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1.
2.
A labeled 77-kDa complex formed when 125I-thrombin was added to platelet suspensions or to the supernatant solution of ionophore-activated platelets. Prostacyclin inhibited complex formation with whole platelets but not with the supernatant solution of ionophore-activated platelets. This is evidence that the complex formed with a factor secreted from activated platelets. Smaller complexes of 70 and 58 kDa formed between labeled thrombin and lysed platelets. The 77-kDa complex was necessary for the formation of a thrombin-thrombospondin complex.  相似文献   

3.
《The Journal of cell biology》1987,105(6):2551-2558
Studies with various thrombin derivatives have shown that initiation of cell proliferation by thrombin requires two separate types of signals: one, generated by high affinity interaction of thrombin or DIP-thrombin (alpha-thrombin inactivated at ser 205 of the B chain by diisopropylphosphofluoridate) with receptors and the other, by thrombin's enzymic activity. To further study the role of high affinity thrombin receptors in initiation, we immunized mice with whole human fibroblasts and selected antibodies that blocked the binding of 125I- thrombin to high affinity receptors on hamster fibroblasts. One of these antibodies, TR-9, inhibits from 80 to 100% of 125I-thrombin binding, exhibits an immunofluorescent pattern indistinguishable from that of thrombin bound to receptors on these cells, and selectively binds solubilized thrombin receptors. By itself, TR-9 did not initiate DNA synthesis nor did it block thrombin initiation, but TR-9 addition to cells in the presence of alpha-thrombin, gamma-thrombin (0.5 microgram/ml), or PMA stimulated thymidine incorporation up to threefold over controls. In all cases, maximal stimulation was observed at concentrations of TR-9, ranging from 1 to 4 nM corresponding to concentrations required to inhibit from 30 to 100% of 125I-thrombin binding. These results demonstrate that the binding of the monoclonal antibody to the alpha-thrombin receptor can mimic the effects of thrombin's high affinity interaction with this receptor in stimulating cell proliferation.  相似文献   

4.
High and low molecular weight kininogens (HK and LK) are able to bind to platelets to inhibit thrombin binding to and activation of platelets. The heavy chain domain on the kininogens that contains these functions has been determined. Domain 3 (D3) but not domains 1 or 2, completely inhibited 125I-HK binding to platelets (Ki = 24 +/- 7 nM, n = 4). 125I-D3 specifically bound to unstimulated platelets and human umbilical vein endothelial cells. On platelets, it was blocked by unlabeled D3 and HK but not prekallikrein, factor XII, C1s, or C1 inhibitor. Further, one monoclonal antibody (HKH13) directed to kininogens' D3 blocked 125I-HK and 125I-D3 binding to platelets. The binding of 125I-D3 to platelets was fully reversible by addition of 35 molar excess of unlabeled D3. D3 binding to platelets was saturable with an apparent Kd of 39 +/- 8 nM (n = 4) and 1227 +/- 404 binding sites/platelet. D3, like HK and LK, inhibited thrombin-induced platelet activation by preventing thrombin binding to platelets. Another monoclonal antibody (HKH12), directed to D3, which did not block HK binding to platelets, reduced HK's ability to inhibit 125I-alpha-thrombin binding. This result suggests that the region on D3 that inhibits 125I-alpha-thrombin binding to platelets is different from that which directly binds to platelets. These studies indicate that D3 of the kininogens contains both a binding region for platelets and endothelial cells and another region that inhibits thrombin-induced platelet activation.  相似文献   

