5 research outputs found

    Role of glycoprotein Ibalpha in phagocytosis of platelets by macrophages

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    BACKGROUND: Platelet (PLT) storage at 0 to 4 degrees C suppresses bacterial multiplication, but induces clusters of glycoprotein (GP) Ibalpha that trigger their phagocytosis by macrophages and reduce their survival after transfusion. A method was sought that detects cold-induced changes in GPIbalpha involved in phagocytosis. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Human PLTs were isolated and stored for up to 48 hours at 0 degrees C. Binding of a phycoerythrin (PE)-labeled antibody directed against amino acids (AA) 1-35 on GPIbalpha (AN51-PE) was compared with phagocytosis of PLTs by matured monocytic THP-1 cells, analyzed by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. RESULTS: Freshly isolated PLTs were detected as a single population of AN51-PE-positive particles and showed less than 5 percent phagocytosis. Cold storage led to a decrease in AN51-PE binding and an increase in phagocytosis. N-Acetylglucosamine, known to interfere with macrophage recognition of GPIbalpha clusters, restored normal AN51-PE binding to cold-stored PLTs and suppressed phagocytosis. CONCLUSIONS: It is concluded that binding of an antibody against AA 1-35 on GPIbalpha reflects changes in GPIbalpha that make PLTs targets for phagocytosis by macrophages

    Role of glycoprotein Ibalpha in phagocytosis of platelets by macrophages

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: Platelet (PLT) storage at 0 to 4 degrees C suppresses bacterial multiplication, but induces clusters of glycoprotein (GP) Ibalpha that trigger their phagocytosis by macrophages and reduce their survival after transfusion. A method was sought that detects cold-induced changes in GPIbalpha involved in phagocytosis. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Human PLTs were isolated and stored for up to 48 hours at 0 degrees C. Binding of a phycoerythrin (PE)-labeled antibody directed against amino acids (AA) 1-35 on GPIbalpha (AN51-PE) was compared with phagocytosis of PLTs by matured monocytic THP-1 cells, analyzed by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. RESULTS: Freshly isolated PLTs were detected as a single population of AN51-PE-positive particles and showed less than 5 percent phagocytosis. Cold storage led to a decrease in AN51-PE binding and an increase in phagocytosis. N-Acetylglucosamine, known to interfere with macrophage recognition of GPIbalpha clusters, restored normal AN51-PE binding to cold-stored PLTs and suppressed phagocytosis. CONCLUSIONS: It is concluded that binding of an antibody against AA 1-35 on GPIbalpha reflects changes in GPIbalpha that make PLTs targets for phagocytosis by macrophages.status: publishe

    Lymphocyte maintenance during healthy aging requires no substantial alterations in cellular turnover

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    In healthy humans, lymphocyte populations are maintained at a relatively constant size throughout life, reflecting a balance between lymphocyte production and loss. Given the profound immunological changes that occur during healthy aging, including a significant decline in T-cell production by the thymus, lymphocyte maintenance in the elderly is generally thought to require homeostatic alterations in lymphocyte dynamics. Surprisingly, using in vivo 2H2O labeling, we find similar dynamics of most lymphocyte subsets between young adult and elderly healthy individuals. As the contribution of thymic output to T-cell production is only minor from young adulthood onward, compensatory increases in peripheral T-cell division rates are not required to maintain the T-cell pool, despite a tenfold decline in thymic output. These fundamental insights will aid the interpretation of further research into aging and clinical conditions related to disturbed lymphocyte dynamics

    Closing the gap between T-cell life span estimates from stable isotope-labeling studies in mice and humans.

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    Quantitative knowledge of the turnover of different leukocyte populations is a key to our understanding of immune function in health and disease. Much progress has been made thanks to the introduction of stable isotope labeling, the state-of-the-art technique for in vivo quantification of cellular life spans. Yet, even leukocyte life span estimates on the basis of stable isotope labeling can vary up to 10-fold among laboratories. We investigated whether these differences could be the result of variances in the length of the labeling period among studies. To this end, we performed deuterated water-labeling experiments in mice, in which only the length of label administration was varied. The resulting life span estimates were indeed dependent on the length of the labeling period when the data were analyzed using a commonly used single-exponential model. We show that multiexponential models provide the necessary tool to obtain life span estimates that are independent of the length of the labeling period. Use of a multiexponential model enabled us to reduce the gap between human T-cell life span estimates from 2 previously published labeling studies. This provides an important step toward unambiguous understanding of leukocyte turnover in health and disease

    Maintenance of Peripheral Naive T Cells Is Sustained by Thymus Output in Mice but Not Humans

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    Parallels between T cell kinetics in mice and men have fueled the idea that a young mouse is a good model system for a young human, and an old mouse, for an elderly human. By combining in vivo kinetic labeling using deuterated water, thymectomy experiments, analysis of T cell receptor excision circles and CD31 expression, and mathematical modeling, we have quantified the contribution of thymus output and peripheral naive T cell division to the maintenance of T cells in mice and men. Aging affected naive T cell maintenance fundamentally differently in mice and men. Whereas the naive T cell pool in mice was almost exclusively sustained by thymus output throughout their lifetime, the maintenance of the adult human naive T cell pool occurred almost exclusively through peripheral T cell division. These findings put constraints on the extrapolation of insights into T cell dynamics from mouse to man and vice versa
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