4.4 Article

Extracellular mitochondria released from traumatized brains induced platelet procoagulant activity

Journal

HAEMATOLOGICA
Volume 105, Issue 1, Pages 209-217

Publisher

FERRATA STORTI FOUNDATION
DOI: 10.3324/haematol.2018.214932

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Funding

  1. NIH [NS087296, HL71895]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81330029, 81720108015, 81271361, 81271359, 81601068]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin [17JCQNJC12100]
  4. [16PTSTJC00180]

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Coagulopathy often develops soon after acute traumatic brain injury and its cause remains poorly understood. We have shown that injured brains release cellular microvesicles that disrupt the endothelial barrier and induce consumptive coagulopathy. Morphologically intact extracellular mitochondria accounted for 55.2% of these microvesicles, leading to the hypothesis that these extracellular mitochondria are metabolically active and serve as a source of oxidative stress that activates platelets and renders them procoagulant. In testing this hypothesis experimentally, we found that the extracellular mitochondria purified from brain trauma mice and those released from brains subjected to freeze-thaw injury remained metabolically active and produced reactive oxygen species. These extracellular mitochondria bound platelets through the phospholipid-CD36 interaction and induced alpha-granule secretion, microvesiculation, and procoagulant activity in an oxidant-dependent manner, but failed to induce aggregation. These results define an extracellular mitochondria-induced and redox-dependent intermediate phenotype of platelets that contribute to the pathogenesis of traumatic brain injury-induced coagulopathy and inflammation.

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