Abstract

Background: Terminal complications of bacterial sepsis include development of disseminated intravascular consumptive coagulopathy. Bacterial constituents, including long-chain polyphosphates (polyP), have been shown to activate the contact pathway of coagulation in plasma. Recent work shows that activation of the contact pathway in flowing whole blood can promote thrombin generation and platelet activation and consumption distal to thrombus formation ex vivo and in vivo . Aim: Determine whether presence of long-chain polyP in the bloodstream promotes platelet activation and consumption in a coagulation factor (F)XII-dependent manner. Methods/Results: The addition of long-chain polyP to human whole blood promoted platelet P-selectin expression, microaggregate formation and platelet consumption in the bloodstream under shear in a FXII-dependent manner. Moreover, long-chain polyP accelerated thrombus formation on immobilized collagen surfaces under shear flow in a thrombin generation-dependent manner. Distal to the site of thrombus formation, platelet consumption was dramatically enhanced in the presence of long-chain polyP in the bloodstream. Inhibiting contact activation of coagulation using established and novel agents reduced fibrin formation on collagen as well as platelet consumption in the bloodstream distal to the site of thrombus formation. In vivo , FXII deficiency was protective against long-chain polyP occlusive lung thrombus formation in mice. Lastly, in a non-human primate model of sepsis, pretreatment of animals with an antibody blocking FXI activation by FXIIa (14E11) diminished LD 100 S. aureus -induced platelet and fibrinogen consumption. Conclusions: This study demonstrates that bacterial-type long-chain polyP promotes FXII-mediated thrombin generation and platelet activation in the flowing blood and could contribute to sepsis-associated thrombotic processes, consumptive coagulopathy and thrombocytopenia.

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