Gray platelet syndrome and defective thrombo-inflammation in Nbeal2-deficient mice

Carsten Deppermann(University of Würzburg), Deya Cherpokova(University of Würzburg), Paquita Nurden(University of Würzburg), Jan-Niklas Schulz(University of Cologne), Ina Thielmann(University of Würzburg), Peter Kraft, Timo Vögtle(University of Würzburg), Christoph Kleinschnitz, Sebastian Dütting(University of Würzburg), Georg Krohne(University of Würzburg), Sabine A. Eming(University of Cologne), Alan T. Nurden(Hôpital Xavier Arnozan), Beate Eckes(University of Cologne), Guido Stoll, David Stegner(University of Würzburg), Bernhard Nieswandt(University of Würzburg)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
June 30, 2013
Cited by 201Open Access
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Abstract

Platelets are anuclear organelle-rich cell fragments derived from bone marrow megakaryocytes (MKs) that safeguard vascular integrity. The major platelet organelles, α-granules, release proteins that participate in thrombus formation and hemostasis. Proteins stored in α-granules are also thought to play a role in inflammation and wound healing, but their functional significance in vivo is unknown. Mutations in NBEAL2 have been linked to gray platelet syndrome (GPS), a rare bleeding disorder characterized by macrothrombocytopenia, with platelets lacking α-granules. Here we show that Nbeal2-knockout mice display the characteristics of human GPS, with defective α-granule biogenesis in MKs and their absence from platelets. Nbeal2 deficiency did not affect MK differentiation and proplatelet formation in vitro or platelet life span in vivo. Nbeal2-deficient platelets displayed impaired adhesion, aggregation, and coagulant activity ex vivo that translated into defective arterial thrombus formation and protection from thrombo-inflammatory brain infarction following focal cerebral ischemia. In a model of excisional skin wound repair, Nbeal2-deficient mice exhibited impaired development of functional granulation tissue due to severely reduced differentiation of myofibroblasts in the absence of α-granule secretion. This study demonstrates that platelet α-granule constituents are critically required not only for hemostasis but also thrombosis, acute thrombo-inflammatory disease states, and tissue reconstitution after injury.


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