首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
A flow cytometric analysis of human platelet surface antigens was carried out using a panel of monoclonal antibody reagents. The reagents used were specific either for the GPIb or the GP IIb/IIIa complex, surface immunoglobulin, or von Willebrand factor (vWf). Indirect surface immunophenotypes were determined using an EPICS V flow cytometer and the monoclonal antibodies 6D1, 10E5, Plt-1, UR1663, anti-IgG, and anti-vWf. Platelets were obtained from normal individuals or patients with either Bernard-Soulier syndrome (BSS) or Glanzmann's thrombasthenia (GT). Normal platelets were positive for 10E5, 6D1, Plt-1, and UR1663 and showed negligible activity for anti-IgG and anti-vWf. Platelets from individuals with BSS showed a marked reduction in 6D1, while the platelets of a patient with GT showed a marked reduction in binding of 10E5, Plt-1, and UR1663. Differences between histograms for normal platelets and for platelets from individuals with BSS or GT were evaluated using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. Compared to normal platelets, the BSS and GT platelets contain at least 35-fold less of the GPIb and GP IIb/IIIa complex respectively. Flow cytometry is a useful and precise method for the study of normal and abnormal surface platelet phenotypes.  相似文献   

2.
Although the domestic swine is commonly employed for physiological studies of the coronary circulation, there is relatively little data available concerning the responsiveness in whole blood of normal porcine platelets to standard physiological agonists. Such information is essential if the domestic swine is to be used as an animal model for studying potential interactions between platelets and the coronary circulation. Accordingly, the present study was undertaken to characterize the responses (aggregation and ATP release) observed in whole blood of normal porcine platelets to selected physiological agonists. The responses of platelets from 10 normal human volunteers also were studied with this system for comparison. Agents tested included ADP, arachidonic acid, collagen, epinephrine, norepinephrine, and thrombin. Studies were conducted with the Chronolog impedance aggregometer. The results demonstrate that platelets of domestic swine are reactive to ADP, arachidonic acid, and collagen. In contrast, neither epinephrine nor norepinephrine alone induced aggregation or release. Norepinephrine, however, caused modest potentiation of aggregation in response to ADP only. At 1 mM concentration each catecholamine inhibited the release response to collagen while at 10 mM each inhibited aggregation and release in response to either ADP or collagen. The data obtained indicate the domestic swine may be employed as a useful model to examine interactions between platelets and the coronary circulation.  相似文献   

3.
Platelets play a key role not only in physiological haemostasis, but also under pathological conditions such as thrombosis. Platelet activation may be initiated by a variety of agonists including thrombin, collagen, thromboxane or adenosine diphosphate (ADP). Although ADP is regarded as a weak agonist of blood platelets, it remains an important mediator of platelet activation evoked by other agonists, which induce massive ADP release from dense granules, where it occurs in molar concentrations. Thus, ADP action underlies a positive feedback that facilitates further platelet aggregation and leads to platelet plug formation. Additionally, ADP acts synergistically to other, even weak, agonists such as serotonin, adrenaline or chemokines. Blood platelets express two types of P2Y ADP receptors: P2Y(1) and P2Y(12). ADP-dependent platelet aggregation is initiated by the P2Y1 receptor, whereas P2Y(12) receptor augments the activating signal and promotes platelet release reaction. Stimulation of P2Y(12) is also essential for ADP-mediated complete activation of GPIIb-IIIa and GPIa-IIa, and further stabilization of platelet aggregates. The crucial role in blood platelet biology makes P2(Y12) an ideal candidate for pharmacological approaches for anti-platelet therapy.  相似文献   