5.
Binding of 125I-thrombin to endothelial cells derived from human umbilical vein was studied in tissue culture. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and autoradiography revealed covalent binding of thrombin in a 72-kDa complex. This binding is specific and requires the catalytically active site of the enzyme. Formation of the complex could be detected as early as 3 min after addition of thrombin or with a thrombin concentration as low as 0.5 nM. This irreversible binding exhibits thrombin dose-dependence and reaches maximum levels at a concentration of 50 nM (10 fmol/10(5) cells). Some characteristics of the 72-kDa complex were compared to those of the complexes formed between thrombin and protease nexin originating from fibroblasts or platelets: (i) its electrophoretic mobility on SDS-PAGE is identical to that of the thrombin-platelet protease nexin complex, (ii) heparin prevents the appearance of the complex on the cell surface, (iii) plasmin in a 100-fold molar excess prevents the covalent linkage of thrombin, suggesting that the protease specificity of the endothelial component involved in the complex might not be restricted to thrombin. Yet no release, nor any secretion of the endothelial protein, could be detected. These results indicate that active thrombin binds covalently to a specific endothelial protein that is in several respects similar to fibroblast or platelet protease nexin and provides a thrombin binding site distinct from thrombomodulin and glycosaminoglycans.  相似文献   

6.
The kininogens, high molecular weight kininogen (HK) and low molecular weight kininogen (LK), are multifunctional, single-gene products that contain bradykinin and identical amino-terminal heavy chains. Studies were performed to determine if LK would bind directly to platelets. 125I-LK specifically bound to gel-filtered platelets in the presence of 50 microM Zn2+. HK effectively competed with 125I-LK for the same binding site (Ki = 27 +/- 9 nM, n = 5). Similarly, the Ki for LK inhibition of 125I-LK binding was 12 +/- 1 nM (n = 3). Albumin, fibrinogen, factor XIII, and kallikrein did not inhibit 125I-LK binding to unstimulated platelets. 125I-LK (66 kDa) was not cleaved upon binding to platelets. The binding of 125I-LK to unstimulated platelets was found to be fully reversible by the addition of a 50 molar excess of unlabeled LK at both 10 and 20 min. LK binding to platelets was saturable with an apparent Kd of 27 +/- 2 nM (mean +/- S.E., n = 9) and 647 +/- 147 binding sites/platelet. Both LK and HK at plasma concentrations inhibited thrombin-induced platelet aggregation. LK and HK at about 5% of plasma concentration also inhibited thrombin-induced secretion of both stirred and unstirred platelets. Both kininogens were found to be noncompetitive inhibitors of proteolytically active thrombin binding to platelets. The kininogens did not inhibit D-phenylalanyl-prolyl-arginine chloromethyl ketone-treated thrombin from binding to platelets. These studies indicated that both kininogens have a region on their heavy chain which allows them to bind to platelets. Further, kininogen binding by its heavy chain modulates thrombin activation of platelets since it prevents proteolytically active thrombin from binding to its receptor.  相似文献   

7.
Thrombin receptors define responsiveness of cholesterol-modified platelets   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The microviscosity of human platelet membranes was changed by incubating platelets with liposomes containing various ratios of cholesterol and lecithin. Binding of 125I-thrombin to the modified platelets was measured together with platelet aggregation and secretion. In cholesterol-normal platelets (mole ratio of cholesterol to phospholipid (C:PL) = 0.553; eta = 2.40 poise), weighted nonlinear least squares curve fitting indicated that a model involving two classes of sites was adequate to describe the binding isotherm (K1 = 8.3 X 10(8) M-1; R1 = 150 sites/platelet; K2 = 6.4 X 10(6) M-1; R2 = 16,000 sites/platelet). In cholesterol-enriched platelets (C:PL = 0.857; eta = 3.05 poise), the apparent affinities for the two classes of sites decreased to 55 and 53%, respectively, while the binding capacities increased to 170 and 160%, respectively. In contrast, in the cholesterol-depleted platelets (C:PL = 0.435; eta = 2.03 poise), the affinities increased to 220 and 180%, respectively, while the binding capacities decreased to 53 and 46%, respectively. In cholesterol-enriched, cholesterol-normal, and cholesterol-depleted platelets, the thrombin concentrations required for half-maximal aggregation were 0.17, 0.35, and 0.52 nM, respectively, while the values for half-maximal secretion of [14C]serotonin were 0.17, 0.40, and 0.55 nM, respectively. Plots of receptor occupancy versus biological response showed that maximum response in cholesterol-enriched, cholesterol-normal, and cholesterol-depleted platelets occurred with occupancy of 30, 50, and 70% of the high affinity sites, respectively. In all three treatment groups, occupancy of 40-50 high affinity sites results in 50% aggregation. These results show that (i) modification of platelet membrane microviscosity results in changes in the number and affinity of both high and low affinity thrombin receptors, (ii) the change in receptor number rather than affinity is the determinant for platelet responsiveness, and (iii) the changes in membrane microviscosity do not appear to alter the coupling between occupied receptor and subsequent bioresponse.  相似文献   

