Abstract
Surface ion equilibrium is hypothesized to play an important role in defining the interactions between foreign materials and biological systems. In this study, we compare two surfaces with respect to their ability to activate adhering platelets. One is a commonly used implant material TiO2, which binds Ca2+, and the other one is glass, which does not. We show, that in the presence of Ca2+, TiO2 acts as an agonist, activating adhering platelets and causing the expression on their surface of two well-known activation markers, CD62P (P-selectin) and CD63. On the contrary, in the absence of Ca2+, platelets adhering on TiO2 express only one of the two markers, CD63. Platelets adhering on glass, as well as platelets challenged with soluble agonists in solution, express both markers independently of whether Ca2+ is present or not. The expression of CD62P and CD63 is indicative of the exocytosis of the so-called α- and dense granules, respectively. It is a normal response of platelets to activation. Differences in the expression profiles of these two markers point to differential regulation of the exocytosis of the two kinds of granules, confirming the recent notion that platelets can tune their microenvironment in a trigger-specific fashion.
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1 Introduction
The interplay between surface physico-chemical properties of materials and the biological response they elicit is an active area of research [1]. The role of interfacial ion equilibrium in this process is an aspect that has not received sufficient attention despite the recognition of its importance [1]. In this context, titania–Ca2+ interactions represent an interesting example. Titania (TiO2) is a relatively inert and stable material responsible for the favorable, if poorly understood, biocompatibility properties of titanium (Ti), which is used in the production of various implants—stents, heart valve housings, dental prostheses and other osseoimplants [2–4]. Titania interactions with Ca2+ are manifested in terms of changes of several surface properties, such as the isoelectric point (IEP, the pH at which proton dissociation from the surface is balanced by adsorption and the surface charge is neutralized) and ζ-potential: the IEP of TiO2 is shifted in the presence of calcium to higher pH [5–8], and its ζ-potential is inverted at a near-physiological Ca2+ concentration of ~3 mM at physiological pH [8]. These changes can be interpreted in terms of adsorption of Ca2+ ions at the oxide surface; this is the so-called “chemical” interpretation. For a detailed discussion of the chemical versus physical interpretation of the charge reversal phenomena, the reader is referred to Lyklema et al. [9], while IEP shifts are discussed in detail in Hunter et al. [10].
In simplest terms, Ca2+ adsorption to the surface will change the balance of interactions between the surface and the material (proteins, lipids, cells) adsorbing or adhering to it. Indeed, there is some evidence suggesting that Ca2+ adsorption to titania affects TiO2-protein interactions [11]. Furthermore, on TiO2, Ca2+ elicits a clear response in terms of lipid behavior in phosphatidyl serine (PS)-containing liposomes and supported lipid bilayers—response that is absent on substrates such as silica or glass [12–15]. Interactions of Ca2+ with silica are not manifested by the ζ-potential reversal [16], and at neutral pH the fraction of adsorbed Ca2+ ions is quite small [17]. For more details, see Figure S1 in the supporting information. In view of these observations, we hypothesized that the behavior of more complex biological systems on TiO2 would also be affected by the TiO2–Ca2+ interactions. In order to demonstrate that these interactions have an effect on a biological system, we chose to investigate platelets, because of a clearly identifiable response in terms of activation, and their relevance to material biocompatibility.
Platelets are anuclear 3–4 µm cell fragments that circulate in the blood, scouring the vascular bed for sites of injury, where they become activated. Activated platelets adhere to each other and to the injured tissue, forming a platelet plug, catalyzing coagulation cascade reactions that culminate in fibrin production and clot formation, and coordinate the subsequent inflammatory response and wound healing processes [18–22]. Platelets achieve these functions by releasing and expressing on their surface a variety of soluble and membrane factors—lipids, proteins, and small molecules—that are stored internally in the quiescent platelets. Examples of membrane factors include the phospholipid phosphatidyl serine (PS), which catalyzes the assembly of the coagulation cascade proteins [18, 23, 24], transmembrane protein markers such as CD62P (P-selectin) and CD63 that are characteristic of the exocytosis of the α- and dense storage granules, respectively [25], and integrin GPIIb/IIIa, the active form of which is responsible for the adhesion events [20, 26–31]. Expression of these factors is a useful measure of platelet activation [20, 32, 33].
