Platelet Dysfunction During Mechanical Circulatory Support

Author:

Roka-Moiia Yana1ORCID,Miller-Gutierrez Samuel1ORCID,Palomares Daniel E.2,Italiano Joseph E.3ORCID,Sheriff Jawaad4ORCID,Bluestein Danny4ORCID,Slepian Marvin J.24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine (Y.R.-M., S.M.-G.), Sarver Heart Center, University of Arizona, Tucson.

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering (D.E.P., M.J.S.), Sarver Heart Center, University of Arizona, Tucson.

3. Brigham and Woman's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (J.E.I.).

4. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY (J.S., D.B., M.J.S.).

Abstract

Objective: Mechanical circulatory support has emerged as lifesaving therapy for patients with advanced heart failure. However, mechanical circulatory support remains limited by a paradoxical coagulopathy accompanied by both thrombosis and bleeding. While mechanisms of mechanical circulatory support thrombosis are increasingly defined, mechanical circulatory support-related bleeding, as related to shear-mediated alteration of platelet function, remains poorly understood. We tested the hypothesis that platelet exposure to elevated shear stress, while a defined prothrombotic activator of platelets, coordinately induces downregulation of key platelet adhesion receptors GPIb-IX-V, α IIb β 3 , and P-selectin, thus decreasing platelet functional responsiveness to physiological stimuli. Approach and Results: Human gel-filtered platelets were exposed to continuous or pulsatile shear stress in vitro. Surface expression of platelet receptors and platelet-derived microparticle generation were quantified by flow cytometry. Shedding of receptor soluble forms were assessed via ELISA, and platelet aggregation was measured by optical aggregometry. We demonstrate that platelet exposure to elevated shear stress led to a downregulation of GPIb and α IIb β 3 receptors on platelets with a progressive increase in the generation of platelet-derived microparticles expressing elevated levels of α IIb β 3 and GPIb on their surface. No shear-mediated shedding of GPIb and β 3 subunit soluble fragments was detected. Soluble P-selectin was extensively shed from platelets, while surface expression of P-selectin on platelets was not significantly altered by shear. Shear-mediated downregulation of GPIb and α IIb β 3 on platelets was associated with an evident decrease of platelet aggregatory response induced by ADP and TRAP 6 (thrombin receptor activating peptide 6). Conclusions: Our data clearly indicate that accumulation of shear stress, consistent with supraphysiologic conditions characterizing device-supported circulation (1) induces adequate platelet degranulation, yet (2) causes downregulation of primary platelet adhesion receptors via ejection of receptor-enriched platelet-derived microparticles, thus mechanistically limiting platelet activation and the aggregatory response.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Reference81 articles.

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