8.
Ahmad SS  Walsh PN 《Biochemistry》2002,41(37):11269-11276
The assembly of the factor X activating complex on the platelet surface requires the occupancy of three receptors: (1) enzyme factor IXa, (2) cofactor factor VIII(a), and (3) substrate factor X. To further evaluate this three-receptor model, simultaneous binding isotherms of (125)I-factor X and (131)I-factor VIII(a) to activated platelets were determined as a function of time and also as a function of the concentrations of both ligands in the presence of active site-inhibited factor IXa (45 nM) and 5 mM CaCl(2). In the presence of active site-inhibited factor IXa and factor VIIIa there are two independent factor X binding sites: (1) low affinity, high capacity (approximately 9000 sites/platelet; K(d) approximately 380 nM) and (2) low capacity, high affinity (1700 sites/platelet; K(d) approximately 30 nM). A single specific and selective factor X binding site was expressed (1200 sites/platelet; K(d) approximately 9 nM) when the shared factor X/factor II site was blocked by excess factor II (4 microM). In the presence of active site-inhibited factor IXa (4 nM) and factor II (4 microM), factor X binds to 3-fold more platelet sites than procofactor VIII with relatively low affinity (K(d) approximately 250 nM). The activation of procofactor VIII to factor VIIIa increases the affinity of binding to platelets of both factor VIIIa ( approximately 4-fold to K(d) approximately 0.8-1.5 nM) and factor X ( approximately 25-50-fold to K(d) approximately 5-9 nM). In the presence of excess zymogen factor IX, which blocks the shared factor IX/factor IXa binding site, the substrate, factor X, and the active cofactor, factor VIIIa, form a 1:1 stoichiometric complex. These coordinate binding studies support the conclusion that factor X initially binds to a high-capacity, low-affinity platelet binding site shared with prothrombin, which then presents factor X to a specific high-affinity site consisting of factor VIIIa bound to a high-affinity, low-capacity receptor on activated platelets.  相似文献   

9.
We used electron microscope autoradiography (EMAR) to visualize the interaction of 125I-thrombin with its surface receptors on mouse embryo (ME) cells. Autoradiographic grains were spaced over the surface of cells in a periodic nonrandom pattern, indicating 125I-thrombin association with clusters of thrombin receptors. The grain spacing varied slightly from cell to cell, indicating subpopulations of cells with different numbers of thrombin receptors. The average distance between grains on ME cells after binding 125I-thrombin (125 ng/ml) at 37 degrees C was 1.65 +/- 0.49 microns. The average distance between grains on prefixed cells and cells incubated with 125I-thrombin at 4 degrees C was not significantly different from that observed at 37 degrees C. This indicates that thrombin receptors are clustered before thrombin binding and that the thrombin receptor aggregates do not redistribute into large aggregates on the surface of cells subsequent to thrombin binding. The number of grains per cluster also does not change under these three binding conditions. Thus, the number of occupied receptors in each cluster appears to be constant. On the basis of the average grain number and spacing, we estimate that each cluster is approximately 400 nm in diameter containing approximately 550 thrombin-binding sites. These receptor-clusters are not associated with specialized structures or coated regions of the membrane. Additionally, grains observed within cells were not found associated with coated vesicles. Therefore, neither the clustering patterns nor internalization of 125I-thrombin are characteristic of molecules which bind to receptors and are internalized by receptor-mediated endocytosis.  相似文献   

