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1.
Nonionic and anionic water-soluble amphiphiles were shown to increase strongly the binding of fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated annexin V (FITC-annexin V) in human erythrocytes pretreated with the aminophospholipid translocase (APLT) inhibitor n-ethylmaleimide (NEM). At high sublytic amphiphile-concentrations the binding of FITC-annexin V, monitored in a flow cytometer, was time -and temperature-dependent and occurred heterogeneously in the cell population, with 43-81% of cells being stained above background following incubation for 60 minutes at 37°C. The increased FITC-annexin V binding apparently indicates an increased flop rate of phosphatidylserine (PS) to the outer membrane leaflet. When the NEM-pretreatment was omitted, the FITC-annexin V binding was markedly, but not completely, reduced. In erythrocytes incubated with a zwitter-ionic amphiphile, a small increase in FITC-annexin V binding was detected, while cationic amphiphiles did not induce an increased FITC-annexin V binding. The potency of amphiphiles to induce PS exposure was not related to the type of shape alteration or vesiculation induced. Our results indicate a significant role of the charge status of a membrane intercalated amphiphile for its capability to induce PS exposure.  相似文献   

2.
Unconjugated bilirubin increasingly binds to erythrocytes as the bilirubin-to-albumin molar ratio exceeds unity, leading to toxic manifestations that can culminate in cell lysis. Our previous studies showed that bilirubin induces the release of lipids from erythrocyte membranes. In the present work, those studies were extended in order to characterize the alterations of membrane lipid composition and evaluate whether bilirubin leads to a loss of phospholipid asymmetry. To this end, human erythrocytes were incubated with several bilirubin-to-albumin molar ratios (0.5 to 5), and cholesterol as well as the total and the individual classes of phospholipids were determined. To detect erythrocytes with phosphatidylserine at the outer surface, the number of annexin V-positive cells was determined following incubation with bilirubin, fixing its molar ratio to albumin at 3. The results demonstrate profound changes in erythrocyte membrane composition, including modified cholesterol and phospholipid content. The release of membrane cholesterol, as well as of total and individual classes of phospholipids at molar ratios ≥1, indicates that damage of erythrocytes may occur in severely ill jaundiced neonates. The loss of the inner-located phospholipids, phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylserine, points to a redistribution of phospholipids in the membrane bilayer. This was confirmed by the exposure of phosphatidylserine at the outer cell surface. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that bilirubin induces loss of membrane lipids and externalization of phosphatidylserine in human erythrocytes. These features may facilitate hemolysis and erythrophagocytosis, thus contributing to enhanced bilirubin production and anemia during severe neonatal hyperbilirubinemia. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

3.
Activation of cation channels causes erythrocyte phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure and cell shrinkage. Human erythrocytes express the P2X7 receptor, an ATP-gated cation channel. The two most potent P2X7 agonists, BzATP and ATP, stimulated PS exposure in human erythrocytes. Other nucleotides also induced erythrocyte PS exposure with an order of agonist potency of BzATP > ATP > 2MeSATP > ATPγS; however neither ADP nor UTP had an effect. ATP induced PS exposure in erythrocytes in a dose-dependent fashion with an EC50 of ∼75 μM. BzATP- and ATP-induced erythrocyte PS exposure was impaired by oxidised ATP, as well as in erythrocytes from subjects who had inherited loss-of-function polymorphisms in the P2X7 receptor. ATP-induced PS exposure in erythrocytes was not significantly altered in the presence of EGTA excluding a role for extracellular Ca2+. These results show that P2X7 activation by extracellular ATP can induce PS exposure in erythrocytes.  相似文献   

4.
Mature human erythrocytes circulate in blood for approximately 120 days, and senescent erythrocytes are removed by splenic macrophages. During this process, the cell membranes of senescent erythrocytes express phosphatidylserine, which is recognized as a signal for phagocytosis by macrophages. However, the mechanisms underlying phosphatidylserine exposure in senescent erythrocytes remain unclear. To clarify these mechanisms, we isolated senescent erythrocytes using density gradient centrifugation and applied fluorescence‐labelled lipids to investigate the flippase and scramblase activities. Senescent erythrocytes showed a decrease in flippase activity but not scramblase activity. Intracellular ATP and K+, the known influential factors on flippase activity, were altered in senescent erythrocytes. Furthermore, quantification by immunoblotting showed that the main flippase molecule in erythrocytes, ATP11C, was partially lost in the senescent cells. Collectively, these results suggest that multiple factors, including altered intracellular substances and reduced ATP11C levels, contribute to decreased flippase activity in senescent erythrocytes in turn to, present phosphatidylserine on their cell membrane. The present study may enable the identification of novel therapeutic approaches for anaemic states, such as those in inflammatory diseases, rheumatoid arthritis, or renal anaemia, resulting from the abnormally shortened lifespan of erythrocytes.  相似文献   