Contact with artificial surfaces also activates platelets, leading to thrombosis [34, 35], which can be successfully managed with anticoagulants to some extent. However, complications still arise despite the anticoagulant therapy [34]. This is a well-known problem for the development of blood-compatible biomaterials and considerable research efforts are focused on the discovery and development of materials with minimal procoagulatory properties [34, 35]. On the other hand, blood coagulation at surfaces of osseoimplants is beneficial for implant integration. Because of its importance, interactions between whole blood, or its components, and various biomaterials, has been extensively studied [34–40]. Quite a few of these studies focused specifically on TiO2 [30, 41–51]. There is an overall understanding of the sequence of events, viz., protein adsorption—platelet activation—thrombosis, and it is established that surface protein adsorption and the dynamics of the protein-adsorbed films play a major role in the process of platelet activation by foreign materials [34, 42, 52], although direct surface effects have also been described [26, 41]. However, the nuances of these processes remain poorly understood; in particular, detailed, multifactorial studies of platelet activation by surfaces are hard to come by. There is a distinct lack of suitable biophysical models that would allow the principles underlying these interactions to be elucidated. For this reason, in our study we focus on the purified platelets and on identifying a clear cause-and-effect relationship between surface ion binding and platelet response. We use the expression of different platelet activation markers to elucidate the effect of surfaces such as TiO2 and glass on the platelets under different ionic conditions. We demonstrate that the pattern of activation marker expression in platelets interacting with TiO2 depends on whether Ca2+ is present or not. This effect is absent in platelets adhering on glass as well as in platelets challenged with agonists in solution.
2 Results
2.1 Platelet Isolation and Purification
Platelets were isolated from human whole blood collected by venipuncture into sodium citrate anticoagulant. In order to establish a clear cause-and-effect relationship between Ca2+–TiO2 interactions and platelet activation at the TiO2 surface, we purified platelets from the plasma proteins. Purification was done by centrifugation, after Watson et al. [53] with modifications. Protein concentration in our samples was ~0.05 ± 0.01 mg/ml, compared to ~130 mg/ml in the blood plasma.
Prior to the surface experiments, platelet behavior in solution was analyzed by flow cytometry to ensure their purity, minimal activation, and appropriate response to agonists [53–56]. The results of this analysis are shown in Fig. 1. They confirm that freshly isolated platelets are not contaminated by other cells and do not express activation markers such as CD62P, CD63, active form of GPIIb/IIIa, or phosphatidyl serine (PS). CD62P and CD63 are indicative of the exocytosis of α- and dense granules, respectively, that occurs in response to activation [25]. GPIIb/IIIa is a constitutively expressed platelet surface integrin that changes conformation upon activation, and the procoagulant phospholipid PS was already discussed above [18, 20, 23–25, 53–56]. Stimulation with soluble agonists (PMA or TRAP) lead to the expression of these markers (Fig. 1, Figure S2 in the Supporting Information). Consistent with previous findings, CD62P and CD63 expression did not depend on the presence of the extracellular Ca2+ [56–58]. GPIIb/IIIa activation and the detection of exposed PS with annexin A5 require extracellular Ca2+ (Fig. 1) [54, 59]. Only platelets that were not activated upon isolation but responded to the agonists as shown in Fig. 1 were used in subsequent experiments.
2.2 Expression of the Activation Marker CD62P Depends on the Extracellular Ca2+ in Platelets Adhering on TiO2, but not on Glass
Freshly isolated, purified platelets were allowed to interact with freshly cleaned, bare glass surfaces or with TiO2-coated glass surfaces in a Ca2+-free buffer. They adhered and spread on both surfaces (Fig. 2). Both the numbers of adhering platelets and the degree of their spreading were similar on glass and on TiO2. In both cases, more platelets adhered after 3 h than after 10 min. Some of the platelets adhering on TiO2 after 3 h were not spread (Fig. 2a-v and Figure S3 in the Supporting Information). The numbers of adhering platelets and their degree of spreading are shown in Table S3 and Figure S3 in the Supporting Information.