4.
Saxatilin, a novel disintegrin purified and cloned from the venom of the Korean snake Gloydius saxatilis, strongly inhibits activation and aggregation of platelets. Glycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa receptor antagonists can resolve thrombus, so saxatilin might also have thrombolytic effects. We investigated the thrombolytic effects of saxatilin in mice using a ferric chloride-induced carotid arterial thrombosis model. Thrombotic occlusion and thrombus resolution were evaluated quantitatively by measuring blood flow in the carotid artery with an ultrasonic flow meter and calculating the degree of flow restoration on a minute-by-minute basis; results were confirmed by histological examination. Saxatilin dissolved thrombi in a dose-dependent manner. Saxatilin at 5 mg/kg restored blood flow to baseline levels. As saxatilin dose increased, time to recanalization decreased. A bolus injection of 10% of a complete dose with continuous infusion of the remaining dose for 60 minutes resulted in effective recanalization without reocclusion. The thrombolytic effect of saxatilin was also demonstrated in vitro using platelet aggregometry by administering saxatilin in preformed thrombi. Bleeding complications were observed in 2 of 71 mice that received saxatilin. Fibrin/fibrinogen zymography and platelet aggregometry studies indicated that saxatilin does not have fibrinolytic activity, but exerted its action on platelets. Integrin-binding assays showed that saxatilin inhibited multiple integrins, specifically α2bβ3 (GP IIb/IIIa), α5β1, αvβ3, αvβ1, and αvβ5, which act on platelet adhesion/aggregation. Saxatilin inhibited multiple integrins by acting on platelets, and was safe and effective in resolving thrombi in mice.  相似文献   

5.
Correlated measurement of platelet release and aggregation in whole blood   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We have used a technique for the simultaneous measurement of platelet activation and aggregation in whole blood using two-color immunofluorescence and flow cytometry to study the relationship between the release reaction and aggregation. A monoclonal antibody specific for the alpha granule membrane protein GMP-140 was used to measure the release reaction, and a monoclonal antibody specific for platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib (GPIb) was used to identify platelets and platelet aggregates. Aggregates were identified as particles expressing both levels of GPIb and size larger than that of resting single platelets. Anticoagulated whole blood was incubated with platelet agonists. At various times samples of the blood were removed and immediately fixed with paraformaldehyde. Blood that had been anticoagulated with ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid showed progressive release of platelets but little or no aggregation. However, blood anticoagulated with citrate or heparin showed correlated release and aggregation. The degree of aggregation was greater in heparin than in citrate. The expression of GPIb and GMP-140 increased in direct proportion to the size of the aggregates. Aggregates were observed varying in apparent diameter up to approximately 20 microns. During prolonged incubation there was progressive disaggregation of adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-induced aggregates. After disaggregation the proportion of GMP-140 negative single platelets increased, indicating that both released and nonreleased platelets participated in the aggregation. There was little or no disaggregation of phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-induced aggregates. The relatively small size and reversibility of platelet aggregates that we have observed in whole blood may be relevant to phenomena occurring in vivo and in extracorporeal circulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used to study the effects of the thiol inhibitor monobromobimane (MB), EDTA, and prostaglandin E1 (PGE1) on the formation and composition of the platelet cytoskeletal core (Triton-insoluble residue) and its association with glycoprotein (GP) IIIa. Stimulation or aggregation of platelets in response to ADP or thrombin increased the amount of Triton-insoluble myosin. Aggregation resulted in incorporation of [125I]GP IIIa and a new band at about 210 kDa into the cytoskeletal core. EDTA and PGE1 caused little disaggregation of platelets that were aggregated in PRP with ADP and that had secreted the contents of their granules. In contrast to EDTA, PGE1 decreased the amount of Triton-insoluble residue and its association with GP IIIa. MB added after ADP-induced aggregation caused an increase in the amount of cytoskeletal core despite marked disaggregation and a substantial decrease in core-associated GP IIIa. With aspirin-treated platelets that had not secreted, EDTA, PGE1, and MB all caused disaggregation and loss of cytoskeletal GP IIIa. MB diminished, but did not reverse, thrombin-induced aggregation of washed platelets and arrested GP IIIa incorporation into the cytoskeletal core. Concanavalin A (Con A) cross-links glycoproteins on a single platelet and induces incorporation of GP IIIa into the Triton-insoluble residue in the absence of platelet aggregation. This induction was not inhibited by MB, although this reagent, as well as aspirin, inhibited Con A-induced secretion. Since GP IIIa incorporation caused by ADP-induced aggregation differs from that caused by Con A in its susceptibility to MB, it seems unlikely that thiol groups are directly involved in the association of GP IIIa with the cytoskeletal core.  相似文献   

