Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Department of Bioengineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Acta Biomater. 2018 Jun;73:228-235. doi: 10.1016/j.actbio.2018.04.002. Epub 2018 Apr 11.
Platelets in flowing blood are sometimes exposed to elevated shear forces caused by anastomotic stenosis at the blood vessel-vascular implant interface. The objective of this study was to determine how effective upstream shear forces are in priming platelets for downstream adhesion and activation. Flow chambers with upstream stenotic regions (shear rates of 400-1000 s) were manufactured by relief molding of polydimethylsiloxane. Downstream from the stenotic regions, microcontact printing was used to covalently immobilize three different proteins (fibrinogen, collagen, or von Willebrand factor) to serve as platelet capture agents. Anticoagulated whole blood was perfused through the flow chambers and platelet adhesion to the downstream capture region was quantified. It was found that transient exposure of platelets to increased shear forces resulted in higher platelet adhesion on all three proteins. The duration of the platelet exposure to elevated shear forces was varied by changing the length of the stenotic regions. The results indicated that, in addition to the magnitude of shear forces, the duration of exposure to these forces was also an important factor in priming platelets. The effect of upstream shear forces on platelet activation was assessed by quantifying P-selectin, integrin αβ, lysosomal glycoprotein, and phosphatidylserine exposure using flow cytometry. The results suggested that increased shear forces were capable of increasing the priming of platelets for downstream activation. This study implicates the anastomotic region(s) of vascular implants as a locus of platelet pre-activation that may lead to thrombus formation downstream.
A synthetic small-diameter vascular graft can often become stenotic due to intimal fibrous hyperplasia, either generally along the inside of the graft or at the anastomotic regions, leading to an increased shear force on flowing platelets. Our lab is studying how the upstream platelet preactivation (aka "priming") in flowing blood affects their downstream adhesion and activation. This manuscript describes a study in which priming of platelets is achieved by upstream stenotic narrowing in a microfluidic flow chamber. Such experimental design was intended to mimic a vascular implant with stenotic upstream anastomosis and downstream exposed platelet protein agonists. Understanding how the pre-activated platelets respond to imperfect vascular implant surfaces downstream is an important factor in designing better vascular implants.
在血管-血管植入物界面处吻合口狭窄会导致血液中流动的血小板偶尔暴露于升高的剪切力下。本研究的目的是确定上游剪切力在使血小板下游黏附和激活方面的作用。通过聚二甲基硅氧烷的浮雕模塑制造了具有上游狭窄区域(剪切速率为 400-1000s)的流动室。在狭窄区域的下游,使用微接触印刷将三种不同的蛋白质(纤维蛋白原、胶原蛋白或血管性血友病因子)共价固定以作为血小板捕获剂。将抗凝全血灌注通过流动室,并定量测定血小板在下游捕获区域的黏附。结果发现,血小板短暂暴露于升高的剪切力会导致所有三种蛋白质上的血小板黏附增加。通过改变狭窄区域的长度来改变血小板暴露于升高剪切力的持续时间。结果表明,除了剪切力的大小外,暴露于这些力的持续时间也是使血小板预激活的重要因素。通过使用流式细胞术定量测定 P-选择素、整合素αβ、溶酶体糖蛋白和磷脂酰丝氨酸暴露,评估上游剪切力对血小板激活的影响。结果表明,增加的剪切力能够增加血小板下游激活的预激活。本研究提示血管植入物的吻合区域(多个)可能是血小板预激活的部位,这可能导致下游血栓形成。
由于内膜纤维性增生,合成的小直径血管移植物通常会变得狭窄,这种增生可能普遍存在于移植物内部或吻合区域,从而导致流动血小板的剪切力增加。我们的实验室正在研究血流中上游血小板预激活(又名“预激活”)如何影响它们下游的黏附和激活。本文描述了一项研究,其中血小板的预激活是通过微流体流动室中的上游狭窄来实现的。这种实验设计旨在模拟具有狭窄上游吻合和下游暴露血小板蛋白激动剂的血管植入物。了解预激活的血小板如何对下游不完美的血管植入物表面做出反应是设计更好的血管植入物的重要因素。