On glass, adhering platelets expressed CD62P and CD63 markers, signalling their activation (Fig. 2a-i, iv, b-i, iii). Activation was already noted in many of the platelets incubated with glass for 10 min (Fig. 2a-i, b-i), when platelets were well-separated. Incubation for 3 h led to a near-confluent layer of activated platelets on the surface (Fig. 2a-iv). These observations are consistent with previous reports of platelet activation on glass in the absence of anticoagulants, both in the presence and in the absence of plasma proteins [60–63].
Crucially, platelets incubated for 10 min on TiO2 in a Ca-free buffer did not express CD62P (Fig. 2a-ii) or respond to TRAP (Fig. 2a-iii). Addition of Ca2+ after adhesion did not activate these platelets and did not restore their ability to respond to TRAP (Figure S4 in the Supporting Information). After 3 h of incubation in a Ca-free buffer, there were platelets on TiO2 that did express CD62P and responded to TRAP, but these were the non-spread platelets (Fig. 2a-v–vii).
Platelets adhering on TiO2 in the absence of Ca2+ did express the dense granule marker CD63 (Fig. 2b), suggesting that the exocytosis of the α-granules and dense granules is differentially regulated.
In the presence of 2 mM Ca2+, platelets adhered, spread, and expressed CD62P both on TiO2 and on glass, after 10 min and after 3 h (Fig. 3a). More platelets adhered to the surface in the presence of Ca2+ than in its absence (c.f. Figs. 2a-i, ii and 3a-i, ii; see Table S3 in the Supporting Information), and after 10 min of incubation, platelets adhering in the presence of Ca2+ spread to a greater extent on both surfaces (Figure S3 in the Supporting Information). Furthermore, there was a difference in the distribution of the integrin GPIIb/IIIa. It appeared to be concentrated at the periphery of the spread platelets in presence of Ca2+ (Fig. 3a), while it was uniformly distributed in its absence (Fig. 2). The significance of this difference is not clear. Such non-uniform staining has been previously observed with this protein in activated platelets [64], though platelets adhering on glass are reported to have a centrally located pool of GPIIb/IIIa surrounded by concentric rings [20].
2.3 Chelating Intracellular Ca2+ Affects the Expression of Both Activation Markers (CD62P and CD63)
To further elucidate the role of calcium in the differential platelet activation at surfaces, the platelet cytoplasmic calcium was chelated by incubating them with BAPTA-AM. BAPTA-AM is an ester that can freely cross the plasma membrane but is hydrolyzed once inside the platelet. The resulting membrane-impermeable acid acts as a chelator of cytoplasmic Ca2+ [65, 66]. Figure 3b shows that platelets in solution loose their ability to express CD62P and CD63 in response to stimulation with TRAP if their cytoplasmic calcium is chelated by BAPTA-AM. This is expected, because both processes require the rise in cytosolic Ca2+ [20]. Similarly, chelation of intracellular Ca2+ significantly reduced the ability of platelets adhering on glass to express these two markers (c.f. Figs. 3c-i, iii, with Fig. 2a-i, iv for CD62P and Fig. 3c-v, vii with Fig. 2b-i, iii for CD63). BAPTA-AM treatment also significantly reduced the extent of expression of CD63 in platelets interacting with TiO2 (c.f. Figs. 3c-vi, viii with Fig. 2b-ii, iv). Since CD62P is not expressed in platelets interacting with TiO2 in the absence of extracellular Ca2+, BAPTA-AM treatment had no further effect on the expression of this marker (Fig. 3c-ii, iv). Chelation of intracellular Ca2+ did reduce the extent of platelet spreading on TiO2 and to a lesser extent on glass (Figure S3 in Supporting Information). A similar effect has previously been observed on polystyrene [67].
3 Discussion
In the presence of the extracellular calcium, TiO2 acts as an agonist, activating adhering platelets, as judged by the expression of the α- and dense granule markers CD62P and CD63. Its effect is similar to that of glass or of soluble agonists such as TRAP. In the absence of the extracellular calcium, the effect of TiO2 on the adhering platelets is markedly different from that of the other agonists: platelets adhering on TiO2 express CD63 but not CD62P, while platelets adhering on glass, or challenged with agonists in solution, express both markers. These trends are visible in the images of individual experiments shown in Figs. 2 and 3, and are also apparent in the average data from different experiments shown in Fig. 4.
