Inicio Blog Página 21

Surprising new role for lungs: making platelets

0

Using video microscopy in the living mouse lung, UC San Francisco scientists have revealed that the lungs play a previously unrecognized role in blood production. As reported online March 22, 2017, in Nature, the researchers found that the lungs produced more than half of the platelets – blood components required for the clotting that stanches bleeding – in the mouse circulation.

In another surprise finding, the scientists also identified a previously unknown pool of blood stem cells capable of restoring blood production when the stem cells of the bone marrow, previously thought to be the principal site of blood production, are depleted.

“This finding definitely suggests a more sophisticated view of the lungs – that they’re not just for respiration but also a key partner in formation of crucial aspects of the blood,” said pulmonologist Mark R. Looney, MD, a professor of medicine and of laboratory medicine at UCSF and the new paper’s senior author. “What we’ve observed here in mice strongly suggests the lung may play a key role in blood formation in humans as well.”

The findings could have major implications for understanding human diseases in which patients suffer from low platelet counts, or thrombocytopenia, which afflicts millions of people and increases the risk of dangerous uncontrolled bleeding. The findings also raise questions about how blood stem cells residing in the lungs may affect the recipients of lung transplants.

Lungs produce more than 10 million platelets per hour

The new study was made possible by a refinement of a technique known as two-photon intravital imaging recently developed by Looney and co-author Matthew F. Krummel, PhD, a UCSF professor of pathology. This imaging approach allowed the researchers to perform the extremely delicate task of visualizing the behavior of individual cells within the tiny blood vessels of a living mouse lung.

Looney and his team were using this technique to examine interactions between the immune system and circulating platelets in the lungs, using a mouse strain engineered so that platelets emit bright green fluorescence, when they noticed a surprisingly large population of platelet-producing cells called megakaryocytes in the lung vasculature. Though megakaryocytes had been observed in the lung before, they were generally thought to live and produce platelets primarily in the bone marrow.

“When we discovered this massive population of megakaryocytes that appeared to be living in the lung, we realized we had to follow this up,” said Emma Lefrançais, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher in Looney’s lab and co-first author on the new paper.

More detailed imaging sessions soon revealed megakaryocytes in the act of producing more than 10 million platelets per hour within the lung vasculature, suggesting that more than half of a mouse’s total platelet production occurs in the lung, not the bone marrow, as researchers had long presumed. Video microscopy experiments also revealed a wide variety of previously overlooked megakaryocyte progenitor cells and blood stem cells sitting quietly outside the lung vasculature – estimated at 1 million per mouse lung.

Blood stem cells in the lung can restore bone marrow

The discovery of megakaryocytes and blood stem cells in the lung raised questions about how these cells move back and forth between the lung and bone marrow. To address these questions, the researchers conducted a clever set of lung transplant studies:

First, the team transplanted lungs from normal donor mice into recipient mice with fluorescent megakaryocytes, and found that fluorescent megakaryocytes from the recipient mice soon began turning up in the lung vasculature. This suggested that the platelet-producing megakaryocytes in the lung originate in the bone marrow.

“It’s fascinating that megakaryocytes travel all the way from the bone marrow to the lungs to produce platelets,” said Guadalupe Ortiz-Muñoz, PhD, also a postdoctoral researcher in the Looney lab and the paper’s other co-first author. “It’s possible that the lung is an ideal bioreactor for platelet production because of the mechanical force of the blood, or perhaps because of some molecular signaling we don’t yet know about.”

In another experiment, the researchers transplanted lungs with fluorescent megakaryocyte progenitor cells into mutant mice with low platelet counts. The transplants produced a large burst of fluorescent platelets that quickly restored normal levels, an effect that persisted over several months of observation — much longer than the lifespan of individual megakaryocytes or platelets. To the researchers, this indicated that resident megakaryocyte progenitor cells in the transplanted lungs had become activated by the recipient mouse’s low platelet counts and had produced healthy new megakaryocyte cells to restore proper platelet production.

