4.7 Article

Tuning the Thromboinflammatory Response to Venous Flow Interruption by the Ectonucleotidase CD39

Journal

ARTERIOSCLEROSIS THROMBOSIS AND VASCULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 39, Issue 4, Pages E118-E129

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/ATVBAHA.119.312407

Keywords

endothelial cells; inflammation; leukocytes; P-selectin; venous thrombosis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [T32GM008322, T32HL007853, HL127151, NS087147, HL007853, K08HL131993]
  2. McKay grant
  3. Bo Schembechler Heart of a Champion Foundation
  4. Jobst-American Venous Forum
  5. J. Griswold Ruth MD & Margery Hopkins Ruth Professorship
  6. Haller Family Foundation
  7. A. Alfred Taubman Medical Research Institute
  8. Frankel Cardiovascular Center
  9. [HL141399]

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Objective- Leukocyte flux contributes to thrombus formation in deep veins under pathological conditions, but mechanisms that inhibit venous thrombosis are incompletely understood. Ectonucleotide di(tri)phosphohydrolase 1 (ENTPD1 or Cd39), an ectoenzyme that catabolizes extracellular adenine nucleotides, is embedded on the surface of endothelial cells and leukocytes. We hypothesized that under venous stasis conditions, CD39 regulates inflammation at the vein:blood interface in a murine model of deep vein thrombosis. Approach and Results- CD39-null mice developed significantly larger venous thrombi under venous stasis, with more leukocyte recruitment compared with wild-type mice. Gene expression profiling of wild-type and Cd39-null mice revealed 76 differentially expressed inflammatory genes that were significantly upregulated in Cd39-deleted mice after venous thrombosis, and validation experiments confirmed high expression of several key inflammatory mediators. P-selectin, known to have proximal involvement in venous inflammatory and thrombotic events, was upregulated in Cd39-null mice. Inferior vena caval ligation resulted in thrombosis and a corresponding increase in both P-selectin and VWF (von Willebrand Factor) levels which were strikingly higher in mice lacking the Cd39 gene. These mice also manifest an increase in circulating platelet-leukocyte heteroaggregates suggesting heterotypic crosstalk between coagulation and inflammatory systems, which is amplified in the absence of CD39. Conclusions- These data suggest that CD39 mitigates the venous thromboinflammatory response to flow interruption.

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