5.
Smriti  Nemergut EC  Daleke DL 《Biochemistry》2007,46(8):2249-2259
The plasma membrane of most cells contains a number of lipid transporters that catalyze the ATP-dependent movement of phospholipids across the membrane and assist in the maintenance of lipid asymmetry. The most well-characterized of these transporters is the erythrocyte aminophospholipid flippase, which selectively transports phosphatidylserine (PS) from the outer to the inner monolayer. Previous work has demonstrated that PS and to a lesser extent phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) are substrates for the flippase and that other phospholipids move across the membrane only by passive flip-flop. The present study re-evaluates these results. The incorporation and transbilayer movement of a number of short-chain (dilauroyl) phospholipid analogues in human erythrocytes was measured by observing lipid-induced changes in cell morphology, and the effect of an ATPase inhibitor (vanadate) and a sulfyhdryl reagent (N-ethylmaleimide) was determined. Incubation of cells with these lipids causes the rapid formation of echinocytes, because of the accumulation of the lipid in the outer monolayer. While dilauroylphosphatidylcholine-treated cells retained this shape, cells treated with sn-1,2-DLP-l-S, sn-1,2-DLP-d-S, or N-methyl-DLPS rapidly changed morphology to stomatocytes, which is consistent with the transport and accumulation of the lipid in the inner monolayer. A similar, although slower, stomatocytic shape change was induced by sn-2,3-DLP-l-S. Other lipids that were tested (dilauroylphosphatidylhydroxypropionate, dilauroylphosphatidylhomoserine, DLPS-methyl ester, or sn-2,3-DLP-d-S) reverted to discocytes only. In all cases, pretreatment with vanadate or N-ethylmaleimide inhibited the conversion of echinocytes to discocytes or stomatocytes. This is the first report of a protein- and energy-dependent pathway for the inwardly directed transbilayer movement of lipids other than PS and PE in the erythrocyte membrane and suggests that the flippase has broader specificity for substrates or that other lipid transporters are present.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Exposure of the aminophospholipid phosphatidylserine at the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane by apoptotic cells can trigger phagocytic removal of these dying cells. This functionality of phosphatidylserine exposure in the process of phagocytosis is indicated by in vitro studies of mammalian and insect phagocytes. We have studied the in vivo distribution of cell-surface exposed phosphatidylserine by injecting biotinylated Annexin V, a Ca 2+ -dependent phosphatidyl-serine binding protein, into viable mouse and chick embryos and Drosophila pupae. The apparent binding of Annexin V to cells with a morphology which is characteristicof apoptosis and which was present in regions of developmental cell death indicates that phosphatidylserine exposure by apoptotic cells is a phylogenetically conserved mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
BackgroundAllicin (ACN), a sulfoxide in freshly crushed garlic, is known for its diverse bioactive properties. Among the most notable effects of ACN is its antitumor activity against a wide array of cancer types. Thus, ACN may be a promising anticancer therapeutic. Nevertheless, chemotherapy-induced anemia is a major obstacle in cancer management with a prevalence of up to 70%. Although the pathophysiology behind it remains elusive, a number of medications known to cause anemia in patients have been shown to induce premature programmed cell death in red blood cells (RBCs) known as eryptosis. This study, thus, investigates the anticancer potential of ACN against THP-1 monocytic leukemia cells, its toxic effects on human RBCs, and delineate the underlying biochemical mechanisms.MethodsCytotoxicity was detected using the MTT assay, while hemoglobin leakage was used as a surrogate for hemolysis which was photometrically measured. Major eryptotic events were examined using flow cytometry with fluorescent probes. Phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure was detected by Annexin-V-FITC, cytosolic calcium with Fluo4/AM, and reactive oxygen species with H2DCFDA.ResultsOur results show that ACN induces hemolysis in a dose-dependent fashion, which is significantly abrogated in absence of extracellular calcium. Moreover, ACN stimulates PS exposure, intracellular calcium overload, and oxidative stress. Using small-molecule inhibitors, we demonstrate that the pro-eryptotic activity of ACN is ameliorated in presence of zVAD(OMe)-FMK, SB203580, and D4476.ConclusionACN possesses both hemolytic and eryptotic properties mediated through elevated intracellular calcium levels, oxidative stress, caspase, p38 MAPK, and CK1α.  相似文献   

