| Literature DB >> 33117353 |
Chongxu Shi1, Luying Yang1, Attila Braun2, Hans-Joachim Anders1.
Abstract
Clotting and inflammation are effective danger response patterns positively selected by evolution to limit fatal bleeding and pathogen invasion upon traumatic injuries. As a trade-off, thrombotic, and thromboembolic events complicate severe forms of infectious and non-infectious states of acute and chronic inflammation, i.e., immunothrombosis. Factors linked to thrombosis and inflammation include mediators released by platelet granules, complement, and lipid mediators and certain integrins. Extracellular deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) was a previously unrecognized cellular component in the blood, which elicits profound proinflammatory and prothrombotic effects. Pathogens trigger the release of extracellular DNA together with other pathogen-associated molecular patterns. Dying cells in the inflamed or infected tissue release extracellular DNA together with other danger associated molecular pattern (DAMPs). Neutrophils release DNA by forming neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) during infection, trauma or other forms of vascular injury. Fluorescence tissue imaging localized extracellular DNA to sites of injury and to intravascular thrombi. Functional studies using deoxyribonuclease (DNase)-deficient mouse strains or recombinant DNase show that extracellular DNA contributes to the process of immunothrombosis. Here, we review rodent models of immunothrombosis and the evolving evidence for extracellular DNA as a driver of immunothrombosis and discuss challenges and prospects for extracellular DNA as a potential therapeutic target.Entities:
Keywords: leukocytes; mouse model; platelets; sepsis; stroke; thrombosis; vasculitis
Year: 2020 PMID: 33117353 PMCID: PMC7575749 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.568513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Animal models of immunothrombosis.
| IVC ligation model (stasis model) | Thrombus size is highly consistent. | It completely blocks blood flow. | ( |
| IVC stenosis model | Thrombus reduces blood flow, endothelial cell damage. | Thrombus formation is strain-dependent, clamp relevant injury is unclear. | ( |
| Modified IVC stenosis model | Thrombus reduces blood flow, no endothelial cells damage. | Variable in thrombus incidence and size. | ( |
| Electrolytic IVC model (EIM) | Thrombus size is highly consistent, with no endothelial cells damage. | Long operation time. | ( |
| FeCl3 IVC model | Produces thrombus within minutes, thrombus size is time-dependent. | Transmural vein wall injury, the thrombus is small, only be used to study early time points. | ( |
| Recurrent IVC model | Most clinically relevant. | Twice surgeries on the same mouse. | ( |
| Photothrombotic model | Localize the ischemic lesion, minimal variation in infarction, low mortality and invasiveness, highly reproducible. | The translational impact is poor. | ( |
| Thromboembolic clot models | Any kind of embolus-like material can be used, perfectly matches human embolic stroke. | High variability in infarct size, embolic material not lysisable, high price. | ( |
| Microsphere/macrosphere model | Infarcts with penumbras, induce ischemic cell death and inflammation. Occlusion can be postponed. | Permanent ischemia, multiple vessels occluded, blood flow redistribution, immediate disruption of the blood-brain barrier and vasogenic edema. | ( |
| Cholesterol clot model | Cholesterol crystal triggers clots formation, appropriate for thrombolytic agent study, low mortality, low invasiveness, highly reproducible. | Requires a high degree of surgical skill, the high variability of infarct size, localized ischemic region. | ( |
| Acquired TTP model | A simple approach leads to salient features of TTP. | It requires rabbit or mouse antibodies. | ( |
| Hereditary TTP model | Spontaneous thrombocytopenia | High mortality. | ( |
| HIT/T model | Severe thrombocytopenia, allowing pre-clinical studies. | Needs high doses of heparin, Four factors (Heparin, hPF4, FcγRIIA, and anti-heparin/hPF4 antibodies) are present simultaneously. | ( |
| Sepsis-related DIC model | Inducible DIC with multiple organ failure, suitable for candidate drugs testing. | Mice are relatively resistant to endotoxin. Needs more than bolus injection. | ( |
| CLP-related DIC model | Inducible DIC with multiple organ failure. Technically easy, reproducible and similar to human disease. | High mortality and variability. | ( |
IVC, inferior vena cava; TTP, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura; HIT/T, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia/thrombosis; CLP, cecal ligation and puncture.
