Platelets (Dec 2023)

Platelet glycogenolysis is important for energy production and function

  • Kanakanagavalli Shravani Prakhya,
  • Hemendra Vekaria,
  • Daniёlle M. Coenen,
  • Linda Omali,
  • Joshua Lykins,
  • Smita Joshi,
  • Hammodah R. Alfar,
  • Qing Jun Wang,
  • Patrick Sullivan,
  • Sidney W. Whiteheart

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09537104.2023.2222184
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34, no. 1

Abstract

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Although the presence of glycogen in platelets was established in the 1960s, its importance to specific functions (i.e., activation, secretion, aggregation, and clot contraction) remains unclear. Patients with glycogen storage disease often present with increased bleeding and glycogen phosphorylase (GP) inhibitors, when used as treatments for diabetes, induce bleeding in preclinical studies suggesting some role for this form of glucose in hemostasis. In the present work, we examined how glycogen mobilization affects platelet function using GP inhibitors (CP316819 and CP91149) and a battery of ex vivo assays. Blocking GP activity increased glycogen levels in resting and thrombin-activated platelets and inhibited platelet secretion and clot contraction, with minimal effects on aggregation. Seahorse energy flux analysis and metabolite supplementation experiments suggested that glycogen is an important metabolic fuel whose role is affected by platelet activation and the availability of external glucose and other metabolic fuels. Our data shed light on the bleeding diathesis in glycogen storage disease patients and offer insights into the potential effects of hyperglycemia on platelets.

Keywords