| Literature DB >> 29083324 |
Lili Zhao1, Jun Liu1, Chunyan He2, Rong Yan1, Kangxi Zhou1, Qingya Cui1, Xingjun Meng1, Xiaodong Li1, Yang Zhang1, Yumei Nie1, Yang Zhang1, Renping Hu1, Yancai Liu1, Lian Zhao1,2, Mengxing Chen1, Weiling Xiao1, Jingluan Tian1, Yunxiao Zhao1, Lijuan Cao1, Ling Zhou1, Anning Lin3, Changgeng Ruan1, Kesheng Dai1.
Abstract
Apoptosis delimits platelet life span in the circulation and leads to storage lesion, which severely limits the shelf life of stored platelets. Moreover, accumulating evidence indicates that platelet apoptosis provoked by various pathological stimuli results in thrombocytopenia in many common diseases. However, little is known about how platelet apoptosis is initiated or regulated. Here, we show that PKA activity is markedly reduced in platelets aged in vitro, stored platelets, and platelets from patients with immune thrombocytopenia (ITP), diabetes, and bacterial infections. Inhibition or genetic ablation of PKA provoked intrinsic programmed platelet apoptosis in vitro and rapid platelet clearance in vivo. PKA inhibition resulted in dephosphorylation of the proapoptotic protein BAD at Ser155, resulting in sequestration of prosurvival protein BCL-XL in mitochondria and subsequent apoptosis. Notably, PKA activation protected platelets from apoptosis induced by storage or pathological stimuli and elevated peripheral platelet levels in normal mice and in a murine model of ITP. Therefore, these findings identify PKA as a homeostatic regulator of platelet apoptosis that determines platelet life span and survival. Furthermore, these results suggest that regulation of PKA activity represents a promising strategy for extending platelet shelf life and has profound implications for the treatment of platelet number-related diseases and disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Apoptosis; Hematology; Platelets; Protein kinases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29083324 PMCID: PMC5707139 DOI: 10.1172/JCI95109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808