Finally, the researchers transplanted healthy lungs in which all cells were fluorescently tagged into mutant mice whose bone marrow lacked normal blood stem cells. Analysis of the bone marrow of recipient mice showed that fluorescent cells originating from the transplanted lungs soon traveled to the damaged bone marrow and contributed to the production not just of platelets, but of a wide variety of blood cells, including immune cells such as neutrophils, B cells and T cells. These experiments suggest that the lungs play host to a wide variety of blood progenitor cells and stem cells capable of restocking damaged bone marrow and restoring production of many components of the blood.

“To our knowledge this is the first description of blood progenitors resident in the lung, and it raises a lot of questions with clinical relevance for the millions of people who suffer from thrombocytopenia,” said Looney, who is also an attending physician on UCSF’s pulmonary consult service and intensive care units.

Lungs as Resource for Platelet Production

In particular, the study suggests that researchers who have proposed treating platelet diseases with platelets produced from engineered megakaryocytes should look to the lungs as a resource for platelet production, Looney said. The study also presents new avenues of research for stem cell biologists to explore how the bone marrow and lung collaborate to produce a healthy blood system through the mutual exchange of stem cells.

“These observations alter existing paradigms regarding blood cell formation, lung biology and disease, and transplantation,” said pulmonologist Guy A. Zimmerman, MD, who is associate chair of the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Utah School of Medicine and was an independent reviewer of the new study for Nature. “The findings have direct clinical relevance and provide a rich group of questions for future studies of platelet genesis and megakaryocyte function in lung inflammation and other inflammatory conditions, bleeding and thrombotic disorders, and transplantation.”

The observation that blood stem cells and progenitors seem to travel back and forth freely between the lung and bone marrow lends support to a growing sense among researchers that stem cells may be much more active than previously appreciated, Looney said. “We’re seeing more and more that the stem cells that produce the blood don’t just live in one place but travel around through the blood stream. Perhaps ‘studying abroad’ in different organs is a normal part of stem cell education.”

The study was supported the UCSF Nina Ireland Program in Lung Health, the UCSF Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), a division of the National Institutes of Health (HL092471, HL107386 and HL130324).

“It has been known for decades that the lung can be a site of platelet production, but this study amplifies this idea by demonstrating that the murine lung is a major participant in the process,” said Traci Mondoro, PhD, project officer at the Translational Blood Science and Resources Branch of the NHLBI. “Dr. Looney and his team have disrupted some traditional ideas about the pulmonary role in platelet-related hematopoiesis, paving the way for further scientific exploration of this integrated biology.”

Additional authors included Axelle Caudrillier, PhD, Beñat Mallavia, PhD, Fengchun Liu, MD, Emily E. Thornton, PhD, Mark B. Headley, PhD, Tovo David, PhD, Shaun R. Coughlin, MD, PhD, Andrew D. Leavitt, MD; David M. Sayah, MD, PhD, of UCLA; and Emmanuelle Passegué, PhD, a former UCSF faculty member who is now director of the Columbia Stem Cell Initiative at Columbia University Medical Center.

UC San Francisco (UCSF) is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care. It includes top-ranked graduate schools of dentistry, medicine, nursing and pharmacy; a graduate division with nationally renowned programs in basic, biomedical, translational and population sciences; and a preeminent biomedical research enterprise. It also includes UCSF Health, which comprises top-ranked hospitals, UCSF Medical Center and UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospitals in San Francisco and Oakland – and other partner and affiliated hospitals and healthcare providers throughout the Bay Area.

Source: UCSF

Listado de emisiones anteriores

No se encontraron entradas.