9.
Intracellular Ca2+ level is under strict regulation through calcium channels and storage pools including the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Mutations in certain ion channel subunits, which cause mis-regulated Ca2+ influx, induce the excitotoxic necrosis of neurons. In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, dominant mutations in the DEG/ENaC sodium channel subunit MEC-4 induce six mechanosensory (touch) neurons to undergo excitotoxic necrosis. These necrotic neurons are subsequently engulfed and digested by neighboring hypodermal cells. We previously reported that necrotic touch neurons actively expose phosphatidylserine (PS), an “eat-me” signal, to attract engulfing cells. However, the upstream signal that triggers PS externalization remained elusive. Here we report that a robust and transient increase of cytoplasmic Ca2+ level occurs prior to the exposure of PS on necrotic touch neurons. Inhibiting the release of Ca2+ from the ER, either pharmacologically or genetically, specifically impairs PS exposure on necrotic but not apoptotic cells. On the contrary, inhibiting the reuptake of cytoplasmic Ca2+ into the ER induces ectopic necrosis and PS exposure. Remarkably, PS exposure occurs independently of other necrosis events. Furthermore, unlike in mutants of DEG/ENaC channels, in dominant mutants of deg-3 and trp-4, which encode Ca2+ channels, PS exposure on necrotic neurons does not rely on the ER Ca2+ pool. Our findings indicate that high levels of cytoplasmic Ca2+ are necessary and sufficient for PS exposure. They further reveal two Ca2+-dependent, necrosis-specific pathways that promote PS exposure, a “two-step” pathway initiated by a modest influx of Ca2+ and further boosted by the release of Ca2+ from the ER, and another, ER-independent, pathway. Moreover, we found that ANOH-1, the worm homolog of mammalian phospholipid scramblase TMEM16F, is necessary for efficient PS exposure in thapsgargin-treated worms and trp-4 mutants, like in mec-4 mutants. We propose that both the ER-mediated and ER-independent Ca2+ pathways promote PS externalization through activating ANOH-1.  相似文献   

10.
The phospholipid distribution across red cell membrane bilayer is asymmetrical. Sphingomyelin and phosphatidylcholine are predominantly present in the outer membrane bilayer, whereas only small amounts of phosphatidylethanolamine and no phosphatidylserine are present in the outer membrane bilayer. The present study, using specific phospholipase, chemical probe, and Russell's viper venom clotting time has found that in neonatal red cells a portion of PS is also present in the outer membrane bilayer.  相似文献   

11.
A series of methyl 7alpha,12alpha-bis(phenylurea) cholate derivatives with different cationic substituents at the 3alpha-position were prepared and evaluated for an ability to increase the level of endogenous phosphatidylserine (PS) on the surface of red blood cells (erythrocytes). Some of the compounds induced large fractions of erythrocytes to expose sufficient PS to become stained by the protein annexin V-FITC. In addition, the compounds were found to bind PS in homogeneous solution, and to promote the translocation of fluorescent NBD-labeled phospholipids across vesicle membranes, which supports the hypothesis that cholate-induced exposure of endogenous PS on the erythrocyte surface is due to the ability of the cationic cholates to promote anionic phospholipid flip-flop.  相似文献   

