scholarly journals Identifying the start of a platelet aggregate by the shear rate and the cell-depleted layer

2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (159) ◽  
pp. 20190148 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. M. van Rooij ◽  
G. Závodszky ◽  
V. W. Azizi Tarksalooyeh ◽  
A. G. Hoekstra

Computer simulations were performed to study the transport of red blood cells and platelets in high shear flows, mimicking earlier published in vitro experiments in microfluidic devices with high affinity for platelet aggregate formation. The goal is to understand and predict where thrombus formation starts. Additionally, the need of cell-based modelling in these microfluidic devices is demonstrated by comparing our results with macroscopic models, wherein blood is modelled as a continuous fluid. Hemocell, a cell-based blood flow simulation framework is used to investigate the transport physics in the microfluidic devices. The simulations show an enlarged cell-depleted layer at the site where a platelet aggregate forms in the experiments. In this enlarged cell-depleted layer, the probability to find a platelet is higher than in the rest of the microfluidic device. In addition, the shear rates are sufficiently high to allow for the von Willebrand factor to elongate in this region. We hypothesize that the enlarged cell-depleted layer combined with a sufficiently large platelet flux and sufficiently high shear rates result in an haemodynamic environment that is a preferred location for initial platelet aggregation.

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Britt J. M. van Rooij ◽  
Gábor Závodszky ◽  
Alfons G. Hoekstra ◽  
David N. Ku

Abstract Occlusive thrombi formed under high flow shear rates develop very rapidly in arteries and may lead to myocardial infarction or stroke. Rapid platelet accumulation (RPA) and occlusion of platelet-rich thrombi and clot shrinkage have been studied after flow arrest. However, the influence of margination and shear rate on occlusive clot formation is not fully understood yet. In this study, the influence of flow on the growth and shrinkage of a clot is investigated. Whole blood (WB) and platelet-rich plasma (PRP) were perfused at high shear rates (> 3,000 s−1) through two microfluidic systems with a stenotic section under constant pressure. The stenotic section of the two devices are different in stenotic length (1,000 vs 150 μm) and contraction angle of the stenosis (15° vs 80°). In all experiments, the flow chamber occluded in the stenotic section. Besides a significantly increased lag time and decreased RPA rate for PRP compared to WB (p < 0.01), the device with a shorter stenotic section and steeper contraction angle showed a shear-dependent occlusion and lag time for both PRP and WB. This shear-dependent behavior of the platelet aggregate formation might be caused by the stenotic geometry.


Author(s):  
Zixiang Leonardo Liu ◽  
Christopher Bresette ◽  
Cyrus K Aidun ◽  
David N Ku

Shear-Induced Platelet Aggregation (SIPA) occurs under elevated shear rates (~10000 s-1) found in stenotic coronary and carotid arteries. The pathologically high-shear environment can lead to occlusive thrombosis by SIPA from the interaction of nonactivated platelets and von Willebrand factor (VWF) via glycoprotein Ib (GPIb)-A1 binding. This process under high shear rates is difficult to visualize experimentally with concurrent molecular- and cellular-resolutions. To understand this fast bonding, we employ a validated multiscale in-silico model incorporating measured molecular kinetics and a thrombosis-on-a-chip device to delineate the flow-mediated biophysics of VWF and platelets assembly into mural micro-thrombi. We show that SIPA begins with VWF elongation, followed by agglomeration of platelets in the flow by soluble VWF entanglement before mural capture of the agglomerate by immobilized VWF. The entire SIPA process occurs on the order of 10 ms with the agglomerate travelling a lag distance of a few hundred microns before capture, matching in vitro results. Increasing soluble VWF concentration by ~20x in silico leads to a 2~3x increase in SIPA rates, matching the increase in occlusion rates found in vitro. The morphology of mural aggregates is primarily controlled by VWF molecular weight (length), where normal-length VWF leads to cluster or elongated aggregates and ultra-long VWF leads to loose aggregates seen by others' experiments. Finally, we present phase diagrams of SIPA which provides biomechanistic rationales for a variety of thrombotic and hemostatic events in terms of platelet agglomeration and capture.