Agenda

 

SIMPOSIO SOBRE GENÓMICA Y MEDICINA PERSONALIZADA 22-24 de julio de 2026 Ciudad de México, México info@slogenomic2026.orgwww.slogenomic2026.org/simposio

ADLM 2026 26–30 julio 2026 Annual Scientific Meeting & Clinical Lab Expo Association for Diagnostics & Laboratory Medicine. Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, California, USA annualmeeting@myadlm.orghttp://meeting.myadlm.org/meetings-and-events/annual-meeting

TECNOLOGÍAS AVANZADAS CON APLICACIÓN EN BIOQUÍMICA CLÍNICA 6 de agosto 2026 Diplomatura Instituto Universitario de Ciencias Biomédicas de Córdoba IUCBC www.iucbc.edu.ar/cursos/diplomaturas/diplomatura-en-tecnologias-avanzadas-con-aplicacion-en-bioquimica-clinica.html ACTUALIZACIÓN EN MICROBIOLOGÍA Y RESISTENCIA ANTIMICROBIANA Curso Teórico-Práctico Virtual 10/08/2026 al 14/09/2026 Confederación Unificada Bioquímica de la República Argentina (CUBRA) info@cubra.org.ar cubra.org.ar ACTUALIZACIÓN EN MICROBIOLOGÍA Y MECANISMOS DE RESISTENCIA ANTIMICROBIANA Curso Teórico-Práctico Virtual: 10/08/2026 al 14/09/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de Misiones en conjunto con CUBRA contacto@colbiomnes.com.ar www.colbiomnes.com.ar FILTRADO GLOMERULAR: HERRAMIENTAS ACTUALES PARA MEDIRLO, CALCULARLO E INFORMARLO Curso Teórico-Práctico: 14/08/2026 al 15/08/2026 Colegio Profesional de Ciencias Bioquímicas de la Provincia de Córdoba colegio@cobico.com.ar cobico.com.ar HEMATOCONECTA SHC-SAH CÓRDOBA 20/08/2026 al 21/08/2026 Sociedad Argentina de Hematología en Alianza con el Colegio de Bioquímicos de Córdoba sah@sah.org.ar ASPECTOS LEGALES, BIOÉTICOS Y RESPONSABILIDAD PROFESIONAL DEL BIOQUÍMICO Taller de Formación Continua:  28/08/2026 al 29/08/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de la Provincia de Corrientes colegiobioquimicodecorrientes@gmail.com PROGRAMA DE CERTIFICACIÓN Y ACTUALIZACIÓN ANALÍTICA EN ESPECIALIDADES BIOQUÍMICAS 01/09/2026 al 30/10/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de Tucumán - Ente Primario de Certificación (ECEBIO) recepcion@cobituc.org.ar www.cobituc.org.ar HEMOSTASIA EN HEPATOPATÍAS Y MONITOREO DEL PACIENTE ANTICOAGULADO Programa Integral de Formación Continua: 04/09/2026 al 05/09/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos del Chaco colegiochaco@gmail.com https://colegiobioquimicochaco.org.ar JORNADAS DE CAPACITACIÓN EN ENDOCRINOLOGÍA MOLECULAR Y VALIDATION DE INMUNOENSAYOS 17/09/2026 al 19/09/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de la Provincia de Santa Fe (1° Circunscripción) info@cobisfe1.org.ar SIMPOSIO INTERNACIONAL DE MEDICINA DE LABORATORIO Y DIAGNÓSTICO DE ENFERMEDADES INFECCIOSAS 21/09/2026 al 22/09/2026 Sociedad Internacional de Medicina de Laboratorio (ISLM) / Sección Cono Sur buenosaires@islm-conferences.org https://internationalconferencealerts.com/laboratory-medicine-clinical-laboratory/buenos-aires BÚSQUEDA Y CARACTERIZACIÓN DE STEC EN ALIMENTOS Enfoque Bromatológico