| Literature DB >> 31616542 |
Xiao-Hua Lei1, Yi-Qing Yang2, Chi-Yuan Ma3, En-Kui Duan3.
Abstract
Platelet transfusion is one of the most reliable strategies to cure patients suffering from thrombocytopenia or platelet dysfunction. With the increasing demand for transfusion, however, there is an undersupply of donors to provide the platelet source. Thus, scientists have sought to design methods for deriving clinical-scale platelets ex vivo. Although there has been considerable success ex vivo in the generation of transformative platelets produced by human stem cells (SCs), the platelet yields achieved using these strategies have not been adequate for clinical application. In this review, we provide an overview of the developmental process of megakaryocytes and the production of platelets in vivo and ex vivo, recapitulate the key advances in the production of SC-derived platelets using several SC sources, and discuss some strategies that apply three-dimensional bioreactor devices and biochemical factors synergistically to improve the generation of large-scale platelets for use in future biomedical and clinical settings. ©The Author(s) 2019. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Bioreactors; Megakaryopoiesis; Platelet production; Stem cells; Transfusion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31616542 PMCID: PMC6789181 DOI: 10.4252/wjsc.v11.i9.666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Stem Cells ISSN: 1948-0210 Impact factor: 5.326
Figure 1Overview of megakaryopoiesis, proplatelet formation and platelet release. In vivo, bone marrow is located within the trabecular bones, where the hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) undergo the process of megakaryocyte (MK) differentiation and MK maturation under the control of thrombopoietin. During maturation, MKs migrate to bone marrow sinusoids and form proplatelets. Proplatelets elongate through the vascular endothelium into the vessels, and proplatelet terminal ends are released into the bloodstream by blood shear forces, forming platelets. In vitro, HSC-derived CD34+ cells or pluripotent stem cell are first expanded in vitro and then differentiate into the megakaryocytic lineage. Once differentiated, immature MKs undergo the polyploidization process via inducing endomitosis to increase the number of DNA content to 16-128 N. During the process of polyploidization, some extended proplatelets are formed and released in high ploidy MKs in culture. To increase the efficiency of platelets, MKs extend proplatelets into the bioreactor, with perfused culture medium mimicking blood flow.
Some major advances in bioreactors in platelet formation and platelet release from 2013 to 2018
| Two-directional flow bioreactor | The bioreactor consisted of two-directional flow, in which the angle between the directions of the main and pressure flow is 60 degrees | Nakagawa et al[ |
| Microfluidic platelet bioreactor | The bioreactor is based on polydimethylsiloxane bonded to glass slides to construct some upper and lower microfluidic channel | Thon et al[ |
| Spinning-membrane filtration device | Separating | Schlinker et al[ |
| RCCS bioreactor | Shear force, simulated microgravity, and better diffusion of nutrients and oxygen from the RCCS | Yang et al[ |
| Innovative bioreactor | The bioreactor consisted of a membrane, and using flow through the membrane and shear across the membrane to drive the megakaryocytes to release PLTs | Avanzi et al[ |
| Microfluidic device | This device consists in a wide array of von Willebrand factor-coated micropillars, allowing them to remain trapped and subjected to hydrodynamic shear | Blin et al[ |
| Turbulent flow-based bioreactor | Stimulation with optimized shear stress and turbulent energy, collaborates with several growth factors for proplatelet formation | Ito et al[ |
RCCS: Rotary cell culture system.