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1.
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   

2.
Shear rate can affect protein adsorption and platelet aggregation by regulating both the collision frequency and the capture efficiency (alpha). These effects were evaluated in well defined shear field in a micro-couette for shear rate G = 10 - 1000 s-1. The rate of protein binding was independent of G, shown for adsorption of albumin to latex beads and PAC1 to activated platelets. The initial aggregation rate for ADP-activated platelets in citrated platelet-rich plasma followed second order kinetics at the initial platelet concentrations between 20,000 and 60,000/microliters. alpha values, which dropped nearly fivefold for a 10-fold increase in G, were approximately proportional to G-1, contrary to a minor drop predicted by the theory that includes protein cross-bridging. Varying ADP concentration did not change alpha of maximally activated platelet subpopulations, suggesting that aggregation between unactivated and activated platelets is negligible. Directly blocking the unoccupied but activated GPIIb-IIIa receptors without affecting pre-bound Fg on "RGD"-activated, fixed platelets (AFP) by GRGDSP or Ro 43-5054 eliminated aggregation, suggesting that cross-bridging of GPIIb-IIIa on adjacent platelets by fibrinogen mediates aggregation. Alpha for AFP remained maximal (approximately 0.24) over 25-75% Fg occupancy, otherwise decreasing rapidly, with a half-maximum occurring at around 2% occupancy, suggesting that very few bound Fg were required to cause significant aggregation.  相似文献   

3.
Platelet aggregation has previously been shown to occur within 1 s of activation with 100 microM adenosine diphosphate (ADP) for both large (L) and small (S) platelet subpopulations, but L platelets were about twofold more sensitive and more rapidly recruited into microaggregates than were S platelets after correcting for differences in platelet surface area. Because platelet aggregation normally requires fibrinogen binding to glycoprotein IIb-IIIa receptors (FbR) expressed on the activated platelet surface, we wished to compare the kinetics and nature of FbR expression induced by ADP for L versus S platelets, and to measure size-dependent differences in FbR expression for platelets maximally activated with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). We presented the theory and methodology in Part I (Frojmovic, M., T. Wong, and T. van de Ven. 1991. Biophys. J. 59:815-827) for measuring the rate of FbR expression (k1) and both the rate (k2) and efficiency (alpha) of binding of PAC1 to FbR as a function of activation conditions from the initial on-rate of FITC-PAC1 to FbR (V) and the maximal number of FbR expressed: these are measured, respectively, from the initial rate of increase in platelet-bound fluorescence (v) and the maximal increase in mean fluorescence (Flmax). We extended these analyses to L and S platelets, selected by electronic gating of forward scatter profiles (FSC), with corresponding fluorescence (Fl) histograms retrieved analytically. Platelet size (V) and surface area (SA), determined directly for cells separated with a cell sorter, were highly correlated with FSC, allowing v and Flmax values to be expressed per unit area of membrane for L:S comparisons. Surprisingly, ADP activation appeared to express all FbR within 1-3 s of ADP activation for both L and S platelets, whereas k1 was similar for PMA activation. In addition, L platelets maximally expressed two and three times more FbR per unit area than did S platelets when maximally stimulated, respectively, with ADP or PMA. Whereas k2 was independent of platelet size for a given activator, the efficiency of PAC1 binding (alpha), per unit area of membrane, was two times greater for L than for S platelets, for either ADP or PMA activation. Our data suggest that the FbR structure, its microenvironment, or its surface organization may vary with platelet size or activator type. Major reorganization of FbR and/or its environment appears to occur after approximately 5 min of ADP activation equally for both L and S platelets. A model is presented to account for size-dependent differences in FbR expression with implications for regulation of platelet aggregation.  相似文献   