7.
1. The platelet aggregation response to several known platelet agonists was evaluated in four Asian elephants. The platelets were highly responsive to stimulation with platelet-activating factor (PAF) and collagen, less responsive to adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and non-responsive to arachidonic acid, serotonin and epinephrine. 2. Arachidonic acid (1 x 10(-4) M), while inducing no aggregation, caused the release of 1248 +/- 1147 pg/ul (mean +/- SD) of thromboxane B2 (TXB2), the stable metabolite of thromboxane A2 from stimulated platelet. The addition of 1 x 10(-4) M ADP to platelets caused suboptimal aggregation and the release of only 25 +/- 10 pg TXB2/microliters. 3. The calcium channel blocker, verapamil, produced a dose-dependent inhibition of PAF-induced but not collagen-induced aggregation. The cyclooxygenase inhibitor, acetylsalicylic acid, produced no inhibition of either collagen- or PAF-induced aggregation.  相似文献   

8.
Many conditions affect the interaction of platelets with foreign surfaces, including the type of surface, modifications of the surface, conditions of blood flow, the adsorbed layer of plasma proteins, changes in this protein layer with time, and the animal species in which experiments are done. Platelets probably never adhere directly to a foreign surface in vivo, because upon exposure of the surface to blood, plasma proteins, principally fibrinogen, are adsorbed almost immediately. When platelets adhere to such a surface and spread on it, they are activated in much the same way as when they are exposed to a strong aggregating and release-inducing agent, but in contrast to aggregation caused by some agonists, adhesion is not dependent on the formation of TXA2 or the release of ADP. It does appear to depend on external Ca2+. Much less is known about the initial adhesion reaction than about platelet aggregation (thrombus formation) on the adherent platelets, although the morphological changes resulting from adhesion have been described. It is surmised that the metabolic and cytoskeletal changes upon adhesion are similar to those that are involved in the response of platelets to other activating agents. The consequences of adhesion include the formation of thrombi and thromboemboli, thrombocytopenia, reduced platelet survival, reduced platelet function in response to hemostatic stimuli, and the appearance in the circulation of products released or formed by activated platelets. Many efforts are being made to develop surfaces and to set up conditions that will minimize platelet adhesion, but it has not yet been possible to find a foreign surface that has and can maintain the nonthrombogenic characteristics of the normal endothelium.  相似文献   

9.
There is broad agreement that platelet aggregation is generally dependent on fibrinogen (Fg) binding to the glycoprotein (GP) IIb-IIIa receptor expressed on the activated platelet surface. We therefore compared rates and extents of aggregation and of fibrinogen receptor expression and specific Fg binding to activated platelets, as a function of ADP concentration. Human citrated platelet-rich plasma (diluted 10-fold) was stirred with adenosine diphosphate (ADP) for 10 s or 2 min to measure rates and extent of aggregation, respectively, determined from the decrease in the total number of particles. The number of fibrinogen receptors and bound Fg were measured from mean fluorescence values obtained with FITC-labeled IgM monoclonal antibody PAC1 and the IgG monoclonal antibody, 9F9, respectively, using flow cytometry as presented in part I (Frojmovic et al., 1994). Because flow cytometric and aggregation measurements were routinely determined at room temperature and 37 degrees C, respectively, we also compared and found temperature-independent initial rates of aggregation. The fraction of platelets with fluorescence values above one critical threshold value, corresponding to maximally "activated" platelets (P*), increased with increasing activator concentration and correlated linearly with the fraction of platelets recruited into aggregates for ADP (r > 0.9). Aggregation was not rate-limited by fibrinogen receptor expression or by Fg binding. It appears that each platelet expresses its maximal Fg receptors at a critical ADP concentration, i.e., occupancy of ADP receptors. This, in turn, leads to rapid Fg occupancy and capture of such "quantally activated" platelets into aggregates.  相似文献   

