Lipopolysaccharide is a direct agonist for platelet RNA splicing

PN Shashkin, GT Brown, A Ghosh… - The Journal of …, 2008 - journals.aai.org
PN Shashkin, GT Brown, A Ghosh, GK Marathe, TM McIntyre
The Journal of Immunology, 2008journals.aai.org
Platelets express TLR4 receptors, but its ligand LPS does not directly activate thrombotic
functions nor, obviously, transcription by these anucleate cells. Platelets, however, store
information that changes their phenotype over a few hours in the form of unprocessed RNA
transcripts. We show even low concentrations of LPS in the presence of soluble CD14
initiated splicing of unprocessed IL-1β RNA, with translation and accumulation of IL-1β
protein. LPS was a more robust agonist for this response than thrombin. Platelets also …
Abstract
Platelets express TLR4 receptors, but its ligand LPS does not directly activate thrombotic functions nor, obviously, transcription by these anucleate cells. Platelets, however, store information that changes their phenotype over a few hours in the form of unprocessed RNA transcripts. We show even low concentrations of LPS in the presence of soluble CD14 initiated splicing of unprocessed IL-1β RNA, with translation and accumulation of IL-1β protein. LPS was a more robust agonist for this response than thrombin. Platelets also contained cyclooxygenase-2 pre-mRNA, which also was spliced and translated after LPS stimulation. Flow cytometry and immunocytochemistry of platelets extensively purified by negative immunodepletion showed platelets contained IL-1β, and quantitative assessment of white blood cell contamination by CD14 real time PCR confirms that leukocytes were not the IL-1β source, nor were they required for platelet stimulation. LPS did not initiate rapid platelet responses, but over time did prime platelet aggregation to soluble agonists, induced actin rearrangement, and initiated granule secretion with P-selectin expression that resulted the coating of quiescent leukocytes with activated platelets. LPS is a direct agonist for platelets that allows these cells to directly participate in the innate immune response to bacteria.
journals.aai.org