Biotinylation of human platelets is compatible with pathogen inactivation treatment and cold storage for clinical studies.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_67EAE4A152E4
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Biotinylation of human platelets is compatible with pathogen inactivation treatment and cold storage for clinical studies.
Journal
Transfusion
ISSN
1537-2995 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0041-1132
Publication state
Published
Issued date
02/2025
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
65
Number
2
Pages
333-343
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Production of platelet concentrates (PCs) involves several steps that significantly affect platelet behavior. To gain a deeper understanding of how storage conditions impact donor platelet recirculation and functionality post-transfusion, ex vivo platelet labeling is a feasible approach. However, before pursuing clinical investigations of platelet recirculation and function in humans, we aimed to determine the effects of pathogen inactivation technology (PIT) and storage conditions (4°C vs. room temperature [RT]) on phenotype and function of biotinylated platelets compared to conventional PIT PCs for transfusion.
Nine PCs were prepared in 61% additive solution from 45 buffy coats (five buffy coats each). A pool-and-split of three units was used to prepare three equivalent PCs: two labeled with biotin and stored at RT or 4°C, and one without labeling and stored at RT. All PCs were then treated by PIT (amotosalen/UVA) and stored for 14 days. Labeling efficiency, platelet concentration, metabolic parameters, aggregation response (ADP, collagen, co-aggregation with epinephrine), and platelet phenotype (CD42b, CD62-P, phosphatidylserine) at the basal stage and upon stimulation (ADP or TRAP-6) were performed.
Labeling efficiency of PIT and 4°C PCs was stable over 14 days of storage. Differences in platelet function and phenotype were mainly due to the storage temperature and not the biotinylation process. Phenotypes at baseline or after stimulation were equivalent in biotin-positive and biotin-negative platelets.
Biotin-labeled platelets can effectively enable investigation of the effects of PIT and storage temperature for clinical studies. This method shows great potential for improving platelet transfusion knowledge.
Nine PCs were prepared in 61% additive solution from 45 buffy coats (five buffy coats each). A pool-and-split of three units was used to prepare three equivalent PCs: two labeled with biotin and stored at RT or 4°C, and one without labeling and stored at RT. All PCs were then treated by PIT (amotosalen/UVA) and stored for 14 days. Labeling efficiency, platelet concentration, metabolic parameters, aggregation response (ADP, collagen, co-aggregation with epinephrine), and platelet phenotype (CD42b, CD62-P, phosphatidylserine) at the basal stage and upon stimulation (ADP or TRAP-6) were performed.
Labeling efficiency of PIT and 4°C PCs was stable over 14 days of storage. Differences in platelet function and phenotype were mainly due to the storage temperature and not the biotinylation process. Phenotypes at baseline or after stimulation were equivalent in biotin-positive and biotin-negative platelets.
Biotin-labeled platelets can effectively enable investigation of the effects of PIT and storage temperature for clinical studies. This method shows great potential for improving platelet transfusion knowledge.
Keywords
Humans, Blood Platelets/metabolism, Biotinylation, Blood Preservation/methods, Platelet Transfusion/methods, Furocoumarins/pharmacology, Platelet Aggregation, Cold Temperature, Ultraviolet Rays, biotin, cold storage, labeling, pathogen inactivation, platelet concentration, transfusion medicine
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
19/12/2024 16:31
Last modification date
22/02/2025 7:06