10.
The concentration profiles of adenosine diphosphate (ADP), thromboxane A2 (TxA2), thrombin, and von Willebrand factor (vWF) released extracellularly from the platelet granules or produced metabolically on the platelet membrane during thrombus growth, were estimated using finite element simulation of blood flow over model thrombi of various shapes and dimensions. The wall fluxes of these platelet-activating agents were estimated for each model thrombus at three different wall shear rates (100 s-1, 800 s-1, and 1,500 s-1), employing experimental data on thrombus growth rates and sizes. For that purpose, whole human blood was perfused in a parallel-plate flow chamber coated with type l fibrillar human collagen, and the kinetic data collected and analyzed by an EPl-fluorescence video microscopy system and a digital image processor. It was found that thrombin concentrations were large enough to cause irreversible platelet aggregation. Although heparin significantly accelerated thrombin inhibition by antithrombin lll, the remaining thrombin levels were still significantly above the minimum threshold required for irreversible platelet aggregation. While ADP concentrations were large enough to cause irreversible platelet aggregation at low shear rates and for small aggregate sizes, TxA2 concentrations were only sufficient to induce platelet shape change over the entire range of wall shear rates and thrombi dimensions studied. Our results also indicated that the local concentration of vWF multimers released from the platelet alpha-granules could be sufficient to modulate platelet aggregation at low and intermediate wall shear rates (less than 1,000 s-1). The sizes of standing vortices formed adjacent to a growing aggregate and the embolizing stresses and the torque, acting at the aggregate surface, were also estimated in this simulation. It was found that standing vortices developed on both sides of the thrombus even at low wall shear rates. Their sizes increased with thrombus size and wall shear rate, and were largely dependent upon thrombus geometry. The experimental observation that platelet aggregation occurred predominantly in the spaces between adjacent thrombi, confirmed the numerical prediction that those standing vortices are regions of reduced fluid velocities and high concentrations of platelet-activating substances, capable of trapping and stimulating platelets for aggregation. The average shear stress and normal stress, as well as the torque, acting to detach the thrombus, increased with increasing wall shear rate. Both stresses were found to be nearly independent of thrombus size and only weekly dependent upon thrombus geometry. Although both stresses had similar values at low wall shear rates, the average shear stress became the predominant embolizing stress at high wall shear rates.  相似文献   

11.
Characterization of the normal bovine platelet aggregation response   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
1. Bovine platelets are more sensitive to stimulation by platelet activating factor (PAF) than adenosine-di-phosphate (ADP) or thrombin. 2. While epinephrine, arachidonic acid and serotonin are ineffective by themselves as aggregatory stimulants of bovine platelets they enhance the aggregation response of other platelet agonists. 3. There is no correlation between thromboxane A2 production and release and the extent of platelet aggregation in bovine platelets. 4. The dependence of bovine platelet aggregation on a phospholipid pathway and calcium mobilization is indicated.  相似文献   

12.
Unactivated discocytes in healthy human donors have mean volumes of approximately 6.0 microns3 (range 3.8-7.5 microns3), while mean values for similarly-shaped discocytes obtained from donors with the hereditary "giant" platelet syndromes were either normal (one Bernard-Soulier syndrome (BSS) and all five members of a family with the Montreal platelet syndrome (MPS) or, on average, up to twice normal (range 6.4-13.8 microns3). This apparent heterogeneity is complicated by the much more consistent and significant observation that both BSS and MPS platelets undergo a defective hypervolumetric shape change following activation which is prolonged indefinitely, in contrast to a transient hypervolumetric change measureable in 1-5 s following ADP addition to normal platelets. It is suggested that the hypervolumetric shape change in both normal and "giant" platelets is accompanied by an increase in externalized plasma membrane surface area, with the most probable source being surface-connected canalicular system. Membrane glycoprotein I abnormalities were not detectable in platelets for 2/3 sibling MPS donors. The precise relation of these membrane changes to altered platelet functions is compared for normal and "giant" platelets, but largely remains to be experimentally determined. Early shape change appears tightly associated with early microscopically-measured aggregation (PA), with both PA and turbidimetrically-measured macroaggregation generally appearing normal to elevated for "giant" platelets.  相似文献   

