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Assessment of neonatal, cord, and adult platelet granule trafficking and secretion

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Version 2 2019-12-03, 00:17
Version 1 2019-02-27, 16:36
journal contribution
posted on 2019-12-03, 00:17 authored by Anh T. P. Ngo, Jawaad Sheriff, Anne D. Rocheleau, Matthew Bucher, Kendra R. Jones, Anna-Liisa I. Sepp, Lisa E. Malone, Amanda Zigomalas, Alina Maloyan, Wadie F. Bahou, Danny Bluestein, Owen J. T. McCarty, Kristina M. Haley

Despite the transient hyporeactivity of neonatal platelets, full-term neonates do not display a bleeding tendency, suggesting potential compensatory mechanisms which allow for balanced and efficient neonatal hemostasis. This study aimed to utilize small-volume, whole blood platelet functional assays to assess the neonatal platelet response downstream of the hemostatic platelet agonists thrombin and adenosine diphosphate (ADP). Thrombin activates platelets via the protease-activated receptors (PARs) 1 and 4, whereas ADP signals via the receptors P2Y1 and P2Y12 as a positive feedback mediator of platelet activation. We observed that neonatal and cord blood-derived platelets exhibited diminished PAR1-mediated granule secretion and integrin activation relative to adult platelets, correlating to reduced PAR1 expression by neonatal platelets. PAR4-mediated granule secretion was blunted in neonatal platelets, correlating to lower PAR4 expression as compared to adult platelets, while PAR4 mediated GPIIb/IIIa activation was similar between neonatal and adult platelets. Under high shear stress, cord blood-derived platelets yielded similar thrombin generation rates but reduced phosphatidylserine expression as compared to adult platelets. Interestingly, we observed enhanced P2Y1/P2Y12-mediated dense granule trafficking in neonatal platelets relative to adults, although P2Y1/P2Y12 expression in neonatal, cord, and adult platelets were similar, suggesting that neonatal platelets may employ an ADP-mediated positive feedback loop as a potential compensatory mechanism for neonatal platelet hyporeactivity.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: [grant numbers R01 HL119096-03, U01 HL131052-02, and R01HL101972].

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