Live-cell Imaging of Platelet Degranulation and Secretion Under Flow

J Vis Exp. 2017 Jul 10:(125):55658. doi: 10.3791/55658.

Abstract

Blood platelets are essential players in hemostasis, the formation of thrombi to seal vascular breaches. They are also involved in thrombosis, the formation of thrombi that occlude the vasculature and injure organs, with life-threatening consequences. This motivates scientific research on platelet function and the development of methods to track cell-biological processes as they occur under flow conditions. A variety of flow models are available for the study of platelet adhesion and aggregation, two key phenomena in platelet biology. This work describes a method to study real-time platelet degranulation under flow during activation. The method makes use of a flow chamber coupled to a syringe-pump setup that is placed under a wide-field, inverted, LED-based fluorescence microscope. The setup described here allows for the simultaneous excitation of multiple fluorophores that are delivered by fluorescently labeled antibodies or fluorescent dyes. After live-cell imaging experiments, the cover glasses can be further processed and analyzed using static microscopy (i.e., confocal microscopy or scanning electron microscopy).

Publication types

  • Video-Audio Media

MeSH terms

  • Blood Platelets / cytology
  • Blood Platelets / metabolism*
  • Hemostasis / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Microscopy, Fluorescence / methods*
  • Platelet Adhesiveness / physiology*
  • Thrombosis / blood