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Storage temperature determines platelet GPVI levels and function in mice and humans.

Jeffrey MilesS Lawrence BaileyAva M ObenausMolly Y MollicaChomkan UsaneerungruengDaire ByrneLydia FangJake R FlynnJill CorsonBarbara OsborneKatie HouckYi WangYu ShenXiaoyun FuJing-Fei DongNathan J SniadeckiMoritz Stolla
Published in: Blood advances (2021)
Platelets are currently stored at room temperature before transfusion to maximize circulation time. This approach has numerous downsides, including limited storage duration, bacterial growth risk, and increased costs. Cold storage could alleviate these problems. However, the functional consequences of cold exposure for platelets are poorly understood. In the present study, we compared the function of cold-stored platelets (CSP) with that of room temperature-stored platelets (RSP) in vitro, in vivo, and posttransfusion. CSP formed larger aggregates under in vitro shear while generating similar contractile forces compared with RSP. We found significantly reduced glycoprotein VI (GPVI) levels after cold exposure of 5 to 7 days. After transfusion into humans, CSP were mostly equivalent to RSP; however, their rate of aggregation in response to the GPVI agonist collagen was significantly lower. In a mouse model of platelet transfusion, we found a significantly lower response rate to the GPVI-dependent agonist convulxin and significantly lower GPVI levels on the surface of transfused platelets after cold storage. In summary, our data support an immediate but short-lived benefit of cold storage and highlight the need for thorough investigations of CSP. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT03787927.
Keyphrases
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