y Diagnóstico. Curso Virtual: 22/09/2026 al 24/10/2026 Asociación Bioquímica de Mendoza capacitacion@abm.org.ar www.abm.org.ar/category/capacitacion/ IX SIMPOSIO LATINOAMERICANO DE INOCUIDAD ALIMENTARIA Y VII Simposio Argentino de Inocuidad Alimentaria 28/09/2026 al 29/09/2026 Asociación Argentina de Microbiología (AAM) simposioinocuidad2026@aam.org.ar www.aam.org.ar/actividades/congresos-y-jornadas XXI CONGRESO DE LA SOCIEDAD ARGENTINA DE MICROBIOLOGÍA GENERAL SAMIGE 29/09/2026 al 02/10/2026 Sociedad Argentina de Microbiología General contacto@samige.org.ar https://samige.org.ar/nuestro-congreso/ AVANCES EN PRUEBAS DE FUNCIÓN TIROIDEA Y ERRORES PREANALÍTICOS COMUNES Webinar: 05/10/2026 Asociación Bioquímica Argentina (ABA) info@aba-online.org.ar https://aba-online.org.ar/ciclo-lectivo-2026 COLABIOCLI 2026 Cursos Pre-Congreso y Talleres con la Industria 07/10/2026 al 10/10/2026 Confederación Latinoamericana de Bioquímica Clínica (COLABIOCLI) y SOBOBIOCLI contacto@colabiocli2026.org www.colabiocli2026.org ANDROLOGÍA 360: DEL LABORATORIO CLÍNICO A LA DECISIÓN MÉDICA Curso Teórico-Práctico Avanzado: 12/10/2026 al 14/10/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de la Provincia de Salta administracion@colbiosa.com.ar https://colbiosa.com.ar GESTIÓN DE CALIDAD EN INMUNOHEMATOLOGÍA Y EL LABORATORIO CLÍNICO Curso Modular Virtual: 15/10/2026 al 15/11/2026 Confederación Latinoamericana de Bioquímica Clínica (COLABIOCLI) secretaria@colabiocli.com https://colabiocli.com/category/cursos/ DIAGNÓSTICO MICOLÓGICO CLÍNICO Y RESISTENCIA A ANTIFÚNGICOS Curso de Actualización 15/10/2026 al 15/11/2026 Sociedad Española de Enfermedades Infecciosas y Microbiología Clínica (SEIMC) formacion@seimc.org seimc.org DIAGNÓSTICO BIOQUÍMICO DE URGENCIAS Y TOXICOLOGÍA BÁSICA Simposio de Actualización 15/10/2026 al 16/10/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de la Provincia de Buenos Aires consultas@colebioqpba.org.ar www.colebioqpba.org.ar 30 JORNADAS DE TOXICOLOGÍA CLÍNICA 20 Jornadas de Toxicovigilancia 21/10/2026 al 23/10/2026 Sociedad Española de Medicina de Laboratorio (SEMEDLAB) secretaria@semedlab.es https://semedlab.es/actualidad/noticias/vigo-acogera-las-30-jornadas-de-toxicologia-clinica-y-20-jornadas-de-toxicovigilancia/ LA RESIDENCIA EN EL LABORATORIO CLÍNICO – PERSPECTIVAS EN IBEROAMÉRICA Mesa Redonda Online: 22/10/2026 Confederación Latinoamericana de Bioquímica Clínica (COLABIOCLI) colabiocli.oficial@gmail.com https://colabiocli.com/category/eventos/ TALLER DE PROCESO ASISTENCIAL EN LA ENFERMEDAD RENAL CRÓNICA (ERC) I Jornada de Calidad: 30/10/2026 Sociedad Española de Medicina de Laboratorio (SEMEDLAB) secretaria@semedlab.es https://semedlab.es/actualidad/sesiones-interhospitalarias-2026/ SADEBAC 2026 IX Congreso de la Sociedad Argentina de Bacteriología, Micología y Parasitología Clínica 04/11/2026 al 06/11/2026 Asociación Argentina de Microbiología (AAM) - División SADEBAC sadebac@aam.org.ar www.aam.org.ar/actividades/969 TALLER DE HEMATOLOGÍA DIAGNÓSTICA Estandarización del Frotis de Sangre Periférica 06/11/2026 Sociedad Española de Medicina de Laboratorio (SEMEDLAB) secretaria@semedlab.es CONTROL DE CALIDAD EN EL LABORATORIO DE MICROBIOLOGÍA Ciclo de Cursos Avanzados ABA - Nodo Regional Santa Fe: 06/11/2026 al 07/11/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de Santa Fe (1° Circunscripción) en conjunto con la Asociación Bioquímica Argentina info@cobisfe1.org.ar www.facebook.com/colegiobioquimicossantafe CONTROL DE CALIDAD INTERNO EN INMUNOENSAYOS Taller de Entrenamiento y Acreditación Analítica 06/11/2026 al 07/11/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de la Provincia de San Juan colegiobioquimicosanjuan@gmail.com cobisanjuan.org.ar CONGRESO LATINOAMERICANO DE PARASITOLOGÍA (FLAP 2026) 12/11/2026 al 15/11/2026 Federación Latinoamericana de Parasitología info@flap2026.com www.flap2026.com AVANCES EN AUTOMATIZACIÓN, IA Y REDUCCIÓN DE ERRORES EN EL LABORATORIO CLÍNICO IFCC Live Webinar Series: 18/11/2026 International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine ifcc@ifcc.org https://ifcc.org/ifcc-education-division/webinars/ HERRAMIENTAS EN BIOQUÍMICA REGENERATIVA Y PREPARACIÓN SEGURA DE HEMOCOMPONENTES AUTÓLOGOS (PRP / PRF) Curso de Postgrado: 20/11/2026 al 21/11/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de la Provincia de Santa Fe capacitacion@cobisfe1.org.ar instagram.com CAPACITACIÓN EN BIOQUÍMICA REGENERATIVA Protocolos Clínicos para la Obtención de PRP y PRF 20/11/2026 al 21/11/2026 Colegio Profesional de Ciencias Bioquímicas de Corrientes / Ente Certificador comisioncientifica.ctes@gmail.com https://colbiocor.com.ar/curso-inicial-y-avanzado-en-bioquimica-regenerativa-prp-prf/ ROL DEL LABORATORIO DE ENDOCRINOLOGÍA EN EL MONITOREO DE LA DIABETES GESTACIONAL Conferencia Virtual: 25/11/2026 Asociación Bioquímica del Uruguay (ABU) secretaria.abu@gmail.com CONTROL DE CALIDAD PRÁCTICO CON SOPORTE ADLM Seminario Iberoamericano de Calidad:  02/12/2026 Asociación para el Diagnóstico y la Medicina de Laboratorio (ADLM) - Subcomité de América Latina globalaffairs@myadlm.org https://myadlm.org/advocacy-and-outreach/global-affairs/latin-america-subcommittee/seminarios-web-en-espanol MARCADORES MOLECULARES EN ONCOLOGÍA Y PESQUISA NEONATAL Jornadas Patagónicas de Medicina de Laboratorio 03/12/2026 al 05/12/2026 Colegio de Bioquímicos de la Provincia del Chubut secretariachubut@bioquimicos.org colegiobioquimicochubut.org/a> ACTUALIZACIONES EN BIOQUÍMICA CLÍNICA Y HEMATOLOGÍA Taller de Formación Continua ABU: 04/12/2026 Asociación Bioquímica del Uruguay (ABU) secretaria.abu@gmail.com www.asociacionbioquimicauruguaya.org/ BIOMARCADORES MOLECULARES EN ONCOLOGÍA CLÍNICA 11/12/2026 Taller Avanzado: Sociedad Española de Medicina de Laboratorio (SEMEDLAB) secretaria@semedlab.es

 

Radio El Microscopio

Ze Xiong

Últimas notas publicadas