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Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity

Coagulopathy often develops soon after acute traumatic brain injury and its cause remains poorly understood. We have shown that injured brains release cellular microvesicles that disrupt the endothelial barrier and induce consumptive coagulopathy. Morphologically intact extracellular mitochondria ac...

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Autores principales: Zhao, Zilong, Zhou, Yuan, Hilton, Tristan, Li, Fanjian, Han, Cha, Liu, Li, Yuan, Hengjie, Li, Ying, Xu, Xin, Wu, Xiaoping, Zhang, Fangyi, Thiagarajan, Perumal, Cap, Andrew, Shi, Fu-Dong, Zhang, Jianning, Dong, Jing-fei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ferrata Storti Foundation 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6939511/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30975909
http://dx.doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2018.214932
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author Zhao, Zilong
Zhou, Yuan
Hilton, Tristan
Li, Fanjian
Han, Cha
Liu, Li
Yuan, Hengjie
Li, Ying
Xu, Xin
Wu, Xiaoping
Zhang, Fangyi
Thiagarajan, Perumal
Cap, Andrew
Shi, Fu-Dong
Zhang, Jianning
Dong, Jing-fei
author_facet Zhao, Zilong
Zhou, Yuan
Hilton, Tristan
Li, Fanjian
Han, Cha
Liu, Li
Yuan, Hengjie
Li, Ying
Xu, Xin
Wu, Xiaoping
Zhang, Fangyi
Thiagarajan, Perumal
Cap, Andrew
Shi, Fu-Dong
Zhang, Jianning
Dong, Jing-fei
author_sort Zhao, Zilong
collection PubMed
description Coagulopathy often develops soon after acute traumatic brain injury and its cause remains poorly understood. We have shown that injured brains release cellular microvesicles that disrupt the endothelial barrier and induce consumptive coagulopathy. Morphologically intact extracellular mitochondria accounted for 55.2% of these microvesicles, leading to the hypothesis that these extracellular mitochondria are metabolically active and serve as a source of oxidative stress that activates platelets and renders them procoagulant. In testing this hypothesis experimentally, we found that the extracellular mitochondria purified from brain trauma mice and those released from brains subjected to freeze-thaw injury remained metabolically active and produced reactive oxygen species. These extracellular mitochondria bound platelets through the phospholipid-CD36 interaction and induced α-granule secretion, microvesiculation, and procoagulant activity in an oxidant-dependent manner, but failed to induce aggregation. These results define an extracellular mitochondria-induced and redox-dependent intermediate phenotype of platelets that contribute to the pathogenesis of traumatic brain injury-induced coagulopathy and inflammation.
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spelling pubmed-69395112020-01-06 Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity Zhao, Zilong Zhou, Yuan Hilton, Tristan Li, Fanjian Han, Cha Liu, Li Yuan, Hengjie Li, Ying Xu, Xin Wu, Xiaoping Zhang, Fangyi Thiagarajan, Perumal Cap, Andrew Shi, Fu-Dong Zhang, Jianning Dong, Jing-fei Haematologica Article Coagulopathy often develops soon after acute traumatic brain injury and its cause remains poorly understood. We have shown that injured brains release cellular microvesicles that disrupt the endothelial barrier and induce consumptive coagulopathy. Morphologically intact extracellular mitochondria accounted for 55.2% of these microvesicles, leading to the hypothesis that these extracellular mitochondria are metabolically active and serve as a source of oxidative stress that activates platelets and renders them procoagulant. In testing this hypothesis experimentally, we found that the extracellular mitochondria purified from brain trauma mice and those released from brains subjected to freeze-thaw injury remained metabolically active and produced reactive oxygen species. These extracellular mitochondria bound platelets through the phospholipid-CD36 interaction and induced α-granule secretion, microvesiculation, and procoagulant activity in an oxidant-dependent manner, but failed to induce aggregation. These results define an extracellular mitochondria-induced and redox-dependent intermediate phenotype of platelets that contribute to the pathogenesis of traumatic brain injury-induced coagulopathy and inflammation. Ferrata Storti Foundation 2020-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6939511/ /pubmed/30975909 http://dx.doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2018.214932 Text en Copyright© 2020 Ferrata Storti Foundation Material published in Haematologica is covered by copyright. All rights are reserved to the Ferrata Storti Foundation. Use of published material is allowed under the following terms and conditions: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode. Copies of published material are allowed for personal or internal use. Sharing published material for non-commercial purposes is subject to the following conditions: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/legalcode, sect. 3. Reproducing and sharing published material for commercial purposes is not allowed without permission in writing from the publisher.
spellingShingle Article
Zhao, Zilong
Zhou, Yuan
Hilton, Tristan
Li, Fanjian
Han, Cha
Liu, Li
Yuan, Hengjie
Li, Ying
Xu, Xin
Wu, Xiaoping
Zhang, Fangyi
Thiagarajan, Perumal
Cap, Andrew
Shi, Fu-Dong
Zhang, Jianning
Dong, Jing-fei
Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity
title Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity
title_full Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity
title_fullStr Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity
title_full_unstemmed Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity
title_short Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity
title_sort extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6939511/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30975909
http://dx.doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2018.214932
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