10.
Miller TN  Sinha D  Baird TR  Walsh PN 《Biochemistry》2007,46(50):14450-14460
The zymogen, factor XI, and the enzyme, factor XIa, interact specifically with functional receptors on the surface of activated platelets. These studies were initiated to identify the molecular subdomain within factor XIa that binds to activated platelets. Both factor XIa (Ki approximately 1.4 nM) and a chimeric factor XIa containing the Apple 3 domain of prekallikrein (Ki approximately 2.7 nM) competed with [125I]factor XIa for binding sites on activated platelets, suggesting that the factor XIa binding site for platelets is not located in the Apple 3 domain which mediates factor XI binding to platelets. The recombinant catalytic domain (Ile370-Val607) inhibited the binding of [125I]factor XIa to the platelets (Ki approximately 3.5 nM), whereas the recombinant factor XI heavy chain did not, demonstrating that the platelet binding site is located in the light chain of factor XIa. A conformationally constrained cyclic peptide (Cys527-Cys542) containing a high-affinity (KD approximately 86 nM) heparin-binding site within the catalytic domain of factor XIa also displaced [125I]factor XIa from the surface of activated platelets (Ki approximately 5.8 nM), whereas a scrambled peptide of identical composition was without effect, suggesting that the binding site in factor XIa that interacts with the platelet surface resides in the catalytic domain near the heparin binding site of factor XIa. These data support the conclusion that a conformational transition accompanies conversion of factor XI to factor XIa that conceals the Apple 3 domain factor XI (zymogen) platelet binding site and exposes the factor XIa (enzyme) platelet binding site within the catalytic domain possibly comprising residues Cys527-Cys542.  相似文献   

11.
Fibroblasts as well as several other cell types, secrete a number of protease inhibitors into their culture media. Among these inhibitors are the protease nexins, a class of proteins which covalently bind serine proteases, thereby inactivating their specific targets. Protease nexin-I, first discovered in human foreskin fibroblasts, binds thrombin, plasmin, and urokinase with high affinity, forming covalently linked complexes. Human fibroblasts bind complexes of protease nexin-I and its target protease via a cell-surface, high-affinity receptor. We have analyzed a number of characteristics of this receptor, and found them to be typical of class II receptors in general. At 4 degrees C binding of PN-I:protease complexes was competed by heparin. In addition, binding was independent of the particular protease bound to the PN-I; purified complexes of PN-I with thrombin or urokinase competed equipotently for [125]I-thrombin:PN-I binding. As the pH of the binding buffer was lowered, binding to cells increased. A twofold increase in binding was attained by lowering the pH from 7.5 to 4.5. This phenomenon was not due to irreversible, pH-induced changes to either the cell surface or the labeled complexes. At 37 degrees C, the removal of labeled complexes from culture medium was rapid; approximately 80% was removed by 4 hours under given conditions. The internalization of complexes was also very rapid, with an estimated ke (endocytic rate constant) of 1.0 min-1. At neutral pH, fibroblasts bind complexes in a saturable manner. Scatchard analysis yields a receptor number of 250,000 per cell and a Kd of 1 nM.  相似文献   