13.
Increased mean platelet volume (MPV) is an independent risk factor of thrombotic events in patients with cardiovascular diseases. Interactions of MPV with platelet aggregation activity and contents of glycoprotein (GP) IIb-IIIa (αIIb/β3 integrin, fibrinogen receptor) and GP Ib (von Willebrand factor receptor) have been investigated in this study. The study was performed in a group of healthy volunteers (n = 38) and a group of patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS, n = 116). Patient’s blood was collected at days 1, 3–5 and 8–12 after ACS development. All patients received acetylsalicylic acid (ASA, inhibitor of thromboxane A2 synthesis) as the antiaggregant therapy and most of them also received clopidogrel (ADP receptor antagonist), except 44 patients who had not taken clopidogrel at day 1 before first blood collection. Aggregation of volunteers’ platelets was stimulated by 1.25, 2.5, 5 and 20 μM ADP, while aggregation of patients’ platelets was stimulated by 5 and 20 μM ADP. GP IIb-IIIa and GP Ib content on the platelet surface was measured using 125I-labelled monoclonal antibodies. GP IIb-IIIa and GP Ib genetic polymorphisms were determined in ACS patients. In healthy donors significant correlations between MPV and aggregation levels have been recognized at 1.25 μM and 2.5 μM ADP (correlation coefficient (r) values of 0.396 and 0.373, p < 0.05), while at 5 μM and 20 μM ADP these interactions did not reach the level of statistical significance (r values of 0.279 and 0.205, p > 0.05). Correlations between MPV and aggregation levels were observed at day 1 of ACS in a subgroup of patients receiving ASA but before the beginning of clopidogrel treatment (r values of 0.526, p < 0.001 and 0.368, p < 0.05 for 5 and 20 μM ADP, respectively). Correlations between these parameters were not found during combined treatment of patients with ASA and clopidogrel. Strong direct correlations between MPV and GP IIb-IIIa and GP Ib contents were detected in both healthy donors and ACS patients (at all time points): the r values ranged from 0.439 to 0.647 (p ≤ 0.001 for all correlations). Genetic polymorphisms of GP IIb-IIIa (GP IIIa Leu33Pro) and GP Ib ((?5)T/C (Kozak) and Thr145Met) identified in ACS patients did not affect expression levels of corresponding glycoproteins. The data obtained indicate that increased MPV values correlate with increased platelet aggregation activity and enhanced GP IIb-IIIa and GP Ib expression.  相似文献   

14.
Satoh K  Yatomi Y  Kubota F  Ozaki Y 《Cytometry》2002,48(4):194-201
BACKGROUND: Although cross-talks between platelets and other blood cells are important in vivo, laboratory platelet aggregation tests have been performed mainly with the use of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) as samples. Methods that enable an efficient and sensitive detection of platelet aggregates in whole blood are being developed. METHODS: A flow cytometer equipped with an imaging device, the flow imaging cytometer 2 (FIC2), was used to detect platelet aggregates in whole blood. RESULTS: The FIC2 provides a resolution that is high enough to differentiate platelet aggregates from single platelets or other blood cells. Epinephrine elicited platelet aggregate formation in hirudin plus argatroban-treated whole blood, but not in PRP. The reconstitution study revealed that a small amount of adenosine diphosphate (ADP) from erythrocytes may play an important role in epinephrine-induced platelet aggregation (in whole blood), through mediation of P2Y1 receptors. When the inhibitory effect of beraprost, an antiplatelet agent, on platelet aggregation was assessed, analysis of whole blood samples with FIC2 proved to be the most sensitive among the methods available. CONCLUSIONS: FIC2 is a promising device for detection of platelet aggregates in whole blood, with wide basic and clinical applications.  相似文献   

