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Published October 24, 2006 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Modular chemical mechanism predicts spatiotemporal dynamics of initiation in the complex network of hemostasis

Abstract

This article demonstrates that a simple chemical model system, built by using a modular approach, may be used to predict the spatiotemporal dynamics of initiation of blood clotting in the complex network of hemostasis. Microfluidics was used to create in vitro environments that expose both the complex network and the model system to surfaces patterned with patches presenting clotting stimuli. Both systems displayed a threshold response, with clotting initiating only on isolated patches larger than a threshold size. The magnitude of the threshold patch size for both systems was described by the Damkohler number, measuring competition of reaction and diffusion. Reaction produces activators at the patch, and diffusion removes activators from the patch. The chemical model made additional predictions that were validated experimentally with human blood plasma. These experiments show that blood can be exposed to significant amounts of clot-inducing stimuli, such as tissue factor, without initiating clotting. Overall, these results demonstrate that such chemical model systems, implemented with microfluidics, may be used to predict spatiotemporal dynamics of complex biochemical networks.

Additional Information

© 2006 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA. Edited by George M. Whitesides, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, and approved August 30, 2006 (received for review July 3, 2006). We thank Shaun R. Coughlin, Jay T. Groves, Satish Kumar, Yannis Kevrekidis, Daniel Koshland, Ka Yee Lee, Jonathan L. Miller, Atul Parikh, Thuong Van Ha, and Ding-Djung Yang for discussions and advice. This work was supported in part by National Science Foundation CAREER Award CHE-0349034 and Office of Naval Research Grant N00014-03-10482. M.K.R. was supported by Burroughs Wellcome Fund Interfaces ID 1001774. R.F.I. is a Cottrell Scholar of Research Corporation and an A. P. Sloan Research Fellow. Some of this work was performed at the Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers microfluidic facility (funded by the National Science Foundation). Author contributions: C.J.K., M.K.R., and R.F.I. designed research; C.J.K., M.K.R., and F.S. performed research; C.J.K. and M.K.R. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; C.J.K., M.K.R., F.S., and R.F.I. analyzed data; and C.J.K., M.K.R., and R.F.I. wrote the paper. The authors declare no conflict of interest. This article is a PNAS direct submission.

Attached Files

Published - Ismagilov_Chem_model_for_clot_initiation_CK_PNAS_2006_103_43_15747.pdf

Supplemental Material - Ismagilov_SI_PNAS_2006_103_15747_chemical_model_Christian.pdf

Files

Ismagilov_Chem_model_for_clot_initiation_CK_PNAS_2006_103_43_15747.pdf

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023