TY - JOUR
T1 - Aging platelets shift their hemostatic properties to inflammatory functions
AU - Anjum, Afra
AU - Mader, Magdalena
AU - Mahameed, Shaan
AU - Muraly, Abhinaya
AU - Denorme, Frederik
AU - Kliem, Fabian P.
AU - Rossaro, Dario
AU - Agköl, Sezer
AU - Di Fina, Lea
AU - Mulkers, Maité
AU - Laun, Lisa
AU - Li, Lukas
AU - Kupper, Nadja
AU - Yue, Keyang
AU - Hoffknecht, Marie Louise
AU - Akhalkatsi, Anastassia
AU - Loew, Quentin
AU - Pircher, Joachim
AU - Escaig, Raphael
AU - Strasser, Erwin
AU - Wichmann, Christian
AU - Pekayvaz, Kami
AU - Nieswandt, Bernhard
AU - Schulz, Christian
AU - Robles, Maria S.
AU - Kaiser, Rainer
AU - Massberg, Steffen
AU - Campbell, Robert
AU - Nicolai, Leo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Society of Hematology
PY - 2025/4/3
Y1 - 2025/4/3
N2 - Platelets are crucial players in hemostasis and thrombosis but also contribute to immune regulation and host defense, using different receptors, signaling pathways, and effector functions, respectively. Whether distinct subsets of platelets specialize in these diverse tasks is insufficiently understood. Here, we used a pulse-labeling method in Mus musculus models for tracking in vivo platelet aging and its functional implications. Using in vitro and in vivo assays, we reveal that young, reticulated platelets show heightened responses in the setting of clot formation, with corresponding, increased responses to agonists, adhesion, and retractile function. Unexpectedly, aged platelets lose their hemostatic proficiency but are more prone to react to inflammatory challenge: compared with reticulated platelets, this cohort was more likely to form platelet-leukocyte aggregates and showed increased adhesion to neutrophils in vitro, as well as enhanced bactericidal function. In vivo, this was reflected in increased pulmonary recruitment of aged platelets in an acute lung injury model. Proteomic analyses confirmed the upregulation of immune pathways in this cohort, including enhanced procoagulant function. In mouse models of prolonged platelet half-life, this resulted in increased pulmonary leukocyte infiltration and inflammation upon acute lung injury. Similarly, human platelet concentrates decreased their hemostatic function and elevated their putative immunomodulatory potential in vitro over time, and in a mouse model of platelet transfusion, aged platelet concentrates resulted in augmented inflammation. In summary, we show that platelets exhibit age-dependent phenotypic shifts, allowing them to fulfill their diverse tasks in the vasculature. Because functional alterations of aging platelets extend to platelet concentrates, this may hold important implications for transfusion medicine.
AB - Platelets are crucial players in hemostasis and thrombosis but also contribute to immune regulation and host defense, using different receptors, signaling pathways, and effector functions, respectively. Whether distinct subsets of platelets specialize in these diverse tasks is insufficiently understood. Here, we used a pulse-labeling method in Mus musculus models for tracking in vivo platelet aging and its functional implications. Using in vitro and in vivo assays, we reveal that young, reticulated platelets show heightened responses in the setting of clot formation, with corresponding, increased responses to agonists, adhesion, and retractile function. Unexpectedly, aged platelets lose their hemostatic proficiency but are more prone to react to inflammatory challenge: compared with reticulated platelets, this cohort was more likely to form platelet-leukocyte aggregates and showed increased adhesion to neutrophils in vitro, as well as enhanced bactericidal function. In vivo, this was reflected in increased pulmonary recruitment of aged platelets in an acute lung injury model. Proteomic analyses confirmed the upregulation of immune pathways in this cohort, including enhanced procoagulant function. In mouse models of prolonged platelet half-life, this resulted in increased pulmonary leukocyte infiltration and inflammation upon acute lung injury. Similarly, human platelet concentrates decreased their hemostatic function and elevated their putative immunomodulatory potential in vitro over time, and in a mouse model of platelet transfusion, aged platelet concentrates resulted in augmented inflammation. In summary, we show that platelets exhibit age-dependent phenotypic shifts, allowing them to fulfill their diverse tasks in the vasculature. Because functional alterations of aging platelets extend to platelet concentrates, this may hold important implications for transfusion medicine.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=86000362980&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1182/blood.2024024901
DO - 10.1182/blood.2024024901
M3 - Article
C2 - 39841014
AN - SCOPUS:86000362980
SN - 0006-4971
VL - 145
SP - 1568
EP - 1582
JO - Blood
JF - Blood
IS - 14
ER -