15.
Pannexin1 (Panx1), a membrane channel-forming protein permitting the passage of small-sized molecules, such as ATP, is expressed in human platelets. Recently, we showed that inhibiting Panx1 affects collagen-induced platelet aggregation but not aggregation triggered by other agonists. We also found that a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP; rs1138800) in the Panx1 gene encoded for a gain-of-function channel (Panx1-400C) and was associated with enhanced collagen-induced platelet reactivity. Here, we assessed the association of this SNP with platelet reactivity in a cohort of 758 stable cardiovascular patients from the ADRIE study treated with aspirin and/or clopidogrel. We found that presence of the Panx1-400C allele was not associated with platelet reactivity in stable cardiovascular patients, irrespective of the platelet aggregation agonist used (collagen, ADP or arachidonic acid) or the anti-platelet drug regimen. Moreover, the Panx1-400A?>?C SNP did also not affect the re-occurrence of cardiac ischemic events in the same stable cardiovascular patient cohort.  相似文献   

16.
Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is a lysophospholipid that is produced during thrombin stimulation of platelets, which can promote platelet aggregation. The mechanism of the effect of LPA was explored in normal platelets and in platelets from a patient with a storage pool deficiency (SPD). A comparison with other lysophospholipids showed that only LPA exerted significant effects to cause or potentiate platelet aggregation. Aspirin, an inhibitor of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase, had little effect on LPA-induced aggregation, but completely blocked LPA-induced serotonin secretion. LPA also promoted phosphorylation of myosin light chain (MLC), a 47 kilodalton (kDa) protein, and actin-binding protein. Aspirin significantly inhibited the phosphorylation of the 47-kDa and actin-binding proteins at 3-8 min after the addition of LPA, but had no effect on protein phosphorylation within the 1st min and had no significant effect on MLC phosphorylation. In SPD platelets, aspirin partially inhibited both aggregation and phosphorylation of the 47-kDa protein (less than 30% inhibition) and MLC (less than 40% inhibition) at time points of 1 min or less. The addition of ADP to SPD platelets enhanced the LPA response in platelets either pretreated or not pretreated with aspirin. Studies with SPD platelets indicate that thromboxane and secreted ADP contribute to, but are not necessary for, LPA-induced aggregation and phosphorylation. A23187 (a calcium ionophore) and LPA showed some selectivity to promote MLC as opposed to the 47-kDa protein phosphorylation, particularly at low concentrations of agonists and at earlier time points. The protein phosphorylation changes seen are consistent with a role for MLC phosphorylation in the granule centralization promoted with LPA.  相似文献   