12.
Characterization of thrombin binding to alpha 2-macroglobulin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The formation and structural characteristics of the human alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M)-thrombin complex were studied by intrinsic protein fluorescence, sulfhydryl group titration, electrophoresis in denaturing and nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel systems, and in macromolecular inhibitor assays. The interaction between alpha 2M and thrombin was also assessed by comparison of sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoretic patterns of peptides produced by Staphylococcus aureus V-8 proteinase digests of denatured alpha 2M-125I-thrombin and alpha 2M-125I-trypsin complexes. In experiments measuring fluorescence changes and sulfhydryl group exposure caused by methylamine, we found that thrombin produced its maximum effects at a mole ratio of approximately 1.3:1 (thrombin:alpha 2M). Measurements of the ability of alpha 2M to bind trypsin after prior reaction with thrombin indicated that thrombin binds rapidly at one site on alpha 2M, but occupies the second site with some difficulty. Intrinsic fluorescence studies of trypsin binding to alpha 2M at pH 5.0, 6.5, and 8.0 not only revealed striking differences in trypsin's behavior over this pH range, but also some similarities between the behavior of thrombin and trypsin not heretofore recognized. Structural studies, using sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to measure alpha 2M-125I-thrombin covalent complex formation, indicated that covalency reached a maximum at a mole ratio of approximately 1.5:1. At this ratio, only 1 mol of thrombin is bound covalently per mol of alpha 2M. These gel studies and those of proteolytic digests of denatured alpha 2M-125I-trypsin and alpha 2M-125I-thrombin complexes suggest that proteinases form covalent bonds with uncleaved alpha 2M subunits. The sum of our results is consistent with a mechanism of proteinase binding to alpha 2M in which the affinity of the proteinase for alpha 2M during an initial reversible interaction determines its binding ratio to the inhibitor.  相似文献   

13.
Comparative interactions of factor IX and factor IXa with human platelets   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Both factor IX and factor IXa were bound to gel filtered platelets in the presence of CaCl2 (2-20 mM) and human alpha-thrombin (0.06-0.2 units/ml) with maximal binding occurring in 10-20 min at 37 degrees C, and rapid reversibility was observed when unlabeled ligands were added in 100-fold molar excess. Competition studies with various coagulation proteins revealed that neither factor XI nor high molecular weight kininogen, at 300-fold molar excess, could compete with 125I-labeled factor IXa for binding sites on thrombin-activated platelets, whereas prothrombin and factor X, in 450-fold molar excess, could displace approximately 15 and 35%, respectively, of bound factor IXa in the absence of added factor VIII. Analysis of saturation binding data in the presence of CaCl2 and thrombin without factors VIII and X indicated the presence of 306 (+/- 57) binding sites per platelet for factor IX (Kd(app) = 2.68 +/- 0.25 nM) and 515 (+/- 39) sites per platelet for factor IXa (Kd = 2.57 +/- 0.14 nM). In the presence of thrombin-activated factor VIII (1-5 units/ml) and factor X (0.15-1.5 microM), the number of sites for factor IX was 316 (+/- 50) with Kd = 2.44 (+/- 0.30) nM and for factor IXa 551 (+/- 48) sites per platelet (Kd = 0.56 +/- 0.05 nM). Studies of competition for bound factor IXa by excess unlabeled factor IX or factor IXa, and direct 125I-labeled factor IXa binding studies in the presence of large molar excesses of factor IX, confirmed the conclusion from these studies that factor IX and factor IXa share approximately 300 low-affinity binding sites per thrombin-activated platelet in the presence of Ca2+ and in the absence of factor VIII and factor X, with an additional 200-250 sites for factor IXa with Kd(app) similar to that for factor IX. The presence of factor VIII and factor X increases by 5-fold the affinity of receptors on thrombin-activated platelets for factor IXa that participate in factor X activation.  相似文献   

