La Trobe

Differential effects of physiological agonists on the proteome of platelet-derived extracellular vesicles

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posted on 2024-07-23, 07:35 authored by Mitchell J Moon, Alin RaiAlin Rai, Prerna Sharma, Haoyun Fang, James D McFadyen, David GreeningDavid Greening, Karlheinz PeterKarlheinz Peter
Arterial thrombosis manifesting as heart attack and stroke is the leading cause of death worldwide. Platelets are central mediators of thrombosis that can be activated through multiple activation pathways. Platelet-derived extracellular vesicles (pEVs), also known as platelet-derived microparticles, are granular mixtures of membrane structures produced by platelets in response to various activating stimuli. Initial studies have attracted interest on how platelet agonists influence the composition of the pEV proteome. In the current study, we used physiological platelet agonists of varying potencies which reflect the microenvironments that platelets experience during thrombus formation: adenosine diphosphate, collagen, thrombin as well as a combination of thrombin/collagen to induce platelet activation and pEV generation. Proteomic profiling revealed that pEVs have an agonist-dependent altered proteome in comparison to their cells of origin, activated platelets. Furthermore, we found that various protein classes including those related to coagulation and complement (prothrombin, antithrombin, and plasminogen) and platelet activation (fibrinogen) are attributed to platelet EVs following agonist stimulation. This agonist-dependent altered proteome suggests that protein packaging is an active process that appears to occur without de novo protein synthesis. This study provides new information on the influence of physiological agonist stimuli on the biogenesis and proteome landscape of pEVs.

Funding

This work was supported by fellowships from Amelia Hains and Baker Institute (DWG) and the National Heart Foundation of Australia (DWG: #105072, Vanguard; JDM: Future Leader Fellow), Aust. National Health and Medical Research Council Project (DWG: #1057741; KP: L3 Investigator Grant), Medical Research Future Fund (DWG: MRF1201805), and the Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program to the Baker Institute. H.F. is the recipient of postgraduate scholarships from Australian Government Training Program (RTP) and Bright Sparks Scholarship program.

History

Publication Date

2024-06-01

Journal

Proteomics

Volume

24

Issue

11

Article Number

2300391

Pagination

16p.

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

1615-9853

Rights Statement

© 2024 The Authors. PROTEOMICS published by Wiley-VCH GmbH. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.