Adipose Triglyceride Lipase Deficiency Attenuates In Vitro Thrombus Formation without Affecting Platelet Activation and Bleeding In Vivo

Author:

Goeritzer MadeleineORCID,Schlager Stefanie,Kuentzel Katharina B.ORCID,Vujić NemanjaORCID,Korbelius MelanieORCID,Rainer Silvia,Kolb Dagmar,Mussbacher MarionORCID,Salzmann ManuelORCID,Schrottmaier Waltraud C.ORCID,Assinger AliceORCID,Schlagenhauf Axel,Madreiter-Sokolowski Corina T.ORCID,Blass Sandra,Eichmann Thomas O.ORCID,Graier Wolfgang F.ORCID,Kratky DagmarORCID

Abstract

According to genome-wide RNA sequencing data from human and mouse platelets, adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL), the main lipase catalyzing triglyceride (TG) hydrolysis in cytosolic lipid droplets (LD) at neutral pH, is expressed in platelets. Currently, it is elusive to whether common lipolytic enzymes are involved in the degradation of TG in platelets. Since the consequences of ATGL deficiency in platelets are unknown, we used whole-body and platelet-specific (plat)Atgl-deficient (−/−) mice to investigate the loss of ATGL on platelet function. Our results showed that platelets accumulate only a few LD due to lack of ATGL. Stimulation with platelet-activating agonists resulted in comparable platelet activation in Atgl−/−, platAtgl−/−, and wild-type mice. Measurement of mitochondrial respiration revealed a decreased oxygen consumption rate in platelets from Atgl−/− but not from platAtgl−/− mice. Of note, global loss of ATGL was associated with an anti-thrombogenic phenotype, which was evident by reduced thrombus formation in collagen-coated channels in vitro despite unchanged bleeding and occlusion times in vivo. We conclude that genetic deletion of ATGL affects collagen-induced thrombosis without pathological bleeding and platelet activation.

Funder

FWF Austrian Science Fund

Medical University of Graz

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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