Login / Signup

Evaluating stored platelet shape change using imaging flow cytometry.

Tahsin ÖzpolatOlga YakovenkoAnastasiia StratiievskaS Lawrence BaileyJeffrey MilesChomkan UsaneerungruengDaire ByrneXiaoping WuMoritz Stolla
Published in: Platelets (2022)
Platelets are routinely stored at room temperature for 5-7 days before transfusion. Stored platelet quality is traditionally assessed by Kunicki's morphology score. This method requires extensive training, experience, and is highly subjective. Moreover, the number of laboratories familiar with this technique is decreasing. Cold storage of platelets has recently regained interest because of potential advantages such as reduced bacterial growth and preserved function. However, platelets exposed to cold temperatures change uniformly from a discoid to a spherical shape, reducing the morphology score outcomes to spheroid versus discoid during cooling. We developed a simpler, unbiased screening tool to measure temperature-induced platelet shape change using imaging flow cytometry. When reduced to two dimensions, spheres appear circular, while discs are detected on a spectrum from fusiform to circular. We defined circular events as having a transverse axis of >0.8 of the longitudinal axis and fusiform events ≤0.8 of the longitudinal axis. Using this assay, mouse and human platelets show a temperature and time-dependent, two-dimensional shape change from fusiform to circular, consistent with their three-dimensional change from discs to spheres. The method we describe here is a valuable tool for detecting shape change differences in response to agonists or temperature and will help screening for therapeutic measures to mitigate the cold-induced storage lesion.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • flow cytometry
  • high resolution
  • endothelial cells
  • high glucose
  • oxidative stress
  • adipose tissue
  • mass spectrometry
  • risk assessment
  • fluorescence imaging
  • physical activity
  • quality improvement