14.
Platelet receptor occupancy with factor IXa promotes factor X activation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
To investigate the activated platelet surface as a locus for factor X activation, the functional consequences of factor IXa binding to platelets were studied. The concentration of factor IXa required for half-maximal rates of factor X activation in the presence of factor VIIIa and thrombin-activated platelets was 0.53 nM, which is close to the Kd (0.56 nM) for factor IXa binding to platelets under identical conditions, determined from equilibrium binding studies. In direct comparative experiments, there was a close correspondence between equilibrium binding of factor IXa to thrombin-activated platelets in the presence of factor VIIIa and kinetic determinations of factor X activation rates. Analysis by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that 125I-labeled factor IXa bound to platelets was structurally intact and did not form covalent complexes with platelet proteins. Factor IXa active site-inhibited by 5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl glutamyl-glycylarginyl chloromethyl ketone was shown to be a competitive inhibitor of factor IXa binding in the absence (Ki = 2.3 nM) and presence (Ki = 0.43 nM) of factor VIIIa and factor X and of factor X activation (Ki = 0.4 nM) by factor IXa in the presence of factor VIIIa, indicating that the generation of factor Xa is not required for factor IXa binding and that factor IXa bound to activated platelets in the presence of factor VIIIa is closely coupled with rates of factor X activation. We conclude that factor IXa bound tightly to a platelet receptor in the presence of factor VIIIa is the enzyme active in factor X activation.  相似文献   

15.
Factor VIII is a cofactor in the tenase enzyme complex which assembles on the membrane of activated platelets. A critical step in tenase assembly is membrane binding of factor VIII. Platelet membrane factor VIII-binding sites were characterized by flow cytometry using either fluorescein maleimide-labeled recombinant factor VIII or a fluorescein-labeled monoclonal antibody against factor VIII. Following activation by thrombin, most platelets bound factor VIII within 90 s. In addition, over the course of several minutes, membranous vesicles (microparticles) were shed from the platelet plasma membrane and each microparticle bound as much factor VIII as a stimulated platelet. Over 30 min, stimulated platelets (but not microparticles) lost the capacity to bind factor VIII. Factor VIII bound saturably to microparticles from platelets stimulated with thrombin, thrombin plus collagen, or the complement proteins C5b-9. The binding of factor VIII was compared to factor V, a structurally homologous coagulation cofactor. Analysis of microparticle binding kinetics yielded similar on and off rates for factor VIII and factor Va and KD values of 2-10 nM. In the presence of 20 nM factor Va, the binding of factor VIII to microparticles was increased, and there was a comparable increase in platelet tenase activity. At higher factor Va concentrations, factor VIII binding and tenase activity were inhibited. Conversely, factor VIII had a similar dose-dependent effect on factor Va binding and platelet prothrombinase activity. Synthetic phospholipid vesicles containing phosphatidylserine competed with microparticles for binding of factor VIII and factor Va. These studies indicate that activated platelets express a transient increase in high affinity receptors for factor VIII, whereas platelet-derived microparticles express a sustained increase in receptors. The binding characteristics of platelet membrane receptors for factor VIII are similar to those for factor Va.  相似文献   

16.
Platelet activation is accompanied by the appearance on the platelet surface of approximately 45,000 receptor sites for fibrinogen. The binding of fibrinogen to these receptors is required for platelet aggregation. Although it is established that the fibrinogen receptor is localized to a heterodimer complex of the membrane glycoproteins, IIb and IIIa, little is known about the changes in this complex during platelet activation that result in the expression of the receptor. In the present studies, we have developed and characterized a murine monoclonal anti-platelet antibody, designated PAC-1, that binds to activated platelets, but not to unstimulated platelets. PAC-1 is a pentameric IgM that binds to agonist-stimulated platelets with an apparent Kd of 5 nM. Binding to platelets is dependent on extracellular Ca2+ (KCa = 0.4 microM) but is not dependent on platelet secretion. Platelets stimulated with ADP or epinephrine bind 10,000-15,000 125I-PAC-1 molecules/platelet while platelets stimulated with thrombin bind 20,000-25,000 molecules/platelet. Several lines of evidence indicate that PAC-1 is specific for the glycoprotein IIb.IIIa complex. First, PAC-1 binds specifically to the IIb.IIIa complex on Western blots. Second, PAC-1 does not bind to thrombasthenic platelets or to platelets preincubated with ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid at 37 degrees C, both of which lack the intact IIb.IIIa complex. Third, PAC-1 competitively inhibits the binding of 125I-A2A9, and IgG monoclonal antibody that is specific for the IIb.IIIa complex. Fourth, the antibody inhibits fibrinogen-mediated platelet aggregation. These data demonstrate that PAC-1 recognizes an epitope on the IIb.IIIa complex that is located near the platelet fibrinogen receptor. Platelet activation appears to cause a Ca2+-dependent change involving the glycoprotein IIb.IIIa complex that exposes the fibrinogen receptor and, at the same time, the epitope for PAC-1.  相似文献   

