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Chloride channels are necessary for full platelet phosphatidylserine exposure and procoagulant activity.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Harper, MT 
Poole, AW 

Abstract

Platelets enhance thrombin generation at sites of vascular injury by exposing phosphatidylserine during necrosis-like cell death. Anoctamin 6 (Ano6) is required for Ca(2+)-dependent phosphatidylserine exposure and is defective in patients with Scott syndrome, a rare bleeding disorder. Ano6 may also form Cl(-) channels, though the role of Cl(-) fluxes in platelet procoagulant activity has not been explored. We found that Cl(-) channel blockers or removal of extracellular Cl(-) inhibited agonist-induced phosphatidylserine exposure. However, this was not due to direct inhibition of Ca(2+)-dependent scrambling since Ca(2+) ionophore-induced phosphatidylserine exposure was normal. This implies that the role of Ano6 in Ca(2+-)dependent PS exposure is likely to differ from any putative function of Ano6 as a Cl(-) channel. Instead, Cl(-) channel blockade inhibited agonist-induced Ca(2+) entry. Importantly, Cl(-) channel blockers also prevented agonist-induced membrane hyperpolarization, resulting in depolarization. We propose that Cl(-) entry through Cl(-) channels is required for this hyperpolarization, maintaining the driving force for Ca(2+) entry and triggering full phosphatidylserine exposure. This demonstrates a novel role for Cl(-) channels in controlling platelet death and procoagulant activity.

Description

Keywords

Anoctamins, Blood Platelets, Calcium, Carrier Proteins, Cells, Cultured, Chloride Channels, Flow Cytometry, Humans, Necrosis, Peptides, Phosphatidylserines, Phospholipid Transfer Proteins, Thrombin, Thrombosis

Journal Title

Cell Death Dis

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2041-4889
2041-4889

Volume Title

4

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC