| Literature DB >> 23490277 |
Reginald Tran1, David R Myers, Jordan Ciciliano, Elaissa L Trybus Hardy, Yumiko Sakurai, Byungwook Ahn, Yongzhi Qiu, Robert G Mannino, Meredith E Fay, Wilbur A Lam.
Abstract
Although the processes of haemostasis and thrombosis have been studied extensively in the past several decades, much of the effort has been spent characterizing the biological and biochemical aspects of clotting. More recently, researchers have discovered that the function and physiology of blood cells and plasma proteins relevant in haematologic processes are mechanically, as well as biologically, regulated. This is not entirely surprising considering the extremely dynamic fluidic environment that these blood components exist in. Other cells in the body such as fibroblasts and endothelial cells have been found to biologically respond to their physical and mechanical environments, affecting aspects of cellular physiology as diverse as cytoskeletal architecture to gene expression to alterations of vital signalling pathways. In the circulation, blood cells and plasma proteins are constantly exposed to forces while they, in turn, also exert forces to regulate clot formation. These mechanical factors lead to biochemical and biomechanical changes on the macro- to molecular scale. Likewise, biochemical and biomechanical alterations in the microenvironment can ultimately impact the mechanical regulation of clot formation. The ways in which these factors all balance each other can be the difference between haemostasis and thrombosis. Here, we review how the biomechanics of blood cells intimately interact with the cellular and molecular biology to regulate haemostasis and thrombosis in the context of health and disease from the macro- to molecular scale. We will also show how these biomechanical forces in the context of haemostasis and thrombosis have been replicated or measured in vitro.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23490277 PMCID: PMC3822810 DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.12041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Mol Med ISSN: 1582-1838 Impact factor: 5.310
Fig. 1In vivo cartoon representation of the multiple scales at which haemostasis occurs.
General overview of techniques used to study haemostasis
| Technique | Scale | Type of force | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rheometry | Macroscale | Input: Shear | Shear stress positively regulates the elastic modulus of clots, which is a material property that characterizes how much an object deforms under applied force without permanently deforming ( | |
| Output: Clot elasticity | Cellular components affect the elastic modulus of clots | |||
| Platelets have a positive relationship with the elastic modulus whereas high RBC concentrations have a biphasic effect on clot elasticity, increasing it at low concentrations and decreasing at higher concentrations | ||||
| The elastic modulus of clots is also positively regulated by fibrinogen concentration and GPIIb/IIIa receptor activity | ||||
| Thromboelastography | Macroscale | Input: Shear | Clot strength (MA values denoting how much force can be applied before a clot ruptures) increased with platelet activation and platelet concentration. Inhibition of the GPIIb/IIIa receptor significantly decreases clot strength | |
| Output: Clot strength, clotting time | In disease, critically ill patients with sepsis, women with mild pre-eclampsia, women with recurrent miscarriage, colorectal and breast cancer had higher clot strength compared with controls | |||
| Women with severe pre-eclampsia with thrombocytopenia had significantly lower clot strength compared with controls. Patients who had higher MA values pre-surgery were more likely to have thrombotic complications after surgery. | ||||
| Microfluidics | Microscale | Input: Shear + hydrodynamic force | Microgradients formed by stenoses cause discoid platelets to preferentially adhere to low-shear zones at the downstream face of forming thrombi | |
| Output: Platelet aggregation or biochemical response | The stabilization of platelet aggregates is also dependent on the dynamic restructuring of membrane tethers | |||
| RBCs under shear release ATP with a time delay | ||||
| Atomic Force Microscopy | Microscale | Input: Precise compressive or tensile force | Platelets have an average maximum contractile force of 29 nN, and can exert forces up to 70 nN | |
| Output: Deformation of cell, contraction or adhesive force | The stiffness of the platelet binding substrate may also positively modulate platelet contraction force | |||
| The elastic modulus of RBCs varies between normal, oxygenated sickle and deoxygenated sickle cells with deoxygenated sickle cells being the stiffest | ||||
| Oligomer unfolding gives rise to a periodic sawtooth pattern with an average peak force of 94 pN that can be attributed to the unfolding of the triple helix coiled coils | ||||
| Extensibility of fibrin starts with the α-helical coiled coils which serve as molecular capacitors that extend and contract reversibly, followed by force-induced β strand release, and the eventual dissociation of the γ nodule | ||||
