss of surface receptors (CD62L and CD162), initiation of activation and aggregation, upregulation of phagocytic ability and increased rolling speed. The alterations were the most severe after 175 Pa exposure. HMSS caused damage and activation of neutrophils, potentially impairing normal neutrophil function, leading to weakened immune defense and increasing a patient’s vulnerability to infections.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,General Medicine,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biophysics

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