New research shows that platelets at a wound site can sense where they are within a blood clot they are and that they can remodel their surroundings accordingly.
Platelets are key to initiating wound healing and the formation of blood clots (thrombus). Fibroblasts are connective tissue cells that are essential for the later stages of wound healing. Fibroblasts invade the clot that has been formed and produce vital proteins, including fibronectin, that then form a structural framework to build the new tissue needed to heal.
This new study, published in Science Advances, indicates that platelets can also form a provisional fibronectin matrix in their surroundings, similar to what fibroblasts do in the later stages of wound healing. This has potential implications for how the integrity of blood clots might be maintained during vascular repair.
Commenting on the discovery, lead author Dr Ingmar Schoen said: “We have identified an additional unexpected role for the most prominent platelet adhesion receptor. Our results show that platelets not only form the clot but also can initiate its remodelling by erecting a fibrous scaffold. This finding challenges some existing paradigms in the field of wound healing, which is dominated by research on fibroblasts.”
The researchers made use of super-resolution microscopy, a powerful imaging technique which enables much finer resolution of structures inside or around cells in vitro. To develop this finding further, in vivo observation of this platelet behaviour will be necessary.
“Without super-resolution microscopy, this discovery would not have been possible,” Dr Schoen noted.
Source: RCSI University