Figure 1Central paradigms of immunothrombosis. Damaged vessel walls and injured endothelial cells release tissue factor (TF) and extracellular matrix molecules, inducing functional crosstalk between platelets and leading to platelet aggregation. Activated platelets promote thrombin formation thereby enhancing platelet degranulation and fibrin formation. Activated platelets release proinflammatory cytokines from α-granules, which promotes platelet-neutrophil interaction and triggers the release of the NETs. vWF, von Willebrand Factor; GPIb, glycoprotein Ib; GPVI, glycoprotein VI; TLR, toll-like receptor; LPS, lipopolysaccharides; NO, nitric oxide; GMP, guanosine monophosphate; NF-κβ, nuclear factor-κ beta; IL-6, interleukin 6; MPO, myeloperoxidase; NETs, neutrophil extracellular traps; MAC-1, macrophage antigen 1.
Experimental evidence for the role of extracellular DNA in immunothrombosis.
| Venous thrombosis | IVC model, ecDNA were present in thrombosis, DNase degrades ecDNA, breaks down NETs, reduces thrombus size. | ( |
| Acute limb IRI model, DNase I reduced DNA traps, inflammation, Thrombin-Anti-Thrombin-III expression, and enhanced post-ischemic hind limb perfusion. | ( | |
| ( | ||
| Arterial thrombosis | Murine models of atherosclerosis, DNase I reduced atherosclerosis burden. | ( |
| Ischemic stroke model, circulating nucleosomes and DNA was increased after ischemic stroke. DNase I reduced infarct size and improved stroke outcome. | ( | |
| Cholesterol clot model, ecDNA were presented in crystal clots, DNase prevented clots formation, reduced organ infarction. | ( | |
| Thrombi collected from stroke patients, neutrophils were abundant in all thrombi, and NETs contributed to the composition of all thrombi especially in their outer layers. | ( | |
| Thrombotic microangiopathies syndromes | HIT/T model, thrombi including neutrophils, extracellular DNA. While neutrophil depletion abolishes thrombus formation, DNase treatment limited venous thrombus size. | ( |
| Sepsis-induced DIC in the murine model, ecDNA were presented in thrombus, the blood vessel of lung occluded in DNase deficient mice, DNase treatment prevented NETs clot. Time-dependent increase of cfDNA, later administration of DNase reduced cfDNA, inflammation, and suppressed organ damage. | ( | |
| In a murine CLP model, later administration of DNase 4 or 6 h after CLP resulted in reduced cell-free DNA, inflammation, prevented organ damage, and improved survival. | ( | |
| In acute TMA patients, levels of DNase activity of plasma showed a significant reduction in compared with healthy controls, plasma-mediated degradation of NETs is reduced in patients with acute TMA. | ( |
IVC, inferior vena cava; ecDNA, extracellular DNA; cfDNA, cell-free DNA; NET, neutrophil extracellular trap; HIT/T, heparin-induced thrombocytopenia/thrombosis; CLP, cecal ligation and puncture.
Figure 2Proposed model of DNase function in immunothrombosis. Damaged endothelial cells release tissue factor (TF) and ecDNA. TF activates the coagulation cascade, converting prothrombin to thrombin, which further activates platelets through PAR receptors. The ecDNA acts as DAMP and directly activates platelets and triggers inflammatory responses. The damaged endothelial layer exposes extracellular matrix proteins (collagen, laminin), and accumulates vWF, fibrinogen and other blood plasma proteins on the endothelial surface, further supporting platelet adhesion and activation through platelet specific glycoprotein receptors (GPIb, GPVI) and integrins (αIIbβ3, α2β1). During degranulation, second wave mediators (ATP, ADP, serotonin), extracellular matrix components (vWF, fibrinogen), and inflammatory cytokines are released by activated platelets, triggering thrombus formation and enhancing immune cell responses and NET formation. Platelet purinergic receptors (P2Y1, P2Y12) are activated by ADP, further promoting platelet aggregation and thrombus growth. P-selectin exposure on the plasma membrane of activated platelets increases procoagulant activity and supports platelet-immune cell interaction and NET formation. In the process of immunothrombosis, DNase could inhibit NETosis by fragmenting DNA within the NETs, thereby dissociating platelet-rich components from the endothelial surface, and inhibiting thrombus growth. DNAse may also inhibit purinergic signals in platelets and immune cells. TF, tissue factor; ec-DNA, extracellular deoxyribonucleic acid; vWF, von Willebrand Factor; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα); GPIb, glycoprotein Ib; GPVI, glycoprotein VI, DNase, deoxyribonuclease; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; ATP, adenosine triphosphate.