12.
It has been a long-standing enigma which scramblase causes phosphatidylserine residues to be exposed on the surface of apoptotic cells, thereby facilitating the phagocytic recognition, engulfment and destruction of apoptotic corpses. In a recent paper in Science, Nagata and coworkers reveal that the scramblases Xkr8 and its C. elegans ortholog, CED-8, are activated by caspase cleavage in apoptotic cells.All cells are separated from the extracellular environment by the plasma membrane, a phospholipid bilayer that prevents diffusion of proteins, ions and other essential molecules into the extracellular space and constitutes the structure in which membrane proteins are embedded. In animal cells, the lipid composition of the outer and inner leaflets of the plasma membrane is not symmetrical. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) and sphingomyelin (SM) are mainly present in the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane, whereas phosphatidylserine (PS), phosphatidylinositol (PI) and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) are restricted to the inner leaflet. This lipid asymmetry is maintained by the combined action of ATP-dependent enzymes called flippases and floppases, which specifically translocate phospholipids and other molecules from the outer to the inner membrane leaflet and from the inner to the outer membrane leaflet, respectively1. Lipid composition asymmetry not only defines the curvature and electrochemical properties of the plasma membrane, but is also essential for the correct function of determined lipids, as for instance, PI, which only functions as a second messenger if present in the inner leaflet2. Nonetheless, several physiologically relevant processes as diverse as platelet activation, neurotransmitter release, sperm capacitation or apoptosis, require dissipation of plasma membrane lipid asymmetry, a process known as scrambling. The enzymes responsible for this activity are called scramblases, and function to randomize the distribution of phospholipids between both membrane leaflets in an ATP-independent manner2,3,4.Although plasma membrane asymmetry and the existence of flippases, floppases and scramblases have been known for decades, the identity of the specific enzymes involved in these activities has only begun to be revealed during the last few years. Very recently, the group of Shigekazu Nagata identified TMEM16F as the long sought-after calcium-dependent phospholipid scramblase3. However, to date, the identity of the scramblase(s) involved in apoptosis-related (and calcium-independent) PS exposure had remained elusive. Cell surface PS exposure is a classic feature of apoptotic cells and acts as an “eat me” signal allowing phagocytosis of post-apoptotic bodies. In a recent paper in Science, Nagata''s group identified Xk-Related Protein 8 (Xkr8) as the enzyme responsible for this activity and demonstrated an evolutionarily conserved role of this protein in apoptosis-induced lipid scrambling5.To identify enzymes involved in membrane lipid scrambling, Nagata''s group took advantage of their previously generated mouse Ba/F3 pro-B cell line3, which presented a high basal level of PS exposure. They then generated a cDNA library from Ba/F3 cells and overexpressed it in the parental cell line. Through sequential enrichment of cells with increased PS exposure, they were able to isolate a cDNA encoding the Xkr8 protein, which enhanced PS scrambling when overexpressed. Xkr8 overexpression (but not that of TMEM16F) was able to increase apoptosis-associated PS exposure. The authors then noticed that both impaired apoptosis-induced PS exposure and deficient post-apoptotic body clearance were correlated with low Xkr8 expression in leukemia and lymphoma cell lines, which was linked to hypermethylation of its promoter. Interestingly, these two alterations were reverted either by overexpressing Xkr8 or by restitution of endogenous Xkr8 expression after treatment with the demethylating agent 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine (DAC), suggesting that methylation of the Xrk8 promoter may be a mechanism by which tumor cells evade their phagocytosis after apoptotic death, which may result in increased local inflammation, thus favoring tumor progression. Far from being restricted only to PS exposure, Xrk8 overexpression was able to promote scrambling of multiple lipid species during apoptosis, which was demonstrated by incorporation of fluorescent PC and SM analogues. This scrambling activity was restricted to apoptotic events, as Xkr8 overexpression had no effect on Ca2+-induced PS exposure. This specificity may be explained by the presence of an evolutionarily conserved caspase recognition site near Xkr8 C-terminal region, whose mutation prevented both Xkr8 cleavage by caspase-3 or -7 and PS exposure during the course of apoptosis (Figure 1). These results from human cell lines were confirmed in Xkr8−/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts and fetal thymocytes, which were unable to expose PS upon induction of apoptosis, underscoring the broad physiological relevance of Xkr8 in the apoptotic process. Finally, the authors moved to the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans to analyze whether the role of Xpr8 as lipid scramblase is evolutionarily conserved. C. elegans harbors only one ortholog of Xk proteins, CED-8, known to participate in the phagocytic removal of apoptotic corpses6. To determine the role of CED-8 in PS exposure, the authors took advantage of the “floater” assay, which is based on the appearance of floating cells (“floaters”) that have detached from developing C. elegans embryos defective for apoptotic cell phagocytosis7. Nagata''s group discovered that ced-8 deficiency leads to the accumulation of floaters. Moreover, ced-8 deficiency synergistically enhanced the number of floaters found in other engulfment mutants, which suggests that CED-8 function is not redundant to that developed by previously known engulfment mutants. This enhancing effect of ced-8 deletion was dependent on CED-3, the C. elegans ortholog of caspase-3, confirming the aforementioned results in mammalian cells. The authors then characterized that floaters resulting from ced-8 deletion show a largely deficient PS exposure after developmental apoptosis, confirming the evolutionarily conserved role of Xk-related proteins in apoptosis-induced lipid scrambling. However, they observed that ced-8 deletion does not lead to a total impairment in apoptotic PS presentation, suggesting that additional proteins must be involved in this process. Indeed, apoptosis-inducing factor can induce PS exposure in mammalian cells in a caspase-independent fashion8, and the C. elegans AIF ortholog, WAF-1, physically interacts with and activates another scramblase, SCRM-14.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Xrp8 acts as apoptosis-induced lipid scramblase. Under normal conditions, the combined action of multiple mechanisms, including the activity of flippases and floppases, maintains lipid asymmetry between the outer and inner leaflets of the plasma membrane. Once apoptotic program is activated, caspases-3 and -7 are able to cleave and activate Xrp8 protein, which acts as a lipid scramblase and leads to the loss of lipid asymmetry, resulting in PS exposure to the extracellular space. This acts as the “eat-me” signal that will allow phagocytosis of post-apoptotic cell corpses. PC, phosphatidylcholine; SM, sphingomyelin; PE, phosphatidylethanolamine; PS, phosphatidylserine.In summary, through a series of elegant manipulations, Nagata''s group has found the long-sought caspase-activated lipid scramblase that mediates the exposure of “eat-me” signals in post-apoptotic cell corpses. Further studies involving Xkr8 protein, including the mechanisms participating in its epigenetic repression may open new roads for the study of autoimmune diseases, such as lupus erythematosus, which is associated with failure in the post-apoptotic corpse clearance system.  相似文献   