4.
The kinetics of adhesion of platelets to fibrinogen (Fg) immobilized on polystyrene latex beads (Fg-beads) was determined in suspensions undergoing Couette flow at well-defined homogeneous shear rates. The efficiency of platelet adhesion to Fg-beads was compared for ADP-activated versus "resting" platelets. The effects of the shear rate (100-2000 s(-1)), Fg density on the beads (24-2882 Fg/microm(2)), the concentration of ADP used to activate the platelets, and the presence of soluble fibrinogen were assessed. "Resting" platelets did not specifically adhere to Fg-beads at levels detectable with our methodology. The apparent efficiency of platelet adhesion to Fg-beads readily correlated with the proportion of platelets "quantally" activated by doses of ADP, i.e., only ADP-activated platelets appeared to adhere to Fg-beads, with a maximal adhesion efficiency of 6-10% at shear rates of 100-300 s(-1), decreasing with increasing shear rates up to 2000 s(-1). The adhesion efficiency was found to decrease by only threefold when decreasing the density of Fg at the surface of the beads by 100-fold, with only moderate decreases in the presence of physiologic concentrations of soluble Fg. These adhesive interactions were also compared using activated GPIIbIIIa-coated beads. Our studies provide novel model particles for studying platelet adhesion relevant to hemostasis and thrombosis, and show how the state of activation of the platelet and the local flow conditions regulate Fg-dependent adhesion.  相似文献   

5.
Platelet aggregation requires the binding of fibrinogen to its receptor, a heterodimer consisting of the plasma-membrane glycoproteins (GP) IIb and IIIa. Although the GPIIb-IIIa complex is present on the surface of unstimulated platelets, it binds fibrinogen only after platelet activation. We have used an immunogold-surface replica technique to study the distribution of GPIIb-IIIa and bound fibrinogen over broad areas of surface membranes in unstimulated, as well as thrombin-activated and ADP-activated human platelets. We found that the immunogold-labeled GPIIb-IIIa was monodispersed over the surface of unstimulated platelets, although the cell surface lacked immunoreactive fibrinogen. On thrombin-stimulated platelets, approximately 65% of the GPIIb-IIIa molecules were in clusters within the plane of the membrane. Fibrinogen, which had been released from the alpha-granules of these cells, bound to GPIIb-IIIa on the cell surface and was similarly clustered. To determine whether the receptors clustered before ligand binding, or as a consequence thereof, we studied the surface distribution of GPIIb-IIIa after stimulation with ADP, which causes activation of the fibrinogen receptor function of GPIIb-IIIa without inducing the release of fibrinogen. In the absence of added fibrinogen, the unoccupied, yet binding-competent receptors on ADP-stimulated platelets were monodispersed. The addition of fibrinogen caused the GPIIb-IIIa molecules to cluster on the cell surface. Clustering was also induced by the addition of the GPIIb-IIIa-binding domains of fibrinogen, namely the tetrapeptide Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser on the alpha-chain or the gamma-chain decapeptide gamma 402-411. These results show that receptor occupancy causes clustering of GPIIb-IIIa in activated platelets.  相似文献   

6.
Platelet aggregation, which occurs within seconds of activation, is generally considered to be mediated by fibrinogen binding to glycoprotein IIb-IIIa which becomes expressed as a fibrinogen receptor (FbR) on the activated platelet surface. This receptor expression has, however, only been measured to date at relatively long activation times (greater than 15 min). We have therefore developed a theoretical and experimental approach for determining FbR expression within seconds of platelet activation using flow cytometry. The fluorescently labeled IgM monoclonal antibody FITC-PAC1, was used to report on the GPIIb-IIIa receptor for Fb (FbR). Human citrated platelet-rich plasma (PRP; diluted 1:10) was incubated with adenosine diphosphate (ADP) or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) for varying times (tau = 0-10 s, out to 60 min), followed by incubation with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-PAC1 antibody at saturating concentrations. The time course of FITC-PAC1 binding was then measured for these variously preactivated samples (different tau) from the mean platelet-bound fluorescence (Fl), determined for greater than or equal to 5 s of PAC1 addition by dilution quenching and determination of fluorescence intensity histograms with the FACSTAR or FACSCAN (Becton-Dickinson Canada, Mississauga, Ontario) flow cytometers. Both rapid, initial rate of increase in Fl (nu) (related to PAC1 on-rates) and maximal extent of increase (Flmax) were thus determined for different tau values. These measurements yield the rate of formation of FbR (k1), and both the rate (k2) and efficiency (alpha) of binding of PAC1 to FbR as a function of activator type and time of action. We have found that ADP appears to cause rapid, maximal expression of FbR within 1-3 s (k1 greater than 20 min-1), whereas PMA expresses FbR in a slow, biphasic manner (k1 - 0.01 and 0.2 min-1). However, k2 and alpha for maximal PMA activation are about two and three times greater, respectively, than for maximal ADP-activation. Moreover, k2 decreases with post ADP activation time. These differences are discussed in terms of altered FbR organization and accessibility. This kinetic approach can be widely used to analyze the dynamics and organization of molecules on cell surfaces by flow cytometry, including studies of size-dependent subpopulations (see Part II, Frojmovic, M., and T. Wong. 1991. Biophys. J. 59:828-837).  相似文献   

