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In vitro function and phagocytosis of galactosylated platelet concentrates after long-term refrigeration

Authors :
Emma C. Josefsson
Denisa D. Wagner
John H. Hartwig
Richard M. Kaufman
Aleksandar Babic
Leslie E. Silberstein
Wolfgang Bergmeier
Thomas P. Stossel
Karin M. Hoffmeister
Source :
Transfusion. 47:442-451
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Wiley, 2007.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Short-term refrigeration of platelets (PLTs) in the absence of plasma results in their rapid clearance after transfusion. Blocking beta-N-acetylglucosamine (beta-GlcNAc) residues of glycoprotein Ibalpha (GPIbalpha) with galactose prevents binding of refrigerated human and mouse PLTs to macrophages and prolongs the circulation times of refrigerated mouse PLTs. PLT-associated galactosyltransferase efficiently galactosylates chilled PLTs in the presence of its substrate UDP-galactose is added to PLT-rich plasma. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS To characterize the hemostatic function of refrigerated and galactosylated human PLTs processed in the blood bank, PLT aggregation was studied in vitro under static and flow conditions and expression of integrin beta3 (CD61), CD62P (P-selectin), GPIbalpha (CD42b), annexin V binding, and integrin alphaIIbeta3 activation with flow cytometry. Affinity of macrophages for galactosylated refrigerated PLTs was evaluated with THP-1 cells, which recognize and phagocytize refrigerated PLTs. RESULTS PLTs refrigerated and galactosylated for 14 days 1) maintained their ability to aggregate when exposed to agonists in a standard aggregometry assay, 2) showed less pronounced changes in surface expression of GPIbalpha compared with room temperature (RT)-stored PLTs, 3) increased P-selectin expression, and 4) were poorly phagocytized by differentiated THP-1 cells in vitro. In addition, it is shown that refrigeration of PLTs does not affect their adhesive properties under in vitro flow conditions. CONCLUSION It is shown that refrigerated human PLTs retain in vitro function better than RT PLTs during storage and demonstrate that galactosylation prevents recognition of stored refrigerated PLTs by macrophages in vitro.

Details

ISSN :
15372995 and 00411132
Volume :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transfusion
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f78755c7ad3593556e1045e359ea050e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2007.01134.x