Beyond Thrombosis: The Role of Platelets in Cardiovascular, Oncological, and Immune-Related Inflammatory Diseases.
Platelets are anucleate cells derived from megakaryocytes that play a vital role in hemostasis through glycoprotein-mediated adhesion and coagulation.
APA
Jiang W, Tang WH, Zhang Y (2026). Beyond Thrombosis: The Role of Platelets in Cardiovascular, Oncological, and Immune-Related Inflammatory Diseases.. American journal of physiology. Cell physiology. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00610.2025
MLA
Jiang W, et al.. "Beyond Thrombosis: The Role of Platelets in Cardiovascular, Oncological, and Immune-Related Inflammatory Diseases.." American journal of physiology. Cell physiology, 2026.
PMID
41944650
Abstract
Platelets are anucleate cells derived from megakaryocytes that play a vital role in hemostasis through glycoprotein-mediated adhesion and coagulation. Their pathophysiological functions extend across cardiovascular, oncological, and inflammatory disorders. In cardiovascular diseases, activated platelets interact with endothelial and smooth muscle cells by delivering inflammatory mediators and microRNAs, thereby modulating vascular remodeling. Additionally, tumor-educated platelets facilitate metastasis by transferring mitochondria via tunneling nanotubes, expressing immune checkpoint molecules such as PD-L1, and releasing angiogenic factors like VEGF. Furthermore, platelets coordinate immune responses through receptor-mediated signaling and the release of cytokines, as well as factors that induce neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Emerging single-cell proteomic and transcriptomic analyses have identified disease-specific signaling components in platelets, revealing potential diagnostic and therapeutic targets for platelet-associated diseases. This review highlights recent advancements on the pathophysiological roles of platelets and their therapeutic implications in cardiovascular, oncological, and immune-related inflammatory diseases (IRIDs).
같은 제1저자의 인용 많은 논문 (5)
- A dynamic nomogram predicting persistent breast cancer-related lymphedema: a retrospective cohort study in China.
- Disulfidptosis-related genes signature predicts prognosis and immune microenvironment in colon cancer.
- Plasma fatty acids, genetic risk, and incident pancreatic cancer: A prospective cohort study.
- Broadening the clinical and research implications of comparative effectiveness for early-stage NSCLC without lymph node involvement.
- T Cell-Independent Role of PD-L1 in Kidney Repair: Mitigation of Tubular DNA Damage via PD-L1/BRCA1 Interaction Following AKI.