The clotting process
Platelets play a critical role in the body’s ability to stop excess bleeding. When a blood vessel is ruptured,
While the plug is forming, a biochemical cascade is carried out that culminates in the cleavage of fibrinogen into fibrin molecules. Fibrin molecules join together to form insoluble threads, creating a natural mesh that converts the plug it into a stable clot.
An important final task carried out by platelets is clot contraction. As more platelets latch on to the fibrin mesh, they begin to spread, shifting from a sphere to
Engineering platelet substitutes
Traditional efforts to bolster clotting have revolved around platelet transfusions, in which donor platelets are introduced into a patient’s bloodstream following trauma or as a preventative measure in
To overcome these limitations, researchers have been engineering
However, while these particle technologies have been successful in their ability to augment clotting, they have yet to overcome a key obstacle, says Thomas Barker, Ph. D., Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology (GIT) who studies clot formation. «There’s no trigger for the particle that tells it where clotting is occurring," he says.
As a result, these particles may begin to initiate clotting as soon as they enter the bloodstream, whether or not clotting is necessary and regardless of whether they’re in the right spot. This kind of indiscriminate clotting can be dangerous as it can lead to blockages in vessels carrying blood to the heart, lungs, or brain.
Another limitation of current synthetic platelet substitutes is that they haven’t been able to achieve some of the more complex processes carried out by platelets, such as clot contraction. This is likely due to their rigid forms, which limit their ability to change shape within the fibrin mesh clot.
Clotting on Command
With funding support from NIBIB, Barker and Andrew Lyon, Ph. D., Dean of the Schmidt College of Science and Technology at Chapman University in California and a prior colleague of Barker’s in the Chemistry Department at GIT, have created new
The PLPs are ultrasoft gel particles that have many fragments of
Because fibrin is only generated while a clot is being made, the PLPs only bind to and become active in areas where clotting is already ongoing; this reduces the likelihood of producing
«We had this crazy concept that you could potentially inject these particles into the bloodstream and if someone wasn’t undergoing clotting, absolutely nothing would happen," said Barker.
This safeguard could make it possible for Barker and Lyon’s PLPs to be given preventively to
Lyon, who synthesized the ultrasoft particles, says their unique ability to deform within the clot is what enables the clot to contract.
Platelet-like particles augment clotting
Barker and Lyon have tested their PLPs in a tiny microfluidic chamber that mimics the physiological environment inside a blood vessel, and also in an animal model of traumatic injury; the chamber was developed by Wilbur Lam, M.D., Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Pediatric and Biomedical Engineering at Emory School of Medicine. They reported their results in the September 7, 2014 issue of Nature
In the microfluidic chamber, PLPs that were added to
Upon examination of
Rosemarie Hunziker, Ph. D., Program Director of Biomaterials at NIBIB, says Barker and Lyon’s synthesized
Moving forward
Before testing the PLPs in patients, Barker says more safety research needs to be conducted to look at whether any
Another important question revolves around the particle’s ultimate fate in the body. «The current particle is not degradable, which is what usually you want in a biomaterial," says Lyon. «We are looking at some analogs that might have better characteristics with respect to degradation. But, at the same time, the deformability of the particle may actually allow it to be distributed and excreted in a way that is very different from a rigid particle.»
The team is also interested in enhancing the particles so they can secrete
1. Ultrasoft microgels displaying emergent
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