Developmental endothelial locus-1 modulates platelet-monocyte interactions and instant blood-mediated inflammatory reaction in islet transplantation

I Kourtzelis, K Kotlabova, JH Lim… - Thrombosis and …, 2016 - thieme-connect.com
I Kourtzelis, K Kotlabova, JH Lim, I Mitroulis, A Ferreira, LS Chen, B Gercken, A Steffen…
Thrombosis and haemostasis, 2016thieme-connect.com
Platelet-monocyte interactions are strongly implicated in thrombo-inflammatory injury by
actively contributing to intravascular inflammation, leukocyte recruitment to inflamed sites,
and the amplification of the procoagulant response. Instant blood-mediated inflammatory
reaction (IBMIR) represents thrombo-inflammatory injury elicited upon pancreatic islet
transplantation (islet-Tx), thereby dramatically affecting transplant survival and function.
Developmental endothelial locus-1 (Del-1) is a functionally versatile endothelial cell-derived …
Platelet-monocyte interactions are strongly implicated in thrombo-inflammatory injury by actively contributing to intravascular inflammation, leukocyte recruitment to inflamed sites, and the amplification of the procoagulant response. Instant blood-mediated inflammatory reaction (IBMIR) represents thrombo-inflammatory injury elicited upon pancreatic islet transplantation (islet-Tx), thereby dramatically affecting transplant survival and function. Developmental endothelial locus-1 (Del-1) is a functionally versatile endothelial cell-derived homeostatic factor with anti-inflammatory properties, but its potential role in IBMIR has not been previously addressed. Here, we establish Del-1 as a novel inhibitor of IBMIR using a whole blood–islet model and a syngeneic murine transplantation model. Indeed, Del-1 pre-treatment of blood before addition of islets diminished coagulation activation and islet damage as assessed by C-peptide release. Consistently, intraportal islet-Tx in transgenic mice with endothelial cell-specific overexpression of Del-1 resulted in a marked decrease of monocytes and platelet-monocyte aggregates in the transplanted tissues, relative to those in wild-type recipients. Mechanistically, Del-1 decreased platelet-monocyte aggregate formation, by specifically blocking the interaction between monocyte Mac-1-integrin and platelet GPIb. Our findings reveal a hitherto unknown role of Del-1 in the regulation of platelet-monocyte interplay and the subsequent heterotypic aggregate formation in the context of IBMIR. Therefore, Del-1 may represent a novel approach to prevent or mitigate the adverse reactions mediated through thrombo-inflammatory pathways in islet-Tx and perhaps other inflammatory disorders involving platelet-leukocyte aggregate formation.
Supplementary Material to this article is available online at www.thrombosis-online.com.
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