17.
We studied the binding of 125I-platelet and plasma Factor XIII (125I-Factor XIII) to human platelets. When 125I-Factor XIII was incubated with gel-filtered platelets, calcium chloride (5 mM) and thrombin (1 unit/ml) at 37 degrees C, saturable binding was observed. Half-maximal binding occurred at 1 min. Binding was inhibited 93% by a 100-fold molar excess of unlabeled ligand but not by other purified proteins. Greater than 87% of platelet-bound radioactivity migrated as thrombin-cleaved a-chains (a'-chains) in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels indicating that Factor XIIIa but not Factor XIII binds to platelets. 125I-Factor XIIIa does not bind to unstimulated platelets. When platelet secretion was blocked, binding was markedly inhibited. 125I-Factor XIIIa bound minimally to platelets stimulated with agonists other than thrombin. Thus, binding is dependent on platelet activation, as well as modification of platelets by thrombin. 125I-Factor XIIIa bound to gamma-thrombin-stimulated platelets, at concentrations which did not clot fibrinogen. Therefore, Factor XIIIa is not bound to fibrin associated with platelets. Binding was only partially reversible. Approximately 12,000 molecules of Factor XIIIa were bound per platelet. 125I-Factor XIIIa bound normally to platelets from patients with severe Glanzmann's thrombasthenia indicating that 125I-Factor XIIIa does not bind to platelet glycoproteins IIb or IIIa, or platelet-bound fibrinogen. Chymotrypsin treatment of platelets inhibited 125I-Factor XIIIa binding by 78% without inhibiting secretion. Methylamine and putrescine, Factor XIIIa substrates, and N-ethylmaleimide, an active site inhibitor, did not inhibit binding. Factor XIIIa bound to platelets was enzymatically active and catalyzed [3H]putrescine incorporation into platelet proteins. The specific binding of Factor XIIIa to platelets suggests it may play a role in physiologic reactions involving platelets.  相似文献   

18.
N E Larsen  E R Simons 《Biochemistry》1981,20(14):4141-4147
alpha-Thrombin has previously been shown to bind to specific, saturable glycoproteins on the platelet surface. Modification of the thrombin active site with tosyllysyl chloromethyl ketone (TosLysCH2Cl) does not alter thrombin's binding characteristics. Interaction of alpha-thrombin with high-affinity binding sites (KD = 10(-9) M) initiates the platelet response which involves proteolytic hydrolysis of this glycoprotein. Although TosLysCH2Cl--thrombin binds to and competes for the same sites as alpha-thrombin, it cannot induce platelet stimulation because it is enzymatically inactive. In this study, we describe the preparation and application of photoreactive tritium-labeled thrombin analogues. The alpha-thrombin derivative retains its platelet-stimulating and enzymatic activities and, upon photoactivation, covalently binds to specific platelet membrane components. When freshly washed human platelets are exposed to less than saturation doses (less than or equal to 2 nM) of the thrombin derivatives in the dark and photoactivated, a single labeled complex is detected. The same experiment with greater than saturating doses (greater than or equal to 20 nM) of the thrombin derivative yields a similar complex as well as two additional ones. Molecular weight estimates of these thrombin-bound complexes were obtained by gel filtration and NaDodSO4--polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The low dose (high affinity) complex with TosLysCH2Cl--thrombin has an approximate molecular weight of 200 000, while that with active alpha-thrombin is smaller, approximately 120 000, due to enzymatic cleavage. The additional complexes detected with the high thrombin dose had estimated molecular weights of 400 000 and 46 000, respectively, and appeared to be the same for TosLysCH2Cl--thrombin and for the alpha-thrombin coupled platelets. These isolated complexes appear to correspond to the two previously detected populations of thrombin binding sites on the platelet.  相似文献   

