Study finds significant role of platelets in immune system
June 20th, 2013
Scientists from the University of Calgary, Canada,
have found through a study a new type of surveillance mechanism linked
with immune system taking place in the liver of mice. It was noticed
that platelets, which are conventionally known to play a significant
role in the clotting of blood and are crucial to wound healing, while
flowing across the blood stream in the liver of mice, were making
frequent short-lived “touch-and-go” interactions with specialized immune
cells called Kupffer cells. Kupffer cells are present in the liver and protect us from infection by capturing and eventually killing bacteria that pass by.
As per scientists, the touch-and-go
mechanism was how platelets were scanning for captured bacteria. But
when platelets detected a Kupffer cell bound to bacteria, the platelet-Kupffer cell interaction sustained much longer, which led to the killing of the bacteria.
How does it happen?
As per researchers, two receptor
proteins on the surface of platelets — GpIb, and the GpIIb-GpIIIa
complex have an affinity towards a protein (von Willebrand factor (vWF))
found on the surface of Kupffer cells. The GpIb receptor binds to the
vWF long enough to scan for any captured bacteria. If they detect
nothing, the platelet comes off and continues along the bloodstream in a
touch-and-go interaction. However, when platelets found a Kupffer cell
with captured bacteria the second receptor binds to the Kupffer cell
resulting in a more prolonged interaction eventually leading up to the
killing of the bacteria. Scientists are yet to examine the helpfulness
of this binding in fighting infection.
This platelet-mediated surveillance
mechanism has been shown to be vital for the mice because most (80-100%)
mutant mice lacking platelets or GpIb receptors died within four hours
of infection, whereas more than 90% of wild-type mice survived.
What about Humans?
Although the presence of same kind of
mechanism in humans is yet to be confirmed, there is good evidence that
human platelets can kill malaria infected red blood cells and in sepsis
platelets appear to also be involved so they likely do play a role in
immunity.
Efficacy of Aspirin questioned
The findings also question the efficacy
of drugs like aspirin, which are known platelet inhibitors. If aspirin
by its platelet-inhibitory role allows bacteria to survive longer in
blood it could help bacteria become more resistant. There may be a need
to reconsider aspirin use in immunosuppressed patients.
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