The simplest mechanism behind this effect would be that TiO2, because of its affinity for Ca2+ [5–8], acts as a Ca2+-chelator: it could deplete intracellular Ca2+, the way BAPTA-AM does, and/or remove structurally important ions from the outer surface of the platelet membranes, the way EDTA does [83]. This mechanism does not account for our observations, however: firstly, we see a clear difference between the effect of the intracellular Ca2+ chelator BAPTA-AM and the effect of TiO2. The former affects the expression of both markers, while the latter concerns only CD62P. Secondly, chelation of the extracellular Ca2+ by EDTA or citrate does not prevent the expression of either of the two markers in platelets challenged with various agonists [68, 69]. In other words, platelets must directly sense differences in the surface properties between TiO2 in the presence and in the absence of Ca2+.
It should be pointed out that we observed two kinds of platelets on both surfaces. We refer to them as spread and non-spread. The spread platelets are present after 10 min and have extensive platelet-surface contacts but limited platelet–platelet contacts (Fig. 2a i, ii). They persist on the surface after 3 h. The non-spread platelets appear at longer times and are observed after 3 h (Fig. 2a iv–vii). They have limited contact with the substrate but appear to be in contact with other platelets. Most likely, these two populations arise simply due to the surface exclusion effects: at the initial stages of adsorption, there is sufficient space for the adhering platelets to spread, but as the surface becomes covered, the adsorbing platelets can no longer spread out as they are limited by the presence of other platelets. There is a difference in the behavior of the two populations on TiO2 in the absence of Ca2+: the non-spread platelets expressed some CD62P and responded to TRAP, while the spread platelets did not (Fig. 2a-v, vi). This observation may appear counterintuitive, because platelet spreading and activation are usually coupled [20, 70, 71]. This is not always the case, however: non-spread, activated platelets have been observed before. In platelets adhering on collagen, they appear in the very early stages of the adhesion process and contribute to thrombus formation through platelet–platelet interactions [31]. Broberg et al. [72] shows several examples where platelet spreading and activation (as judged by the expression of CD62P) are not correlated. Similarly Pandey et al. [73] show that low concentrations of lysophosphatidic acid induce platelet shape changes but not granule secretion. The difference in behavior between the spread and non-spread platelets we observe on TiO2 in the absence of Ca2+ appears to be related to the platelet-surface contact area or to the platelet–platelet interactions.
One of the consequences of platelets’ ability to sense differences in TiO2 surface properties is the differential expression of the α- and dense granule markers that we observe on titania in the absence of Ca2+. As early as 1988, Kang et al. [39] showed that exocytosis of the dense granules, as judged by the serotonin release, correlated with the number of platelets adhering to the surface, while the release of α-granules, as judged by the release of β-thromboglobulin, was selective in regards to the surface properties and peaked in a particular range of surface wetability values they tested. Rhodes et al. [37] in 1994 also showed that granule release was differentially induced by the different surfaces and flow regimes, and Taylor et al. [74] demonstrated that the level of expression of α- and dense granule markers depends on the agonist concentration and strength differently. These studies were done with whole blood and PrP. Our observation of the differential granule release is therefore not restricted to the purified platelets but is a manifestation of a more general aspect of platelet behaviour, that could allow them to tune the microenvironment at the wound site [19]. Molecular mechanism behind this behavior is most likely rooted in the different regulatory machinery associated with the secretion of the two types of granules: it is reported that the secretion of α- and dense granules is regulated by two different Rab-GTPases (Rab4A and Rab27A) [75–78] and is affected differently by actin polymerization inhibitors [57, 77]. α-granules themselves appear to contain subpopulations, the release of which is regulated differentially [79], further supporting the idea of platelets tuning the environment of the wound. This is an active area of research [19]. However, it is at this point not clear how this differential regulation is achieved: what are the stimuli and how are they transmitted to the different granules. This complicates further interpretation of our observations at the molecular level, but does provide an interesting starting point for further investigations. In the context of the possible applications, surface-induced and surface-charge regulated differential granule release can be used for controlled molecule release from platelets, e.g., by nanoparticles, or implants in drug delivery applications [80].