7.
The platelet integrin, glycoprotein IIb-IIIa (GPIIb-IIIa), serves as the receptor for fibrinogen. This study examined what effect GPIIb-IIIa receptor occupancy had on the cytoskeleton of resting and activated platelets. Triton X-100-insoluble residues (cytoskeletons) were isolated from resting washed platelets incubated with either 500 microM RGDS or 500 microM RGES and examined for protein content. RGDS did not increase the amount of GPIIb-IIIa associated with the cytoskeletal residues which sedimented at either 15,800 x g or 100,000 x g. To determine the effect of receptor occupancy on the formation of the activated platelet cytoskeleton, stirred and nonstirred RGDS-treated platelets in plasma were activated with ADP. Triton X-100-insoluble residues were isolated and examined for both protein content and retention of GPIIb-IIIa. Further, morphological studies were performed on the RGDS-ADP-stimulated platelets. The results of this study suggest that 1) RGDS peptide receptor occupancy does not lead to GPIIb-IIIa linkage to the cytoskeleton, 2) ADP-stimulated platelet shape change, polymerization of actin, and association of myosin with the cytoskeleton are unaffected by RGDS peptide receptor occupancy. 3) RGDS inhibits an aggregation-dependent incorporation of ABP, alpha-actinin, talin, and GPIIb-IIIa into the Triton-insoluble residue.  相似文献   

8.
Platelet cohesion requires the binding of fibrinogen to its receptor, a heterodimer consisting of the plasma-membrane glycoproteins GPIIb and GPIIIa. Although the GPIIb-IIIa complex is present on the surface of unstimulated platelets, it binds fibrinogen only after platelet activation. We have used an immunogold-surface replica technique to study the distribution of GPIIb-IIIa and bound fibrinogen over broad expanses of surface membranes in unstimulated and ADP-activated human platelets. We found that the gold prove was monodispersed over the surface of unstimulated platelets, although the cell surface lacked immunoreactive fibrinogen. To ascertain whether the receptors clustered prior to ligand binding or as a consequence thereof, we studied the surface distribution of GPIIb-IIIa after stimulation with ADP, which causes activation of the fibrinogen receptor function of GPIIb-IIIa without inducing the secretion of fibrinogen. In the absence of added fibrinogen, the unoccupied, yet binding-competent receptors on ADP-stimulated platelets were monodispersed. The addition of fibrinogen caused the GPIIb-IIIa molecules to cluster on the cell surface. Clustering was also induced by the addition of the GPIIb-IIIa binding domains of fibrinogen--namely, the tetrapeptide Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser on the alpha-chain or the gamma-chain decapeptide gamma 402-411. These results show that receptor occupancy causes clustering of GPIIb-IIIa in activated platelets.  相似文献   

9.
Incubation of washed human blood platelets with 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyl [3H]adenosine (FSBA) covalently labels a single polypeptide of Mr = 100,000. Protection by ADP has suggested that an ADP receptor on the platelet surface membrane was modified. The modified cells, unlike native platelets, failed to aggregate in response to ADP (100 microM) and fibrinogen (1 mg/ml). The extent of binding of 125I-fibrinogen and aggregation was inhibited to a degree related to the incorporation of 5'-p-sulfonylbenzoyl adenosine (SBA) into platelets, indicating FSBA could inhibit the exposure of fibrinogen receptors by ADP necessary for aggregation. Incubation of SBA platelets with alpha-chymotrypsin cleaved the covalently labeled polypeptide and concomitantly reversed the inhibition of aggregation and fibrinogen binding. Platelets proteolytically digested by chymotrypsin prior to exposure to FSBA did not require ADP for aggregation and fibrinogen binding. Moreover, subsequent exposure to FSBA did not inhibit aggregation or fibrinogen binding. The affinity reagent FSBA can displace fibrinogen bound to platelets in the presence of ADP, as well as promote the rapid disaggregation of the platelets. The apparent initial pseudo-first order rate constant of dissociation of fibrinogen was linearly proportional to FSBA concentrations. These studies suggest that a single polypeptide can be altered either by ADP-induced conformational changes or proteolysis by chymotrypsin to reveal latent fibrinogen receptors and promote aggregation of platelets after fibrinogen binding.  相似文献   

