Respective contributions of single and compound granule fusion to secretion by activated platelets

Although granule secretion is pivotal in many platelet responses, the fusion routes of α and δ granule release remain uncertain. We used a 3D reconstruction approach based on electron microscopy to visualize the spatial organization of granules in unstimulated and activated platelets. Two modes of e...

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Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2016-11, Vol.128 (21), p.2538-2549
Hauptverfasser: Eckly, Anita, Rinckel, Jean-Yves, Proamer, Fabienne, Ulas, Neslihan, Joshi, Smita, Whiteheart, Sidney W., Gachet, Christian
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container_end_page 2549
container_issue 21
container_start_page 2538
container_title Blood
container_volume 128
creator Eckly, Anita
Rinckel, Jean-Yves
Proamer, Fabienne
Ulas, Neslihan
Joshi, Smita
Whiteheart, Sidney W.
Gachet, Christian
description Although granule secretion is pivotal in many platelet responses, the fusion routes of α and δ granule release remain uncertain. We used a 3D reconstruction approach based on electron microscopy to visualize the spatial organization of granules in unstimulated and activated platelets. Two modes of exocytosis were identified: a single mode that leads to release of the contents of individual granules and a compound mode that leads to the formation of granule-to-granule fusion, resulting in the formation of large multigranular compartments. Both modes occur during the course of platelet secretion. Single fusion events are more visible at lower levels of stimulation and early time points, whereas large multigranular compartments are present at higher levels of agonist and at later time points. Although α granules released their contents through both modes of exocytosis, δ granules underwent only single exocytosis. To define the underlying molecular mechanisms, we examined platelets from vesicle-associated membrane protein 8 (VAMP8) null mice. After weak stimulation, compound exocytosis was abolished and single exocytosis decreased in VAMP8 null platelets. Higher concentrations of thrombin bypassed the VAMP8 requirement, indicating that this isoform is a key but not a required factor for single and/or compound exocytosis. Concerning the biological relevance of our findings, compound exocytosis was observed in thrombi formed after severe laser injury of the vessel wall with thrombin generation. After superficial injury without thrombin generation, no multigranular compartments were detected. Our studies suggest that platelets use both modes of membrane fusion to control the extent of agonist-induced exocytosis. •Weak stimulation favors the fusion of single granules with the platelet surface and stronger stimulation induces granule-granule fusion.•VAMP8 participates in single and compound exocytosis.
doi_str_mv 10.1182/blood-2016-03-705681
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We used a 3D reconstruction approach based on electron microscopy to visualize the spatial organization of granules in unstimulated and activated platelets. Two modes of exocytosis were identified: a single mode that leads to release of the contents of individual granules and a compound mode that leads to the formation of granule-to-granule fusion, resulting in the formation of large multigranular compartments. Both modes occur during the course of platelet secretion. Single fusion events are more visible at lower levels of stimulation and early time points, whereas large multigranular compartments are present at higher levels of agonist and at later time points. Although α granules released their contents through both modes of exocytosis, δ granules underwent only single exocytosis. To define the underlying molecular mechanisms, we examined platelets from vesicle-associated membrane protein 8 (VAMP8) null mice. 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subjects Animals
Blood Platelets - metabolism
Exocytosis
Mice
Mice, Mutant Strains
Platelet Activation
Platelets and Thrombopoiesis
R-SNARE Proteins - genetics
R-SNARE Proteins - metabolism
Secretory Vesicles - genetics
Secretory Vesicles - metabolism
title Respective contributions of single and compound granule fusion to secretion by activated platelets
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