4 Materials and Methods
4.1 Blood Collection
Blood collection was organized by the Biobanco Vasco para la Investigación (Basque Biobank for Research, Galdakao, Spain) and performed with informed consent according to the appropriate legal and ethical guidelines. Donors were healthy volunteers without the history of exposure to medication (such as aspirin) or exposure to alcohol in the 2 weeks prior to collection. 10 ml of blood was collected by venipuncture with a 21 gauge needle into sodium citrate anticoagulant (two 5 ml glass Vacutainer® tubes, Becton Dickenson, Madrid, Spain, from each donor) and stored at 37 °C. First 2 ml of blood was discarded during the collection to avoid platelet activation by residual thrombin [53].
4.2 Platelet Preparation [53, 81]
All procedures involving dispensing, pipetting, and transferring blood were carried out in a sterile laminar flow cabinet (Faster Two 30, Faster, Italy) to avoid contamination. Glass- and plasticware was autoclaved before use unless it was already sterile when purchased. Citrate-anticoagulated whole blood was transferred from the Vacutainers to 1.5 ml Eppendorf Safe-lock microcentrifuge tubes (Sigma Aldrich, Madrid). Platelet count was determined with a ABX Micros 60 hematology analyzer (Horiba ABX Diagnostics, Madrid, Spain) and was typically in the range 1.5–2.5 × 108 platelets per ml. Platelet-rich plasma was prepared from whole blood by centrifugation at 600 rpm (37×g) for 20 min at 37 °C in a 5417R Eppendorf centrifuge (Hamburg, Germany) equipped with a fixed angle rotor. At this point, platelet and other cell counts were measured with the hematology analyzer. Red and white blood cell counts were below 0.01 × 106 and below 0.1 × 106 cells per ml, respectively, platelet counts were on the order of 2.8 × 108 cells per ml.
PRP layers were collected into a 15 ml falcon tube and acid-citrate-dextrose (ACD; Sigma, Madrid, Spain) was added to the PRP in a ratio 1:6 by volume. Platelets were incubated for 10 min at 37 °C and then centrifuged at 700×g at 22 °C for 20 min (Sigma 3K30 centrifuge, Fisher Scientific, fixed angle rotor). The pellet was re-suspended in citrate buffer (100 mM NaCl, 5 mM KCl, 5 mM Glucose, 1 mM MgCl2, 15 mM citrate, pH 6.5) and centrifuged again at 700×g at 22 °C for 10 min. The pellet was finally suspended in the HEPES isolation buffer (145 mM NaCl, 5 mM Glucose, 1 mM MgCl2, 10 mM HEPES, 5 mM KCl, pH 7.4). For experiments to be carried out in the presence of extracellular calcium, the pellet was re-suspended in the HEPES isolation buffer containing 2 mM calcium. Platelet concentration was adjusted to ~1 × 108 cells per ml. Platelet purity was ascertained by flow cytometry (described below) and was found to be above 99 %.
Protein concentration in the purified platelets was measured with an ND-1000 Nanodrop spectrophotometer system (Wilmington, DE, USA) using an extinction coefficient of ~1 ml g−1 cm−1.
Platelet isolation was performed within ~12 h of blood collection. All experiments were completed within 24 h of blood collection. Each experiment was carried out at least three times with blood from three different donors.