| Optical Tweezers | Microscale | Input: Precise compressive or tensile force | Tensile forces of 7–14 pN can unfold a single A2 domain of vWF. These forces contribute to the mechanical properties and stability of vWF | |
| Molecular scale | Output: Deformation of cell, contraction or adhesive force |
Fig. 2(A) A cylindrical rheometer consists of a stationary outer cylinder and a rotating inner cylinder to shear cells in suspension. This allows for controlled, continuous Couette flow, which has a constant velocity profile. Couette flow is fluid movement generated by the movement of a flat plate relative to a stationary plate. The layer of fluid in contact with the cylinders is constrained to the respective surfaces, resulting in the velocity profile shown above where it is zero at the stationary outer cylinder and maximal with the same velocity of the inner moving cylinder. (B) Similar to the cylindrical rheometer, a rotating cone stationed about a stationary plate allows for a varying velocity profile as the distance from the tip of the cone increases. (C) Thromboelastography works on a similar principle as the rheometer, but instead plots the torque of a rotating pin relative to a rotating outer cylinder to fully characterize clot formation as it occurs. An initial time delay is observed before fibrin begins to form, characterized by the R time. K and α are kinetic parameters that characterize the time to stable clot formation. As the clot becomes stiffer and the pin becomes more coupled with the oscillating cylinder, the trace increases in amplitude until maximal amplitude (MA) is reached, denoting the maximum clot firmness. Once fibrinolysis or clot retraction occurs, the amplitude starts decreasing again as the pin and cylinder start rotating out of phase.
Fig. 3(A) Microfluidics can be used to control shear flow of platelets to study platelet aggregation using small sample volumes. (B) Microfluidic systems can mimic the hemodynamic and geometric environment of the microvasculature. Stiffer cells move more slowly through the system, and can occlude channels. (C) Atomic force microscopy gives detailed measurements of cell stiffness, and can be used to locally probe molecular interactions. For non-adherent cells, some physical or chemical trap is required to hold the cell in place during probing. (D) Attaching dielectric spheres to cells and using them in conjunction with an optical trap enable cell mechanical measurements to be made by stretching the cells and measuring the required force needed for a given deformation.
General overview of diseases that affect the mechanical properties of blood, leading to alterations in clot composition or thrombosis
| Disease | Cause | Clinical manifestation related to mechanics at macro-, micro- and molecular scales | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Type II Diabetes Mellitus | Insulin deficiency or resistance | Increased clot firmness and coagulability | |
| Decreased RBC deformability | |||
| Enhanced platelet pro-coagulant activity in patients with suboptimal clopidogrel response | |||
| RBC membrane stiffness increased | |||
| Higher nanoscale adhesive stiffness of RBCs in elderly diabetic patients | |||
| Poikilocytosis and anisocytosis, RBC cytoskeletal reorganization | |||
| Heterogeneous population of RBCs with varying mechanical properties | |||
| Haemophilia A/B | Defect or deficiency in Factor VIII (A) or Factor IX (B) | Extended bleeding times | |
| Longer clotting times | |||
| Less stiff clots | |||
| Bulk platelet contractile force decreased | |||
| Increased platelet aggregation time | |||
| von Willebrand Disease (Type 1, 2A, 2B, 2M, 2N and 3) | Either qualitative (Type 2) or quantitative (Type 1 and 3) defects of vWF. | Increased bleeding times | |
| Inability to clear out agglutinated platelets with ristocetin. Normal blood experiences a reduction in clot strength when incubated with ristocetin contrary to vWD patients. | |||
| Surface coverage of platelets on collagen thin films under flow is decreased. | |||
| Prolonged bond lifetimes between GPIbα and the vWF A1 domain | |||
| The physical structure of vWF owing to mutations affects the bonding stability, which has an effect on binding kinetics caused by rheological shear. | |||
| Hypercoagulable State | Pre-eclampsia, correlation with miscarriage, thrombotic complications after surgery | Clotting occurs quicker than normal, resulting in stiffer clots | |
| Hypocoagulable State | Critically ill patients with sepsis, severe pre-eclamptic women with thrombocytopenia, Peripheral arterial disease | Increased clotting times | |
| Softer clots | |||
| Malaria | Nervous, respiratory, renal and/or haematopoietic complications | ||
| RBCs stiffen as the parasite grows | |||
| Deformability is decreased | |||
| Increased shear modulus | |||
| Sickle Cell Disease | Genetic mutation in the haemoglobin gene | Vaso-occlusion or stroke because of increased clotting | |
| Individual cells are stiffer | |||
| Deformability is decreased |