19.
Optimal rates of factor X (FX) activation require occupancy of receptors for factor IXa (FIXa), factor VIII (FVIII), and FX on the activated platelet surface. The presence of FVIII and FX increases 5-fold the affinity of FIXa for the surface of activated platelets, and the presence of FVIII or FVIIIa generates a high affinity, low capacity specific FX-binding site on activated platelets. We have now examined the effects of FX and active site-inhibited FIXa (EGR-FIXa) on the binding of both FVIII and FVIIIa to activated platelets and show the following: (a) von Willebrand factor inhibits FVIII binding (K(i) = 0.54 nM) but not FVIIIa binding; (b) thrombin and the thrombin receptor activation peptide (SFLLRN amide) are the most potent agonists required for FVIII-binding site expression, whereas ADP is inert; (c) FVa does not compete with FVIIIa or FVIII for functional platelet-binding sites; and (d) Annexin V is a potent inhibitor of FVIIIa binding (IC(50) = 10 nM) to activated platelets. The A2 domain of FVIII significantly increases the affinity and stoichiometry of FVIIIa binding to platelets and contributes to the stability of the FX-activating complex. Both FVIII and FVIIIa binding were specific, saturable, and reversible. FVIII binds to specific, high affinity receptors on activated platelets (n = 484 +/- 59; K(d) = 3.7 +/- 0.31 nM) and FVIIIa interacts with an additional 300-500 sites per platelet with enhanced affinity (K(d) = 1.5 +/- 0.11 nM). FVIIIa binding to activated platelets in the presence of FIXa and FX is closely coupled with rates of F-X activation. The presence of EGR-FIXa and FX increases both the number and the affinity of binding sites on activated platelets for both FVIII and FVIIIa, emphasizing the validity of a three-receptor model in the assembly of the F-X-activating complex on the platelet surface.  相似文献   

20.
Ahmad SS  Walsh PN 《Biochemistry》2005,44(42):13858-13865
Optimal rates of factor X (FX) activation require binding of factor IXa (FIXa), factor VIII(a) [FVIII(a)], and FX to activated platelet receptors. To define the FVIIIa domains that mediate platelet interactions, albumin density gradient washed, gel-filtered platelets (3.5 x 10(8)/mL) activated by the thrombin receptor peptide, SFLLRN (25 microM), were incubated with 125I-labeled FVIII C2 domain, or 125I-FVIIIa, or 125I-FVIII((LC)), or peptides from the C2 domain region, with or without anti-C2 domain monoclonal antibodies (MoAb), ESH4 or ESH8. FVIIIa (Kd approximately 1.7 nM), FVIII((LC)) (Kd approximately 3 nM), and the C2 domain (Kd approximately 16 nM) all interacted with approximately 700-800 binding sites/platelet. Unlike FVIIIa, the C2 domain did not respond to the presence of excess EGR-FIXa (45 nM) and FX (1.5 microM) with enhanced binding stoichiometry and affinity. Both the MoAb ESH4 and a synthetic peptide corresponding to FVIII residues 2303-2332 (epitope for FVIII MoAb, ESH4) inhibited FVIIIa binding to platelets, whereas MoAb ESH8 and a C2 domain peptide corresponding to residues 2248-2285 (epitope for the FVIII MoAb, ESH8) failed to inhibit FVIIIa binding. Thus, a major platelet-binding site resides within residues 2303-2332 in the C2 domain of FVIIIa, and an additional site within residues 2248-2285 increases the stoichiometry and affinity of FVIIIa binding to activated platelets only in the presence of FIXa and FX but does not directly mediate FVIIIa binding to the platelet surface.  相似文献   

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