13.
The surface charge of human glutaraldehyde-fixed erythrocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We measured the number of charged residues at the surface of fresh human erythrocytes after fixation with glutaraldehyde by polyelectrolyte titration using polycations of different chemical composition and various molecular weights. Independent of the reagents used, the number was (8.5 +/- 1.5) X 10(8) negatively charged residues per cell. The surface charge density of 6.3 e/nm2 is considerably higher than that calculated from the electrophoretic mobility for which the surface charge density is calculated to be 0.09 e/nm2.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure on propidium iodide negative cells using FITC labelled annexin-V has been used to quantify apoptosis in vitro and in vivo. Detection of PS within cells undergoing necrosis is also possible if labelled annexin-V specific for PS enters the cell following early membrane damage. Necrotic or late apoptotic cells can be excluded from flow cytometric analysis using propidium iodide which enters and stains cells with compromised membrane integrity. Here we show that thymocytes undergoing death exclusively by necrosis show early exposure of PS prior to loss of membrane integrity. This early exposure of PS occurs in cells treated with agents which both raise intracellular calcium levels and are also capable of interacting with protein thiol groups. We also demonstrate that PS exposure in thymocytes induced to undergo apoptosis by three different agents does not correlate with calcium rises but correlates with and precedes DNA fragmentation.  相似文献   

16.
Human red blood cells (RBCs), transformed by incubation with the amphiphatic compound lysolecithin from their normal discocyte shape into echinocytes, have increased rates of agglutination in the presence of either poly- -lysine (PLL) or soybean agglutinin (SBA). Removal of lysolecithin by washing caused a reversal of shape back to the discocyte configuration and a lowering of agglutination rates. Methochlorpromazine, another amphiphatic echinocytogenic substance produced a similar increase in agglutination rates, suggesting that increased agglutinability may be a general property of echinocytes. Lysolecithin treatment of RBCs caused a decrease in the binding of cationized ferritin (CF) particles/μm2 of RBC surface. The decrease in CF binding is due to a rearrangement of negative charge bearing molecules on the RBC surface rather than shedding of charged groups. These observations support the hypothesis that integral membrane proteins which bear negative charges and receptors are associated with a cytoskeleton within the red cell. Alterations in cell shape which result in distortion of the cytoskeleton may cause a redistribution of integral membrane proteins which bear charged groups at the RBC surface.  相似文献   

