Michael Keegan Delaney
University of Illinois at Chicago
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Featured researches published by Michael Keegan Delaney.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2016
Michael Keegan Delaney; Kyungho Kim; Brian Estevez; Zheng Xu; Aleksandra Stojanovic-Terpo; Bo Shen; Masuko Ushio-Fukai; Jaehyung Cho; Xiaoping Du
Objective—Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are known to regulate platelet activation; however, the mechanisms of ROS production during platelet activation remain unclear. Platelets express different isoforms of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate) (NAD(P)H) oxidases (NOXs). Here, we investigated the role of NOX1 and NOX2 in ROS generation and platelet activation using NOX1 and NOX2 knockout mice. Approach and Results—NOX1−/Y platelets showed selective defects in G-protein–coupled receptor–mediated platelet activation induced by thrombin and thromboxane A2 analog U46619, but were not affected in platelet activation induced by collagen-related peptide, a glycoprotein VI agonist. In contrast, NOX2−/− platelets showed potent inhibition of collagen-related peptide-induced platelet activation, and also showed partial inhibition of thrombin-induced platelet activation. Consistently, production of ROS was inhibited in NOX1−/Y platelets stimulated with thrombin, but not collagen-related peptide, whereas NOX2−/− platelets showed reduced ROS generation induced by collagen-related peptide or thrombin. Reduced ROS generation in NOX1/2-deficient platelets is associated with impaired activation of Syk and phospholipase C&ggr;2, but minimally affected mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. Interestingly, laser-induced arterial thrombosis was impaired but the bleeding time was not affected in NOX2−/− mice. Wild-type thrombocytopenic mice injected with NOX2−/− platelets also showed defective arterial thrombosis, suggesting an important role for platelet NOX2 in thrombosis in vivo but not hemostasis. Conclusions—NOX1 and NOX2 play differential roles in different platelet activation pathways and in thrombosis. ROS generated by these enzymes promotes platelet activation via the Syk/phospholipase C&ggr;2/calcium signaling pathway.
Blood | 2016
Brian Estevez; Kyungho Kim; Michael Keegan Delaney; Aleksandra Stojanovic-Terpo; Bo Shen; Ruan C; Jaehyung Cho; Zaverio M. Ruggeri; Xiaoping Du
Thrombin-induced cellular response in platelets not only requires protease-activated receptors (PARs), but also involves another thrombin receptor, the glycoprotein Ib-IX complex (GPIb-IX). It remains controversial how thrombin binding to GPIb-IX stimulates platelet responses. It was proposed that GPIb-IX serves as a dock that facilitates thrombin cleavage of protease-activated receptors, but there are also reports suggesting that thrombin binding to GPIb-IX induces platelet activation independent of PARs. Here we show that GPIb is neither a passive thrombin dock nor a PAR-independent signaling receptor. We demonstrate a novel signaling-mediated cooperativity between PARs and GPIb-IX. Low-dose thrombin-induced PAR-dependent cell responses require the cooperativity of GPIb-IX signaling, and conversely, thrombin-induced GPIb-IX signaling requires cooperativity of PARs. This mutually dependent cooperativity requires a GPIb-IX-specific 14-3-3-Rac1-LIMK1 signaling pathway, and activation of this pathway also requires PAR signaling. The cooperativity between GPIb-IX signaling and PAR signaling thus drives platelet activation at low concentrations of thrombin, which are important for in vivo thrombosis.
Blood | 2014
Michael Keegan Delaney; Junling Liu; Kyungho Kim; Bo Shen; Aleksandra Stojanovic-Terpo; Yi Zheng; Jaehyung Cho; Xiaoping Du
Activated platelets facilitate blood coagulation by exposing phosphatidylserine (PS) and releasing microvesicles (MVs). However, the potent physiological agonists thrombin and collagen poorly induce PS exposure when a single agonist is used. To obtain a greater procoagulant response, thrombin is commonly used in combination with glycoprotein VI agonists. However, even under these conditions, only a percentage of platelets express procoagulant activity. To date, it remains unclear why platelets poorly expose PS even when stimulated with multiple agonists and what the signaling pathways are of soluble agonist-induced platelet procoagulant activity. Here we show that physiological levels of shear present in blood significantly enhance agonist-induced platelet PS exposure and MV release, enabling low doses of a single agonist to induce full-scale platelet procoagulant activity. PS exposed on the platelet surface was immediately released as MVs, revealing a tight coupling between the 2 processes under shear. Using platelet-specific Rac1(-/-) mice, we discovered that Rac1 plays a common role in mediating the low-dose agonist-induced procoagulant response independent of platelet aggregation, secretion, and the apoptosis pathway. Platelet-specific Rac1 function was not only important for coagulation in vitro but also for fibrin accumulation in vivo following laser-induced arteriolar injury.
Blood | 2013
Brian Estevez; Aleksandra Stojanovic-Terpo; Michael Keegan Delaney; Kelly A O'Brien; Michael C. Berndt; Ruan C; Xiaoping Du
Current antithrombotic drugs have an adverse effect on bleeding, highlighting the need for new molecular targets for developing antithrombotic drugs that minimally affect hemostasis. Here we show that LIMK1(-/-) mice have defective arterial thrombosis in vivo but do not differ from wild-type mice with respect to bleeding time. LIMK1(-/-) mice show a selective defect in platelet activation induced through the von Willebrand Factor (VWF) receptor, the glycoprotein Ib-IX-V complex (GPIb-IX), but not by GPIb-IX-independent platelet agonists. In fact, LIMK1(-/-) platelets show an enhanced reaction to certain GPIb-IX-independent agonists. The defect of LIMK1(-/-) platelets in GPIb-IX-mediated platelet activation is attributed to a selective inhibition in VWF/GPIb-IX-induced phosphorylation of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) and consequent thromboxane A2 (TXA2) production. Supplementing a TXA2 analog, U46619, corrected the defect of LIMK1(-/-) platelets in VWF-induced stable platelet adhesion. Although LIMK1(-/-) platelets also showed reduced actin polymerization after GPIb-IX-mediated platelet aggregation, actin polymerization inhibitors did not reduce TXA2 generation, but rather accelerated platelet aggregation, suggesting that the role of LIMK1 in GPIb-mediated platelet activation is independent of actin polymerization. Thus, LIMK1 plays a novel role in selectively mediating GPIb-IX-dependent TXA2 synthesis and thrombosis and represents a potential target for developing antithrombotic drugs with minimal bleeding side effect.
Blood | 2014
Brian Estevez; Michael Keegan Delaney; Aleksandra Stojanovic-Terpo; Xiaoping Du
Circulation | 2016
Aiming Pang; Yujie Cui; Michael Keegan Delaney; Aleksandra Stojanovic; Xiaoping Du
Circulation | 2014
Brian Estevez; Michael Keegan Delaney; Aleksandra Stojanovic-Terpo; Xiaoping Du
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2012
Michael Keegan Delaney; Yi Zheng; Xiaoping Du
Blood | 2011
Michael Keegan Delaney
Circulation | 2010
Michael Keegan Delaney; Junling Liu; Yi Zheng; Xiaoping Du