10.
The platelet membrane glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex (GPIIb-IIIa) recognizes peptides containing the amino acid sequence Arg-Gly-Asp, a sequence present at two locations in the alpha chain of fibrinogen. GPIIb-IIIa also interacts with peptides containing the carboxyl-terminal 10-15 residues of the fibrinogen gamma chain. We found that the alpha chain tetrapeptide, Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser (RGDS), and the gamma chain peptide, Leu-Gly-Gly-Ala-Lys-Gln-Ala-Gly-Asp-Val (LGGAKQAG-DV), each inhibited fibrinogen binding to ADP-stimulated platelets with Ki values of 15.6 +/- 2.7 and 46.2 +/- 8.2 microM, respectively. Furthermore, the inhibitory effect of the peptides was additive, indicating that they interact with GPIIb-IIIa in a mutually exclusive manner. Mutually exclusive binding suggests that either the alpha and gamma chain peptides bind to identical or overlapping sites on the GPIIb-IIIa complex or that one peptide induces a change in the complex that excludes the other. To differentiate between these possibilities, we compared the ability of RGDS and LGGAKQAGDV to inhibit the binding of fibrinogen and two GPIIb-IIIa complex-specific monoclonal antibodies, A2A9 and PAC-1, to ADP-stimulated platelets. A2A9 and PAC-1 appear to bind to different sites on GPIIb-IIIa because A2A9 binds to both stimulated and unstimulated platelets while PAC-1 only binds to stimulated platelets. RGDS specifically inhibited fibrinogen and PAC-1 binding with nearly identical Ki values of 15.6 +/- 2.7 and 20.2 +/- 3.5 microM, respectively. In contrast, LGGAKQAGDV had a differential effect on fibrinogen and PAC-1 binding, inhibiting PAC-1 binding with a Ki of 116.1 +/- 12.9 microM and fibrinogen binding with a Ki of 46.2 +/- 8.2 microM (p less than 0.005). Furthermore, while RGDS had no effect on the binding of the monoclonal antibody A2A9, LGGAKQAGDV was a partial inhibitor of A2A9 binding to activated platelets. These results suggest that the bindings sites for RGDS and LGGAKQAGDV are spatially distinct. They also suggest that ligand-induced changes in GPIIb-IIIa conformation are likely to be responsible for the mutually exclusive nature of alpha and gamma chain peptide binding.  相似文献   