Blood ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 1214-1217
Author(s):  
E Fressinaud ◽  
D Baruch ◽  
C Rothschild ◽  
HR Baumgartner ◽  
D Meyer

Although it is well established that plasma von Willebrand Factor (vWF) is essential to platelet adhesion to subendothelium at high shear rates, the role of platelet vWF is less clear. We studied the respective role of both plasma and platelet vWF in mediating platelet adhesion to fibrillar collagen in a parallel-plate perfusion chamber. Reconstituted blood containing RBCs, various mixtures of labeled washed platelets and plasma from controls or five patients with severe von Willebrand disease (vWD), was perfused through the chamber for five minutes at a shear rate of 1,600 s-1. Platelet-collagen interactions were estimated by counting the radioactivity in deposited platelets and by quantitative morphometry. When the perfusate consisted of normal platelets suspended in normal plasma, platelet deposition on the collagen was 24.7 +/- 3.6 X 10(6)/cm2 (mean +/- SEM, n = 6). Significantly less deposition (16 +/- 2.3) was observed when vWD platelets were substituted for normal platelets. In mixtures containing vWD plasma, significantly greater deposition (9 +/- 2.2) was obtained with normal than with vWD platelets (1 +/- 0.4) demonstrating a role for platelet vWF in mediating the deposition of platelets on collagen. Morphometric analysis confirmed these data. Our findings indicate that platelet, as well as plasma, vWF mediates platelet-collagen interactions at a high shear rate.


Blood ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 95 (12) ◽  
pp. 3796-3803 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadine Ajzenberg ◽  
Anne-Sophie Ribba ◽  
Ghassem Rastegar-Lari ◽  
Dominique Meyer ◽  
Dominique Baruch

Abstract The aim was to better understand the function of von Willebrand factor (vWF) A1 domain in shear-induced platelet aggregation (SIPA), at low (200) and high shear rate (4000 seconds-1) generated by a Couette viscometer. We report on 9 fully multimerized recombinant vWFs (rvWFs) expressing type 2M or type 2B von Willebrand disease (vWD) mutations, characterized respectively by a decreased or increased binding of vWF to GPIb in the presence of ristocetin. We expressed 4 type 2M (-G561A, -E596K, -R611H, and -I662F) and 5 type 2B (rvWF-M540MM, -V551F, -V553M, -R578Q, and -L697V). SIPA was strongly impaired in all type 2M rvWFs at 200 and 4000 seconds-1. Decreased aggregation was correlated with ristocetin binding to platelets. In contrast, a distinct effect of botrocetin was observed, since type 2M rvWFs (-G561A, -E596K, and -I662F) were able to bind to platelets to the same extent as wild type rvWF (rvWF-WT). Interestingly, SIPA at 200 and 4000 seconds-1 confirmed the gain-of-function phenotype of the 5 type 2B rvWFs. Our data indicated a consistent increase of SIPA at both low and high shear rates, reaching 95% of total platelets, whereas SIPA did not exceed 40% in the presence of rvWF-WT. Aggregation was completely inhibited by monoclonal antibody 6D1 directed to GPIb, underlining the importance of vWF-GPIb interaction in type 2B rvWF. Impaired SIPA of type 2M rvWF could account for the hemorrhagic syndrome observed in type 2M vWD. Increased SIPA of type 2B rvWF could be responsible for unstable aggregates and explain the fluctuant thrombocytopenia of type 2B vWD.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 3964-3964
Author(s):  
Volker R. Stoldt ◽  
Jan Peveling ◽  
Robert Loncar ◽  
Andreas Beck ◽  
Volker Aurich ◽  
...  

