| Literature DB >> 29599771 |
Abstract
Recent studies suggest that in addition to their common function in the regulation of thrombosis and hemostasis, platelets also contribute to tissue inflammation affecting adaptive immunity. Platelets have a number of pro-inflammatory and regulatory mediators stored in their α-granules and dense granules, which are promptly released at sites of inflammation or tissue injury. Platelet-derived mediators include cytokines (IL-1α, IL-1β, and TGFβ1), chemokines (CXCL4 and CCL3), immunomodulatory neurotransmitters (serotonin, dopamine, epinephrine, histamine, and GABA), and other low-molecular-weight mediators. In addition, activated platelets synthesize a number of lipid pro-inflammatory mediators such as platelet-activating factor and prostaglandins/thromboxanes. Notably, platelets express multiple toll-like receptors and MHC class I on their surface and store IgG in their α-granules. Platelet-derived factors are highly effective in directly or indirectly modulating the priming and effector function of various subsets of T cells. Besides secreting soluble factors, activated platelets upregulate a number of integrins, adhesion molecules, and lectins, leading to the formation of platelet-T cells aggregates. Activated platelets are able to instantly release neurotransmitters acting similar to neuronal presynaptic terminals, affecting CD4 T cells and other cells in close contact with them. The formation of platelet-T cell aggregates modulates the functions of T cells via direct cell-cell contact interactions and the local release of soluble factors including neurotransmitters. New data suggest an important role for platelets as neuronal and innate-like cells that directly recognize damage- or pathogen- associated molecular patterns and instantly communicate with T cells.Entities:
Keywords: CD4 T cells; autoimmunity; damage-associated molecular pattern; glycolipids; inflammation; neurotransmitter; platelets
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29599771 PMCID: PMC5863511 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.00406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Communication of platelets with CD4 T cells has many similarities with the interaction of presynaptic and postsynaptic neurons. The process of platelet degranulation is very similar to the process of the release of neurotransmitters by presynaptic neurons. In both presynaptic neurons and platelets, neurotransmitters (e.g., serotonin, dopamine), and other mediators are stored in specific vesicles inside the cells. During the process of neuronal or platelet activation, specific vesicles are fused with the surface membrane (using the same docking molecules for platelets and neurons such as VAMP and SNARE), and the vesicle content is released. Both CD4 T cells and postsynaptic neurons have detergent-resistant membrane domains (lipid rafts) with neurotransmitter receptors (e.g., serotonin, dopamine receptors) that promote the further activation of postsynaptic neuron or T cells when stimulated. Both neuronal and platelet–T cell synapses are stabilized with adhesion molecules such as ALCAM, NCAM, and various integrins. ACLAM adhesion molecules and integrins are expressed by neurons, platelets, and activated T cells, and NCAM is expressed by neurons and subsets of activated T cells. During inflammation, platelets are able to directly interact with postsynaptic neurons or activate T cells recognizing specific glycolipids (sialylated gangliosides) and glycoproteins (ALCAM, NCAM) within lipid rafts via specific receptors (CD62P, Siglecs, CLRs). AChRs, acetylcholine receptors; CLRs, C-type lectin receptors; DA, dopamine; DARs, dopamine receptors; GluRs, glutamate receptors; HRs, histamine receptors; β2ARs, β2-adrenoreceptors; 5HT, serotonin; 5HTRs, serotonin receptors.
Platelet-derived soluble factors and surface molecules that affect proliferation, differentiation, and migration of Th1, Th17, Th2, and Tregs.
| Class of mediators | Platelet-derived mediators | How produced during inflammation | Effect on CD4 T cells |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cytokines | IL-1α (mouse) | Released from α-granules | Promote differentiation of Th17 cells ( |
| IL-1β (human) | |||
| TGFβ1 | Released from α-granules | Promote differentiation of Tregs; TGFβ1 in combinations with IL-6 stimulate differentiation of Th17 cells ( | |
| Chemokines | CXCL1 | Released from α-granules | Stimulate differentiation of Th17 cells ( |
| CXCL4 | Released from α-granules | Stimulate differentiation of Th17 cells ( | |
| CCL5 | Released from α-granules | Potent chemoattractant for effector memory T cells; | |
| Neurotransmitters | Serotonin | Released from dense granules | Stimulate proliferation of CD4 T cells and differentiation of Th1 cells ( |
| Dopamine | Released from dense granules | Stimulate differentiation of Th1 and Th17 cells; inhibit Tregs ( | |
| Histamine | Released from dense granules | Inhibit Tregs ( | |
| Epinephrine | Released from dense granules | Indirectly promote Th2 and Th17 differentiation affecting antigen-presenting cells ( | |
| GABA | Released from dense granules | Inhibit CD4 T cell proliferation ( | |
| Low-molecular-weight mediators | ATP | Released from dense granules | Stimulate CD4 T cell proliferation in moderate concentrations; inhibit CD4 T cell proliferation in high concentrations ( |
| Lipid-derived factors | Platelet-activating factor (PAF) | Released from plasma membrane. Present on the surface of platelet-derived microparticles (PMPs) | Stimulate differentiation of Th17 cells ( |
| Thromboxane A2 | Released from plasma membrane | Stimulate chemotaxis of naive CD4 T cells ( | |
| Other immune mediators | PMPs | Produced by activated platelets by budding process | Possibly stimulate Th17 cells |
| Adhesion molecules | CD40 | Recruited to the surface from membranes of α-granules | Costimulatory signal for CD4 T cells |
| CD62P | Recruited to the surface from membranes of α-granules (CD62P); constitutively expressed (αIIbβ3) | Participate in platelet–T cell aggregates; inhibit proliferation and differentiation ofTh1 and Th17 ( | |
| αIIbβ3 | |||
| Siglecs (?) | |||