11.
To analyze the basis of affinity modulation of integrin function, we studied cloned stable Chinese hamster ovary cell lines expressing recombinant integrins of the beta 3 family (alpha IIb beta 3 and alpha v beta 3). Antigenic and peptide recognition specificities of the recombinant receptors resembled those of the native receptors found in platelets or endothelial cells. The alpha IIb beta 3-expressing cell line (A5) bound RGD peptides and immobilized fibrinogen (Fg) but not soluble fibrinogen or the activation-specific monoclonal anti-alpha IIb beta 3 (PAC1), indicating that it was in the affinity state found on resting platelets. Several platelet agonists failed to alter the affinity state of ("activate") recombinant alpha IIb beta 3. The binding of soluble Fg and PAC1, however, was stimulated in both platelets and A5 cells by addition of IgG papain-digestion products (Fab) fragments of certain beta 3-specific monoclonal antibodies. These antibodies stimulated PAC1 binding to platelets fixed under conditions rendering them unresponsive to other agonists. Addition of these antibodies to detergent-solubilized alpha IIb beta 3 also stimulated specific Fg binding. These data demonstrate that certain anti-beta 3 antibodies activate alpha IIb beta 3 by acting directly on the receptor, possibly by altering its conformation. Furthermore, they indicate that the activation state of alpha IIb beta 3 is a property of the receptor itself rather than of the surrounding cell membrane microenvironment.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The equilibrium binding of 14C-labeled ADP to intact washed human blood platelets and to platelet membranes was investigated. With both intact platelets and platelet membranes a similar concentration dependence curve was found. It consisted of a curvilinear part below 20 microM and a rectilinear part above this concentration. At high ADP concentrations, the rectilinear part appeared to be saturable. Because of this, two classes of saturable ADP binding sites were proposed. ADP was partly converted to ATP and AMP with intact platelets while this conversion was virtually absent in isolated platelet membranes. ADP was bound to platelet membranes with the same type of curves found for intact platelets. The ADP binding to the high affinity system, which was stimulated by calcium ions, was nearly independent of temperature and had a pH optimum at 7.8. A number of agents were investigated for inhibiting properties. Of the sulfhydryl reagents only p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate inhibited both high and low affinity binding systems while iodoacetamide and N-ethylmaleimide were without effect. Compounds acting via cyclic AMP on platelet aggregation, such as adenosine and cyclic AMP itself, had no influence on binding. Some nucleosidediphosphates and nucleotide analogs at a concentration of 100 microM had no, or only a slight, effect on high affinity ADP binding. For some other nucleotides inhibitor constants were determined for both platelet ADP aggregation and ADP binding. The inhibitor constants of ATP, adenyl-5'-yl-(beta,gamma-methylene)diphosphate, IDP, adenosine-5'(2-O-thio)diphosphate, for aggregation and high affinity binding were in good correlation with each other. Exceptions formed fluorosulfonylbenzoyl adenosine and AMP. The ATP formation found with intact platelets could be attributed to a nucleosidediphosphate kinase. It was investigated in some detail. The enzyme was magnesium dependent, had a Q10 value of 1.41, a pH optimum at 8.0, was competitively inhibited by AMP and reacted via a ping pong mechanism. All findings described in this paper indicate that platelets as well as platelet membranes bind ADP with the same characteristics and they suggest that the high affinity binding of ADP is involved in platelet aggregation induced by ADP. The results on nucleosidediphosphate kinase did not permit a firm conclusion about the role of the enzyme in induction of platelet aggregation by ADP.  相似文献   

14.
Purified human blood platelet membrane showed the presence of one low Km (1.1 microM) and one high Km (5.0 microM) cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase(s). Incubation of platelet-rich plasma or gel-filtered platelets with ADP (4.0 microM), a well-known platelet aggregating agent, resulted in the inhibition of phosphodiesterase activity of the isolated membrane by 25% in 5 min at 23 degrees C. A Lineweaver-Burk plot of the enzymic activity of the membrane preparation showed that ADP specifically inhibited the low Km (1.1 microM) phosphodiesterase by reducing the Vmax from 241 to 176 pmol/mg per min with concomitant lowering of Km to 0.5 microM. In contrast, neither the high Km (5.0 microM) enzymic activity of the membrane preparation nor the phosphodiesterase activities of the cytosolic fraction of the ADP-treated platelets was affected. This effect of ADP, which was independent of platelet aggregation, reached maximal level within 5 min of incubation. When platelet-rich plasma was incubated longer in the presence of nucleotide, the inhibition of phosphodiesterase activity began to decrease, and after 20 min of incubation approx. 90% of the original enzymic activity was regained. The incubation of platelet-rich plasma with 4.0 microM ADP also increased the cyclic AMP level to twice the basal level. The effect of ADP on the phosphodiesterase activity could be demonstrated only by incubating the intact platelets with the nucleotide. The treatment of isolated membrane from platelets, previously unexposed to ADP, with the nucleotide did not inhibit the enzymic activity. The inhibition of phosphodiesterase by the nucleotide in the absence of stirring, as expected, resulted in the inhibition of platelet aggregation when these cells were subsequently stirred with 1-epinephrine or an increased concentration of ADP.  相似文献   