4.3 Platelet analysis by flow cytometry [33, 53, 56, 82, 83]
Flow cytometry was performed on freshly isolated platelets to analyze their purity, basal activity, and response to agonists, with a FACScalibur Flow cytometer (Becton–Dickinson, Madrid, Spain). 50 µl of the washed platelets were mixed with 50 µl of HEPES calcium-free buffer or with 2 mM calcium buffer, as required. For stimulating platelets, either TRAP (Thrombin receptor activating peptide, Sigma-Aldrich, Madrid, Spain) at a final concentration of 70 µM, or PMA (Phorbyl methyl acetate, Sigma-Aldrich, Madrid, Spain), at a final concentration of 10 µM, were added to the samples. Platelets were identified by staining samples with PerCPCy5.5-conjugated anti-CD41a antibody. Activation was evaluated by staining them with PE-conjugated anti-CD62P (P-selectin), PE-conjugated anti-CD63, FITC-conjugated PAC1 (antibody against the active conformation of GPIIb/IIIa) and APC-conjugated Annexin A5 (staining agent for phosphatidyl serine, PS), in separate tubes. All the fluorescently labeled reagents used in the flow cytometry experiments were purchased from Becton–Dickinson, Madrid, Spain. Samples were incubated for 30 min at 37 °C without agitation before being diluted with 2 ml of the respective buffer and analyzed by flow cytometry. Isotype-matched controls were run in parallel to all monoclonal antibodies. Light scatter and fluorescence data from 10,000 events were collected with all the detectors in the logarithmic mode. Antibody binding was expressed as percentage of platelets positive for an antibody using Flow Jo software (Tree Star Inc, Oregon, USA).
4.4 Surface Preparation and Cleaning
Surfaces used in this study were either bare 25 mm #1 microscope coverslip glass slides (Menzel-Gläser, Braunschweig, Germany), or the same glass slides coated with ~20 nm layer of TiO2 by magnetron reactive sputtering. The coating was done in a Leybold dc-magnetron Z600 sputtering unit at the Paul Scherrer Institut (Villigen, Switzerland) according to the previously published protocol [84].
Immediately prior to each experiment, surfaces were cleaned in 2 % SDS solution that was filtered through 0.2 µm pore diameter syringe filter for 30 min, washed under a stream of Nano-pure water (Nanopure Diamond™, Barnstead International, USA), dried with a stream of filtered nitrogen gas (99.999, AirLiquide Spain, Derio, Spain), and further cleaned for 30 min in a UV-Ozone cleaner (BioForce Nanosciences, USA) that was pre-heated for 30 min immediately prior to this step. This procedure results in minimal carbon contamination of the surface (<10 %) as judged by XPS (SAGE HR100, Specs, Berlin, Germany). No other impurities were detected on the surfaces cleaned in this way. This cleaning procedure has been used by several groups for a wide variety of biophysical studies [8, 14, 15, 85].
4.5 Platelet Adhesion and Activation Studies on Glass and TiO2 Surfaces
Platelet adhesion experiments were started no later than 2 h after platelet preparation. The entire experiment was performed at 37 °C.
Freshly cleaned surfaces were mounted in home-made, 500 µl hollow Teflon cells using dental glue. 250 µl of the buffer required for the experiment was added to the cell immediately after the glue had set (~2 min) to reduce as much as possible the chances of contaminating the surface, followed by 250 µl of the washed platelets in the same buffer, and incubated either for 10 min or for 3 h.
After the incubation, the samples were washed by adding and withdrawing 250 µl of the buffer 20× to remove any non-adhered platelets. Care was taken not to touch the surface with the pipette tip, not to introduce bubbles, and not to dry the sample out.
Washed samples were incubated with 5 µl of PerCPCy5.5 anti-CD41a antibody and with PE anti-CD62P or PE anti-CD63 antibody for 30 min and analyzed using confocal microscope (see below).
For experiments involving platelet stimulation with an agonist, the above steps were followed by the addition of TRAP to the sample cell, incubation for 30 min, and confocal microscopy analysis. For experiments involving intracellular calcium chelation with BAPTA-AM, platelets were isolated in calcium free buffer and incubated in the presence the desired BAPTA-AM concentration (1, 2, 5, 8, 10, 100 µM) for 30 min before they were treated with an agonist (TRAP) in solution or allowed to interact with the surfaces. The results of solution experiments are shown in Fig. 3b, and the results of the surface experiments are shown in Fig. 3c.