Abstract We have used confocal laser microscopy and a novel “voxel”-based imaging software to study the dynamics of platelet aggregation and thrombus formation when anticoagulated blood was perfused over collagen-coated surfaces at shear rates simulating arterial flow. The objective was to evaluate the three-dimensional growth of platelet thrombi over time (“4-D” imaging). Blood from healthy donors, anticoagulated with either PPACK (80 μM) or, depending on the type of experiment, with trisodium citrate (11 mM), was incubated with mepacrine (10 μM) to render platelets fluorescent. Blood was aspirated with a syringe pump through a rectangular perfusion chamber (flow path height of 80 μm) at a flow rate of 160 or 480 μl per min to provide initial shear rates of 500 or 1,500 sec−1, respectively. Prior to perfusion, glass coverslips were coated with fibrillar type I collagen (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany) prepared in 0.5 M acedic acid, pH 2.8, and blocked with 2 % BSA. The chamber was mounted on a Zeiss Axiovert 100M/LSM 510 invert laser scanning confocal microscope (Carl Zeiss, Oberkochem, Germany). Upon perfusion, a series of stacks, i.e. 30 confocal optical sections, from the bottom to the apex of the forming platelet aggregate or thrombus, were obtained every 25 sec with a 488-nm laser and a scanning time of &lt; 500 msec on an area of 26,450 μm2. Images corresponding to an area of 0.202 μm2 were analyzed by a “voxel”-based procedure, whereby a voxel is defined by a volume of 0.202 μm3 (0.45 μm x 0.45 μm x 1 μm). For calibration, fluorescent beads (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) were used, and the volume coresponding to a 1.0 μm thick stack was calculated pursuant to the voxel technique. A threshold was applied to distinguish adherent platelets from the background. Using these procedures, a uniform profile of thrombus formation and volume was observed (n=7). With citrate anticoagulated blood at an initial shear rate of 500 sec−1, thrombus growth begun after a lag phase of 220 sec, and, after 420 sec, thrombus volume reached a maximum (mean ± SD, 5x104 ± 4.9x103 μm3). Thrombus progression occurred in a two-step way with an apical growth (height extension) at the interval of 220 and 300 sec, and a further growth in the plane section at the interval of 300 and 420 sec after perfusion. Prolonged perfusion resulted in markedly abnormal flow pattern due to thrombus growth and increased shear rates. Again at an initial shear rate of 500 sec−1, platelet aggregate formation and thrombus progression were completely suppressed in the presence of anti-αIIbβ3 antibody (abciximab, 4 μg/ml). Interestingly, the polymorphism (HPA-1, PlA) of the β subunit of αIIbβ3 had a dramatic effect on thrombus growth. Thus, when comparing blood from homozygous carriers of HPA-1b (n=8) and HPA-1a (n=8), thrombus formation and progression occurred more rapidly with HPA-1b than with HPA-1a platelets, resulting in significantly larger thrombi from HPA-1b than from HPA-1a individuals (p=0.001). In conclusion, the voxel-based determination of thrombus formation and progression in vitro provides an appropriate technique to assess volumina of thrombi. Moreover, this technique can detect phenotypic differences related to an αIIbβ3 polymorphism which is postulated to modulate platelet thrombogenicity.


1999 ◽  
Vol 106 (3) ◽  
pp. 777-783 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edith Fressinaud ◽  
Agnès Veyradier ◽  
Marianne Sigaud ◽  
Catherine Boyer-Neumann ◽  
Cécile Le Boterff ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 677-682 ◽  
Author(s):  
WX Li ◽  
AV Kaplan ◽  
GW Grant ◽  
JJ Toole ◽  
LL Leung

A novel thrombin inhibitor based on single-stranded (ss) deoxynucleotides with the sequence GGTTGGTGTGGTTGG (thrombin aptamer) has been recently discovered. In this study, we tested its efficacy in inhibiting clot-bound thrombin activity and platelet thrombus formation in an ex vivo whole artery angioplasty model. The thrombin aptamer showed a specific dose-dependent inhibition of thrombin-induced platelet aggregation (0.5 U/mL) in human platelet-rich plasma, with an IC50 of approximately 70 to 80 nmol/L. In an in vitro clot-bound thrombin assay system, heparin, used at clinically relevant concentrations of 0.2 U/mL and 0.4 U/mL, was ineffective in inhibiting clot-bound thrombin (6.5% and 34.9% inhibition at 0.2 U/mL and 0.4 U/mL, respectively). In contrast, the thrombin aptamer at an equivalent anticoagulant concentration inhibited clot-bound thrombin (79.7% inhibition). In an ex vivo whole artery angioplasty model, the thrombin aptamer markedly suppressed the generation of fibrinopeptide A (FPA), whereas heparin at 2 U/mL was ineffective. Compared with a scrambled ssDNA control, the thrombin aptamer reduced platelet deposition by 34.5% +/- 5% (mean +/- SEM, n = 4, P = .09) at low shear rates (approximately 200 s-1) and 61.3% +/- 11% (mean +/- SEM, n = 4, P = .05) at high shear rates (approximately 850 s-1). Thrombin aptamers based on ssDNA molecules represent a new class of thrombin inhibitors with potent anticoagulant and antithrombotic properties.


2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (01) ◽  
pp. 21-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Reininger

SummaryBlood platelets are the first line of defense against bleeding and as such involved in the haemostatic repair of damaged vasculature. Their true prowess seems to be displayed under high shear conditions where platelets interact with a variety of plasma proteins, all of which are tightly regulated to close the leak but at the same time prevent lumen occlusion and thromboembolism. The first task is to arrest fast flowing platelets on exposed collagen of the damaged subendothelial surface. Although platelets are endowed with several collagen receptors, most notably integrin ╒2b®1 and the immunoglobulin superfamily member GPVI, they can not arrest platelets at high shear rates. The latter requires binding of the platelet receptor GPIb╒to the A1-binding domain of von Willebrand factor (VWF), which first has to be immobilized from the flowing blood onto the site of injury. Under high shear conditions further accrual of newly arriving platelets again requires VWF, which has to bridge platelets not only to the exposed collagen but also to each other by being sandwiched between the multiple platelet layers of the haemostatic plug.


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