15.
The radiolabelled monoclonal antibody, 5G11, directed against native thrombospondin, has been used to assess the surface expression of secreted thrombospondin on human blood platelets. Emphasis has been placed on studying the role of fibrinogen in this process. Unstimulated platelets bound low amounts of 5G11 (about 2000 molecules/platelet). Binding increased 2-fold and 5-7-fold after stimulation of platelets with ADP or thrombin (or ionophore A23187) respectively. Unstimulated platelets from patients deficient in alpha-granule proteins (gray platelet syndrome) bound baseline levels of 5G11. However, binding was not increased after activation. Thrombospondin expression on thrombin-stimulated normal platelets was for a large part divalent-cation-dependent and was not affected by AP-2, a monoclonal antibody to GPIIb-IIIa complexes. However, binding of 5G11 was some 50% lower when platelets were stimulated in the presence of Fab fragments of a polyclonal rabbit antibody to fibrinogen. This suggested either a direct binding of thrombospondin to surface-bound fibrinogen or a steric inhibition due to a close proximity of the two proteins. The fact that binding of 5G11 was at the lower limit of the normal range to the stimulated platelets of an afibrinogenaemic patient specifically lacking detectable fibrinogen favoured the latter explanation. Thus, a major fibrinogen-independent pathway for thrombospondin expression must exist.  相似文献   

16.
A noncovalently associated complex comprising of CD9, the fibrinogen (Fg) receptor alphaIIbbeta3, integrin-associated protein (IAP), and glycoprotein (GP) Ib/V/IX complex was isolated from Chaps-solubilized human platelets. The CD9 complex was immunoprecipitated by mAbs specific for CD9 (mAb7), IAP (BRIC126), GPIb (SZ1), GPIX (GR-P), beta3 (AP3) and alphaIIb (C3). Additionally, the association between CD9 and alphaIIbbeta3 was demonstrated by ELISA. In this system, CD9 did not bind to vitronectin receptor (alphavbeta3) suggesting that CD9/alphaIIbbeta3 association was alphaIIb-subunit or alphaIIbbeta3-complex dependent. D3, an alphaIIbbeta3-activating mAb that is also an anti-LIBS (ligand-induced binding site), immunoprecipitated primarily alphaIIbbeta3 with GPIb and IAP. CD9 was not detected in D3 immunoprecipitates. D3 binding induced platelet aggregation via direct alphaIIbbeta3 activation and was upregulated by the alphaIIbbeta3 antagonist eptifibatide. In contrast, AP3 and C3 exhibited neither effect. In addition, D3 also inhibited whole blood clot retraction, in contrast to AP3 and C3, suggesting that conformational constraints on alphaIIbbeta3 by D3 binding not only influenced the CD9 complex but also affected alphaIIbbeta3 post receptor occupancy events. The CD9 complex was immunoprecipitated in the presence of eptifibatide, demonstrating that alphaIIbbeta3 receptor occupancy was not sufficient to cause complex dissociation. CD9 complex isolation was also independent of platelet activation, although a twofold increase in the quantity of CD9 complex was seen after platelet activation by alpha-thrombin in the presence of CaCl2 compared with that present in EDTA. Stirred platelets showed fibrinogen-mediated aggregation by alpha-thrombin in the presence of CaCl2 but not with EDTA, suggesting that fibrinogen crosslinking of CD9 complexes via alphaIIbbeta3 could be partially responsible for this increase. These findings imply that the platelet CD9 complex is independent of platelet activation although it is dependent upon the conformation state of alphaIIbbeta3.  相似文献   

17.
A conformation-dependent epitope of human platelet glycoprotein IIIa.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
This study explores conformational states of human platelet glycoprotein IIIa (GP IIIa) and possible mechanisms of fibrinogen receptor exposure. D3GP3 is an IgG1, kappa monoclonal antibody generated against purified GP IIIa and found to be specific for GP IIIa by immunoprecipitation and Western blot analysis. The binding of D3GP3 to resting platelets caused fibrinogen binding (approximately 5,000 molecules/platelet) and platelet aggregation but not secretion. Platelets express 40,000-50,000 GP IIb-IIIa molecules in their surface membranes. However, resting platelets only bound approximately 5,000 D3GP3 molecules/platelet. D3GP3 binding to platelets could be increased 2-3-fold by dissociation of the GP IIb-IIIa complex with 5 mM EDTA or by occupying the fibrinogen receptor with either RGDS peptides or fibrinogen. Platelet stimulation with ADP in the absence of fibrinogen did not cause increased D3GP3 binding above control levels. These data suggest that 1) GP IIb-IIIa can exist in multiple conformations in the platelet membrane, 2) D3GP3 binding to GP IIIa can expose the fibrinogen receptor, 3) the binding of either RGDS peptides or fibrinogen causes exposure of the D3GP3 epitope, and 4) platelet activation in the absence of ligand does not induce the same conformational changes in GP IIb-IIIa as does receptor occupancy by RGDS peptides or fibrinogen.  相似文献   