4.6 Confocal Microscopy and Image Analysis
Fluorescence images were obtained using an LSM 510 confocal laser scanning microscope (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany) equipped with Plan-Apochromat 63×/1.40 NA oil immersion objective. All experiments were carried out in a temperature controlled stage at 37 °C. PerCP Cy5.5 and PE fluorescence was excited with the 488 nm line of the Ar laser and detected with an avalanche photodiode and a photomultiplier with LP 655 and BP575-615IR filters, respectively. 143 × 143 µm2 512 × 512 or 2,048 × 2,048 pixel images were recorded and analyzed using the Zen (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany) or ImageJ version 1.42 software to extract the numbers and sizes of the adhering platelets as well as to highlight the different types of platelets observed on the surface. The image analysis procedure was as follows. First, the multi-channel images were split into separate channels—one corresponding to the anti-CD41a fluorescence and one corresponding to the CD62P or CD63 fluorescence. Second, a Gaussian blur filter was applied to both sets of images to highlight platelet edges.
The numbers of adhering platelets were quantified using the ImageJ cell counter plugin. Platelets adhering on the surfaces for 3 h were counted manually because cells were overlapping and it was difficult to separate them. The numbers of adhering platelets are quoted in Table S3.
Platelet areas were measured manually by drawing regions of interest around the platelets using the free hand drawing tool. Based on the analysis of 180 cells, radii were calculated to determine the size distribution of the platelets, adhered on the surface for different experiment conditions. Due to the aggregation of platelets after 3 h, the exact number and size of adhered platelets were difficult to quantify. The results of these analyses under different experimental conditions are shown in Figure S3.
Two methods were used to determine which of the adhering platelets were activated:
Method I: First, blurred images for the CD41a and CD62P or CD63 channel were false colored green and red respectively. Co-localization was visualized in the merged images in terms of the appearance of the yellow color. These images are shown in Figs. 2 and 3 in and Figure S4 in the Supporting Information.
Method II: Background subtraction with rolling ball radius 50 was used to separate the fluorescence coming from the spread and the non-spread platelets in each channel (see white circles in Fig. 2a). The resulting background-subtracted images were thresholded, leading to binary images. Logical AND operation was used in the binary images from each channel to obtain the outline image shown in Fig. 2a-vii. In such an image, the co-localization of the two dyes (anti-CD41a and anti-CD62P, green and red channels, respectively), appears as a double boundary, signaling activated platelets. Non-activated platelets appear as single boundaries.
Interestingly, it was the non-spread platelets that were activated, as shown by both methods. See Sects. 2 and 3 for further explanation.
To calculate the background subtracted average fluorescence intensities shown in Fig. 4, individual cells were selected in ImageJ and median intensity within the selected region in the red channel was calculated. Median intensities for regions where there were no cells were measured as well. The intensity for each cell in a given image was than normalized by the background intensity I = [(I(cell) − I(background)]/I(background). These normalized intensities were averaged over the cells observed in different experiments performed under nominally the same experimental conditions but with blood taken from different donors. The results are plotted in Fig. 4.
4.7 Cell Viability Analysis [86]
Membrane integrity in platelets adhering on the bare glass and TiO2-coated glass surfaces was measured by Calcein-AM stain. This marker is retained in the cytoplasm and degraded by esterases, unless the cell membrane is damaged. After the adhesion of cells on the surface for 10 min and 3 h, they were washed, and then 200 µl of 2 mM Calcein-AM solution was added to the surface. After staining for 30 min at 37 °C, labeled cells were visualized using confocal microscope. This analysis showed that adhesion to the surface did not affect the integrity of the platelet membranes.
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Acknowledgments
We would like to acknowledge funding from the Department of Industry of the Basque Government (program ETORTEK) and from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN, ref. CTQ2009-11245) to I.R.; Michael Horisberger (Paul Scherrer Institut, Villigen, Switzerland) is gratefully acknowledged for TiO2-coated glass slides; Drs. Laura Saa and Valeri Pavlov allowing us to use their centrifuge and Nanodrop equipment; Drs. Jose Manuel Cardenas Diaz De Espada, Roberto Bilbao Urquiola, Amaia del Villar Álvarez, and Ms. Clara Rodriuez Aierbe (Basque Biobank for Research, Galdakao, Spain); Ms. Mari Carmen Pozo and Dr. Mari Mar Lertxundi (Basque Biobank for Research, San Sebastian, Spain) for organizing the blood collection and testing.
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Gupta, S., Reviakine, I. Platelet Activation Profiles on TiO2: Effect of Ca2+ Binding to the Surface. Biointerphases 7, 28 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13758-012-0028-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13758-012-0028-8