Platelet secretion is crucial to prevent bleeding in the ischemic brain but not in the inflamed skin or lung in mice

  • Carsten Deppermann
  • Peter Kraft
  • Julia Volz
  • Michael K Schuhmann
  • Sarah Beck
  • Karen Wolf
  • David Stegner
  • Guido Stoll
  • Bernhard Nieswandt

Abstract

Platelets maintain hemostasis after injury, but also during inflammation. Recent studies have shown that platelets prevent inflammatory bleeding through (hem) immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif-dependent mechanisms irrespective of aggregation during skin and lung inflammation. Although the exact mechanisms underlying this process remain unknown, it was speculated that mediators released from platelet granules might be involved. Maintaining cerebral hemostasis during stroke treatment is of high clinical relevance because hemorrhage may aggravate the disease state and increase mortality. Although it was shown that platelets help maintain hemostasis in the ischemic brain, their exact contribution remains ill defined. Here we show that Unc13d -/- /Nbeal2 -/- mice, which lack platelet α- and dense-granule secretion, show no signs of hemorrhage in models of skin or lung inflammation. In stark contrast, lack of platelet granule release resulted in impaired hemostasis in the ischemic brain after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion leading to increased intracranial hemorrhage and mortality. Our results reveal for the first time that platelet granule constituents are essential for maintenance of hemostasis during thrombo-inflammatory brain infarction but not experimental inflammation of the skin or lung, thereby uncovering vascular bed-specific differences in the prevention of inflammatory bleeding.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0006-4971
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 23.03.2017

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2017 by The American Society of Hematology.

PubMed 28077416