18.
1. AGEPC (2 microM) caused a noticeable increment in platelet aggregation, in increasing order, in 9 heterozygous beta-thalassaemic subjects, 18 homozygous beta-thalassaemics and 12 splenectomized homozygous beta-thalassaemics. 2. Recombination experiments with "patient" platelets and "normal" plasma or the reverse, as well as hydrolysis of labelled AGEPC from "normal" and "patient" serum, suggested that the observed abnormalities were due to platelets rather than to the plasma PAF hydrolase. 3. A normal splenectomized subject showed also hyperaggregability and PAF serum levels in a splenectomized patient were found twice as high in a non-splenectomized patient. 4. ADP (5 microM) caused decreased or normal platelet aggregation in the homozygous patients, approximately normal in the heterozygous subjects and increased in the splenectomized patients.  相似文献   

19.
Fibrinogen binding to receptors on activated platelets is a prerequisite for platelet aggregation. However, the regions of fibrinogen interacting with these receptors have not been completely characterized. Fibronectin also binds to platelet fibrinogen receptors. Moreover, the amino acid sequence Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser, corresponding to the cell attachment site of fibronectin, is located near the carboxyl-terminal region of the alpha-chain of fibrinogen. We have examined the ability of this tetrapeptide to inhibit platelet aggregation and fibrinogen binding to activated platelets. Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser, but not the peptide Arg-Gly-Tyr-Ser-Leu-Gly, inhibited platelet aggregation stimulated by ADP, collagen, and gamma-thrombin without inhibiting platelet shape change or secretion. At a concentration of 60-80 microM, Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser inhibited the aggregation of ADP-stimulated gel-filtered platelets approximately equal to 50%. Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser, but not Arg-Gly-Tyr-Ser-Leu-Gly, also inhibited fibrinogen binding to ADP-stimulated platelets. This inhibition was competitive with a Ki of approximately equal to 25 microM but was incomplete even at higher tetrapeptide concentrations, indicating that Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser is a partial competitive inhibitor of fibrinogen binding. These data suggest that a region near the carboxyl-terminus of the alpha-chain of fibrinogen interacts with the fibrinogen receptor on activated platelets. The data also support the concept that the sequence Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser has been conserved for use in a variety of cellular adhesive processes.  相似文献   

20.
In the present report we describe the platelet-binding characteristics of applaggin and echistatin, potent inhibitors of fibrinogen-dependent platelet aggregation derived from Agkistrodon piscivorus piscivorus and Echis carinatus snake venoms, respectively. Both molecules bound to unstimulated platelets in a specific and saturable manner. At saturation there were 37,100 +/- 3,150 (mean, +/- S.D.) molecules of applaggin and 27,200 +/- 2,816 molecules of echistatin bound/platelet, with dissociation constants (Kd) of 1.4 +/- 0.6 x 10(-7) M and 4.9 +/- 1.2 x 10(-7) M, respectively. Stimulation of platelets with ADP (10 microM) + epinephrine (2 microM) resulted in an increase in the number of molecules bound at saturation to 42,300 +/- 2,105 for applaggin and 32,185 +/- 3,180 for echistatin, with a Kd of 5.6 +/- 0.3 x 10(-8) M and 1.8 +/- 0.6 x 10(-7) M, respectively. The synthetic peptide (Arg)8-Gly-Asp-Val was a competitive antagonist of applaggin and echistatin binding to unstimulated platelets (Ki = 25 and 36 microM, respectively). Applaggin and echistatin inhibited the binding of fibrinogen to stimulated platelets in a dose-dependent manner, with an IC50 of 9 and 25 nM, respectively. In concert with inhibition of platelet aggregation, applaggin and echistatin inhibited platelet secretion and synthesis of thromboxane A2 induced by ADP, collagen, and human gamma-thrombin. The monclonal antibody, LJ-CP3, which inhibits the binding of Arg-Gly-Asp containing ligands to platelet GPIIb.IIIa, also inhibited applaggin binding to unstimulated platelets in a competitive manner (Ki = 4.5 microM). Thus, applaggin and echistatin bind to the platelet GPIIb.IIIa complex, and the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence plays a central role in mediating this interaction.  相似文献   

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