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The impact of bilirubin ditaurate on platelet quality during storage

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 10:44 authored by Evan Pennell, Ryan Shiels, Josif Vidimce, Karl-Heinz Wagner, Sapha ShibeebSapha Shibeeb, Andrew Bulmer
Bilirubin ditaurate (BRT), a conjugated bilirubin analogue, has demonstrated anti-platelet characteristics following acute ex vivo exposure. Scavenging of mitochondrial superoxide and attenuation of granule exocytosis suggested a potential benefit for including BRT for storage. With no reports of cytotoxicity following acute exposure, the impact of 35µM BRT on platelet function was investigated, in clinically suppled units, for up to seven days. Exposure to 35µM BRT significantly reduced mitochondrial membrane potential and increased glucose consumption until exhaustion after 72 hours. Platelet aggregation and activation was significantly impaired by BRT. Mitochondrial superoxide production and phosphatidylserine expression were significantly elevated following glucose exhaustion, with decreased viability observed from day five onwards. Lactate accumulation and loss of bicarbonate, support a metabolic disturbance, leading to a decline of quality following BRT inclusion. Although acute ex vivo BRT exposure reported potentially beneficial effects, translation from acute to chronic exposure failed to combat declining platelet function during storage. BRT exposure resulted in perturbations of platelet quality, with the utility of BRT during storage therefore limited. However, these are the first data of prolonged platelet exposure to analogues of conjugated bilirubin and may improve our understanding of platelet function in the context of conjugated hyperbilirubinemia.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1080/09537104.2019.1693038
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 09537104

Journal

Platelets

Volume

31

Issue

7

Start page

884

End page

896

Total pages

13

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

Former Identifier

2006126457

Esploro creation date

2023-11-23

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