17.
The exposure of the aminophospholipid phosphatidylserine on the external leaflet of red blood cell plasma membrane can have several pathophysiological consequences with particular regard to the processes of cell phagocytosis, haemostasis and cell-cell interaction. A significant increase in phosphatidylserine-exposing erythrocytes has been reported in chronic haemodialysis patients and found to be strongly influenced by the uraemic milieu. To identify uraemic compound(s) enhancing phosphatidylserine externalization in erythrocytes, we fractionated by chromatographic methods the ultrafiltrate obtained during dialysis, and examined by flow cytometry the effect of the resulting fractions on phosphatidylserine exposure in human red cells. Chromatographic procedures disclosed a homogeneous fraction able to increase erythrocyte phosphatidylserine exposure. The inducer of such externalization was identified by monodimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry investigations as beta2-microglobulin. To confirm the beta2-microglobulin effect and to examine the influence of protein glycation (as it occurs in uraemia) on phosphatidylserine erythrocyte exposure, erythrocytes from normal subjects were incubated with recombinant beta2-microglobulin (showing no glycation sites at mass analysis), commercial beta2-microglobulin (8 glycation sites), or with in vitro glycated recombinant beta2-microglobulin (showing multiple glycation sites). Elevated concentrations of beta2-microglobulin (corresponding to plasma levels reached in dialysis patients) increased slightly but significantly the protein's ability to externalize phosphatidylserine on human erythrocytes. Such an effect was markedly enhanced by glycated forms of the protein. Beta2-microglobulin is recognized as a surrogate marker of middle-molecule uraemic toxins and represents a key component of dialysis-associated amyloidosis. Our study adds further evidence to the potential pathophysiologic consequences of beta2-microglobulin accumulation in chronic uraemic patients.  相似文献   

18.
19.
A highly sensitive and selective sensor for daunomycin was developed using phosphatidylserine (PS) and aptamer as bioreceptors. The PS and aptamer were co-immobilized onto gold nanoparticles modified/functionalized [2,2':5',2″-terthiophene-3'-(p-benzoic acid)] (polyTTBA) conducting polymer. Direct electrochemistry of daunomycin was used to fabricate a label free sensor that monitors current at -0.61 V. The formation of each layer was confirmed with XPS, SEM, and QCM. Response of the sensor was compared with and without PS in terms of sensitivity and selectivity. Interaction between the sensor probe and daunomycin was determined with DPV. The experimental parameters affecting sensor performance were optimized in terms of concentration of immobilized aptamer, PS:aptamer ratio, temperature, pH, and reaction times. The dynamic range for daunomycin analysis ranged between 0.1 and 60.0 nM with a detection limit of 52.3 ± 2.1 pM. Sensor was also examined for interference effect of other drugs. The present sensor exhibited long term stability and successfully detected daunomycin in a real human urine spiked with daunomycin.  相似文献   

20.
Annexin V, an intracellular protein with a calcium-dependent high affinity for anionic phospholipid membranes, acts as an inhibitor of lipid-dependent reactions of the blood coagulation. Antiphospholipid antibodies found in the plasma of patients with antiphospholipid syndrome generally do not interact with phospholipid membranes directly, but recognize (plasma) proteins associated with lipid membranes, mostly prothrombin or beta(2)-glycoprotein I (beta(2)GPI). Previously, it has been proposed that antiphospholipid antibodies may cause thrombosis by displacing annexin V from procoagulant cell surfaces. We used ellipsometry to study the binding of annexin V and of complexes of beta(2)GPI with patient-derived IgG antibodies to beta(2)GPI, commonly referred to as anticardiolipin antibodies (ACA), to phospholipid bilayers composed of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and 20% phosphatidylserine (PS). More specifically, we investigated the competition of these proteins for the binding sites at these bilayers. We show that ACA-beta(2)GPI complexes, adsorbed to PSPC bilayers, are displaced for more than 70% by annexin V and that annexin V binding is unaffected by the presence of ACA-beta(2)GPI complexes. Conversely, annexin V preadsorbed to these bilayers completely prevents adsorption of ACA-beta(2)GPI complexes, and none of the preadsorbed annexin V is displaced by ACA-beta(2)GPI complexes. Using ellipsometry, we also studied the effect of ACA-beta(2)GPI complexes on the interaction of annexin V with the membranes of ionophore-activated blood platelets as a more physiological relevant model of cell membranes. The experiments with blood platelets confirm the high-affinity binding of annexin V to these membranes and unequivocally show that annexin V binding is unaffected by the presence of ACA-beta(2)GPI. In conclusion, our data unambiguously show that ACA-beta(2)GPI complexes are unable to displace annexin V from procoagulant membranes to any significant extent, whereas annexin V does displace the majority of preadsorbed ACA-beta(2)GPI complexes from these membranes.  相似文献   

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