Abstract
AbstractInterrogating small platelets and their densely packed, highly abundant receptor landscape is key to understand platelet clotting, a process that can save lives when stopping blood loss after an injury, but also kill when causing heart attack, stroke or pulmonary embolism. The underlying key receptor distributions and interactions, in particular the relevance of integrin clustering, are not fully understood is because of highly abundant and densely distributed GPIIb/IIIa receptors. This makes receptor distributions difficult to assess even by super-resolution fluorescence microscopy. Here, we combine dual-color expansion and confocal microscopy with colocalization analysis to assess platelet receptor organization without the need of a super-resolution microscope. We show that 4x expansion is highly straight-forward for super-resolution microscopy of platelets, while 10x expansion provides higher precision at the price of increased efforts in sample preparation and imaging. Quantifying various receptor colocalization scenarios we demonstrate that expansion microscopy can pinpoint receptor distributions and interactions in resting and activated platelets being superior to conventional methods that fail in such dense 3D scenarios with highly abundant receptors. We reveal the presence of GPIIb/IIIa clusters in resting platelets, which are not affected by platelet activation indicating that they contribute to the rapid platelet response during platelet clotting.Graphical Abstract
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory