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Altered platelet lipidome in bleeding patients with unexplained platelet function defects

  • Bianca De Jonckheere
  • , Dino Mehic
  • , Dominik Kopczynski
  • , Anita Pirabe
  • , Waltraud Schrottmaier
  • , Anna Schmuckenschlager
  • , Cristina Coman
  • , Tim Dreier
  • , Helmuth Haslacher
  • , Alexander Tolios
  • , Cihan Ay
  • , Ingrid Pabinger
  • , Johanna Gebhart
  • , Robert Ahrends (Korresp. Autor*in)
  • , Alice Assinger

Veröffentlichungen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelPeer Reviewed

Abstract

In patients with a mild to moderate bleeding disorder (MBD) and abnormal light transmission aggregometry (LTA), a platelet function defect (PFD) is suspected. However, in many patients with PFD, the underlying mechanism remains elusive. Given the essential role of lipids in platelet signaling, platelet lipid profiles in MBD patients with unexplained PFD may provide valuable diagnostic and mechanistic insights. This prospective cohort study investigated platelet lipidomes in patients with PFD of unknown cause from the Vienna Bleeding Biobank (VIBB). Using a standardized lipidomics workflow, we analyzed platelets from 27 patients and 19 age- and sex-matched controls and found that sex-specific lipid shifts emerged exclusively within the patient cohort, with greater deviations in females. Furthermore, lipid alterations correlated with impaired platelet aggregation and were predictive of responses to ADP and TRAP-6 stimuli in LTA experiments. Baseline and stimulated platelet analyses in a female subgroup showed intrinsic lipidomic changes, including upregulated polyunsaturated triacylglycerols (PUFA-TG), acylcarnitines (CAR), and reduced lysophosphatidylethanolamines (LPE). This study emphasizes lipidomic profiling as a promising diagnostic tool for unexplained platelet dysfunction and highlights TG, CAR, and LPE as potential therapeutic targets. Further research into lipid-driven platelet regulation may advance personalized treatments and improve clinical outcomes for patients with MBD.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)300-313
Seitenumfang14
FachzeitschriftHaematologica
Jahrgang111
Ausgabenummer1
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 1 Jan. 2026

Fördermittel

We gratefully acknowledge the support provided by the Mass Spectrometry Centre (MSC) at the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Vienna. The Vienna Bleeding Biobank was supported by the Anniversary Fund of the Austrian National Bank (grant number 18500), an unrestricted grant of CSL Behring and the medical-scientific fund of the Mayor of the federal capital Vienna (grant number 20023). DM received the Physician Pathway Scholarship of the Medical University of Vienna for protected research time. The authors received support from the University of Vienna through seed funding and funding derived from the Vienna Doctoral School in Chemistry (DoSChem) at the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Vienna (RA). The study was funded by the Austrian Science

ÖFOS 2012

  • 301302 Lipidforschung
  • 104002 Analytische Chemie

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