Ultrastructural study of platelet behavior and interrelationship in sprouting and intussusceptive angiogenesis during arterial intimal thickening formation.
Fecha
2021Resumen
Platelets in atherosclerosis, bypass stenosis, and restenosis have been extensively assessed.
However, a sequential ultrastructural study of platelets in angiogenesis during the early phases of
these lesions has received less attention. Our objective was the study of platelets in angiogenesis and
vessel regression during intimal thickening (IT) formation, a precursor process of these occlusive
vascular diseases. For this purpose, we used an experimental model of rat occluded arteries and
procedures for ultrastructural observation. The results show (a) the absence of platelet adhesion
in the de-endothelialized occluded arterial segment isolated from the circulation, (b) that intraarterial
myriad platelets contributed from neovessels originated by sprouting angiogenesis from the
periarterial microvasculature, (c) the association of platelets with blood components (fibrin, neutrophils,
macrophages, and eosinophils) and non-polarized endothelial cells (ECs) forming aggregates
(spheroids) in the arterial lumen, (d) the establishment of peg-and-socket junctions between platelets
and polarized Ecs during intussusceptive angiogenesis originated from the EC aggregates, with
the initial formation of IT, and (e) the aggregation of platelets in regressing neovessels (‘transitory
paracrine organoid’) and IT increases. In conclusion, in sprouting and intussusceptive angiogenesis
and vessel regression during IT formation, we contribute sequential ultrastructural findings on
platelet behavior and relationships, which can be the basis for further studies using other procedures.