17.
The involvement of the mitogen-activated protein kinase c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase-1 (JNK1) has never been investigated in hemostasis and thrombosis. Using two JNK inhibitors (SP600125 and 6o), we have demonstrated that JNK1 is involved in collagen-induced platelet aggregation dependent on ADP. In these conditions, JNK1 activation requires the coordinated signaling pathways of collagen receptors (alpha2beta1 and glycoprotein (GP)VI) and ADP. In contrast, JNK1 is not required for platelet adhesion on a collagen matrix in static or blood flow conditions (300-1500 s(-1)) involving collagen receptors (alpha2beta1 and GPVI). Importantly, at 1500 s(-1), JNK1 acts on thrombus formation on a collagen matrix dependent on GPIb-von Willebrand factor (vWF) interaction but not ADP receptor activation. This is confirmed by the involvement of JNK1 in shear-induced platelet aggregation at 4000 s(-1). We also provide evidence during rolling and adhesion of platelets to vWF that platelet GPIb-vWF interaction triggers alphaIIbbeta3 activation in a JNK1-dependent manner. This was confirmed with a Glanzmann thrombastenic patient lacking alphaIIbbeta3. Finally, in vivo, JNK1 is involved in arterial but not in venular thrombosis in mice. Overall, our in vitro studies define a new role of JNK1 in thrombus formation in flowing blood that is relevant to thrombus development in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
ADP-induced platelet responses play an important role in the maintenance of hemostasis. There has been disagreement concerning the identity of an ADP receptor on the platelet surface. The chemical structure of 7-chloro-4-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD-Cl) shows considerable resemblance to that of the adenine moiety of adenine-based nucleotides. The reagent has been previously used by other investigators as an affinity label for adenine nucleotide-requiring enzymes, such as mitochondrial ATPase and the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Since ADP-induced platelet responses depend on the binding of ADP to its receptor, we investigated the effect on ADP-induced platelet responses and the nature of ADP-binding protein modified by NBD-Cl. NBD-Cl inhibited ADP-induced shape change and aggregation of platelets in platelet-rich plasma in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. NBD-Cl also inhibited ADP-induced shape change, aggregation, exposure of fibrinogen binding sites, secretion, and calcium mobilization in washed platelets. NBD-Cl did not act as an agonist for platelet shape change and aggregation. Covalent modification of platelets by NBD-Cl blocked the ability of ADP to antagonize the increase in intracellular levels of cAMP mediated by iloprost (a stable analogue of prostaglandin I2). NBD-Cl was quite specific in inhibiting platelet aggregation by those agonists, e.g., ADP, collagen, and U44619 (a thromboxane mimetic), that completely or partially depend on the binding of ADP to its receptor. Autoradiogram of the gel obtained by SDS-PAGE of solubilized platelets modified by [14C]-NBD-Cl showed the presence of a predominant radiolabeled protein band at 100 kDa corresponding to aggregin, a putative ADP receptor. The intensity of this band was considerably decreased when platelets were either preincubated with ADP and ATP or covalently modified by a sulfhydryl group modifying reagent before modification by [14C]-NBD-Cl. These results (1) indicate that covalent modification of aggregin by NBD-Cl contributed to loss of the ADP-induced platelet responses, and (2) suggest that there is a sulfhydryl group in the ADP-binding domain of aggregin. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
We have obtained evidence that selective inhibition of high affinity thrombin-binding sites located in the amino-terminal domain of the membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ib alpha results in impaired platelet activation, as shown by abrogation or reduction of the following responses induced in normal platelets by exposure to less than 1 nM alpha-thrombin: (i) increase in intracellular ionized calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i), (ii) release of dense granule content, (iii) binding of fibrinogen, (iv) aggregation. An anti-GP Ib monoclonal antibody, LJ-Ib 10, which does not inhibit von Willebrand factor binding to platelets, obliterated the high affinity alpha-thrombin-binding sites on normal platelets. Isotherms of alpha-thrombin binding to normal platelets treated with saturating amounts of the antibody were virtually identical to those obtained with platelets from a patient with classical Bernard-Soulier syndrome. In parallel with decreased binding of the agonist, this antibody caused 50% inhibition of the maximal extent of platelet aggregation and 90% inhibition of ATP release induced by 0.3 nM alpha-thrombin. By inhibiting alpha-thrombin binding to GP Ib, the antibody prevented the activation of platelets exposed to low concentrations of the agonist, as demonstrated by abrogation of the increase in intraplatelet ionized calcium concentration induced in control platelets by 0.18 nM alpha-thrombin; under these conditions, fibrinogen binding was inhibited by 84%. Therefore, there is a correlation between occupancy of the high affinity sites for alpha-thrombin on GP Ib alpha and platelet activation, secretion, and aggregation, suggesting that GP Ib alpha is part of an alpha-thrombin receptor relevant for platelet function.  相似文献   

20.
Rho GTPases such as Rac, RhoA, and Cdc42 are vital for normal platelet function, but the role of RhoG in platelets has not been studied. In other cells, RhoG orchestrates processes integral to platelet function, including actin cytoskeletal rearrangement and membrane trafficking. We therefore hypothesized that RhoG would play a critical role in platelets. Here, we show that RhoG is expressed in human and mouse platelets and is activated by both collagen-related peptide (CRP) and thrombin stimulation. We used RhoG−/− mice to study the function of RhoG in platelets. Integrin activation and aggregation were reduced in RhoG−/− platelets stimulated by CRP, but responses to thrombin were normal. The central defect in RhoG−/− platelets was reduced secretion from α-granules, dense granules, and lysosomes following CRP stimulation. The integrin activation and aggregation defects could be rescued by ADP co-stimulation, indicating that they are a consequence of diminished dense granule secretion. Defective dense granule secretion in RhoG−/− platelets limited recruitment of additional platelets to growing thrombi in flowing blood in vitro and translated into reduced thrombus formation in vivo. Interestingly, tail bleeding times were normal in RhoG−/− mice, suggesting that the functions of RhoG in platelets are particularly relevant to thrombotic disorders.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号