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1.
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   

2.
The glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex (GP IIb-IIIa) mediates platelet aggregation and is a member of the cytoadhesin family of receptors that bind adhesive proteins such as fibrinogen, fibronectin, and von Willebrand factor. Despite the wide range of cell-substrate interactions mediated by these receptors, ligand binding domains have not yet been identified on any of the integrins. The present study was designed to determine potential fibrinogen binding domain(s) on the GP IIb-IIIa complex. Synthetic peptides derived from residues 1-288 of the amino-terminal portion of GP IIIa were tested for their abilities to block the binding of fibrinogen to purified GP IIb-IIIa in a solid-phase microtiter assay. Two overlapping peptides encompassing residues 204-229 of GP IIIa were identified which blocked fibrinogen binding in this assay. Polyclonal antibodies to these peptides blocked fibrinogen binding to purified GP IIb-IIIa as well as platelet aggregation. The overlapping residues of these two peptides GP IIIa (211-222), SVSRNRDAPEGG-NH2, blocked the binding of fibronectin, von Willebrand factor, and vitronectin to purified GP IIb-IIIa. Finally, direct binding of GP IIIa (204-229) to fibrinogen and fibronectin was demonstrated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. We conclude from these studies that the amino acid sequence 211-222 of GP IIIa is critically involved in adhesive protein binding, and may represent an important portion of the GP IIb-IIIa ligand binding domain.  相似文献   

3.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to the extreme COOH terminus of the gamma chain of fibrinogen gamma 400-411, (400)HHLGGAKQAGDV(411), have been used to analyze recognition specificities of the platelet-binding sites for fibrinogen, fibronectin, and von Willebrand factor. gamma 403-411 did not inhibit 125I-fibrinogen binding to platelets. In contrast, gamma 402-411 produced dose-dependent inhibition of fibrinogen binding to ADP and thrombin-stimulated living or fixed cells and was a competitive antagonist. Inhibitory activity was not modified by addition of one (gamma 401-411) or two (gamma 400-411) histidinyl residues to the NH2 terminus, but peptides with a trifluoroacetyl group on the epsilon-amino group of lysine 406 were inactive. 125I-Fibronectin and 125I-von Willebrand factor binding to thrombin-stimulated living or fixed cells was inhibited in the same dose range by the same set of peptides which inhibited fibrinogen binding and not by gamma 403-411 or trifluoroacetate-blocked peptides. The capacity of the peptides to inhibit binding to cells with an expressed receptor, i.e. fixed cells, excludes an effect on receptor induction. Thus, these results suggest that the three adhesive glycoproteins share a common site on thrombin-activated platelets, and a 10-amino acid peptide, corresponding to gamma 402-411, defines the recognition specificity of this site.  相似文献   

4.
Peptides Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro and Gly-His-Arg-Pro (fibrin alpha- and beta-chain NH2-terminal analogs, respectively) are studied for their effect on fibrinogen (F) and fibrin NH2-terminal disulphide knot (N-DSK) specific binding. Both peptides are found to inhibit the formation of soluble and insoluble F-N-DSK-complexes through inhibition of the interdomain D-E-binding. Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro is much more potent inhibitor than Gly-His-Arg-Pro. Lowering the insoluble F-N-DSK-copolymer quantity by concentration-dependent way these peptides do not change its composition described by the formula [F(N-DSK)2]n. Invariability of fibrinogen and N-DSK copolymer structure is asserted. In this structure neighbouring fibrinogen molecules are bound by two N-DSK molecules via the D1-E1 and D2-E2 binding sites.  相似文献   

5.
The I domains of CD11 are responsible for the binding of ligands and have a unique structure with 6-7 alpha helices and 6 beta sheets with interconnecting loops. To determine loops recognizing fibrinogen in CD11c I domain, five oligopeptides corresponding to CD11c loops were used to prevent fibrinogen binding to isolated CD11c I domain. The results of the inhibition experiment indicated that all of the loops except the one between E-beta sheet and 6-alpha helix were involved in the binding to fibrinogen. The peptide beta D alpha 5 and alpha 3 alpha 4 showed higher inhibitory activity than others, and the combination of four peptides blocked fibrinogen binding to the I domain completely. These peptides (beta A alpha 1, alpha 3 alpha 4, beta D alpha 5 and beta F alpha 7) could block THP-1 cell binding to fibrinogen coated surface as well. Alanine substitution of amino acids on the I domain such as Y249A and Q201A (which are on the loops beta D-alpha 5 and alpha 3-alpha 4 respectively) abolished fibrinogen binding, while mutation on the loop beta E-alpha 6 (Q273A) had no effect on fibrinogen binding. Taken together, the results from this study suggest that the loops on the top of CD11c I domain such as loop beta A-alpha 1, alpha 3-alpha 4, beta D-alpha 5 and beta F-alpha 7 are involved in fibrinogen binding, and two loops (alpha 3-alpha 4 and beta D-alpha 5) are more important than others for the recognition of fibrinogen.  相似文献   

6.
Integrin alpha(v)beta(3) recognizes fibrinogen gamma and alpha(E) chain C-terminal domains (gammaC and alpha(E)C) but does not require the gammaC dodecapeptide sequence HHLGGAKQAGDV(400-411) for binding to gammaC. We have localized the alpha(v)beta(3) binding sites in gammaC using gammaC-derived synthetic peptides. We found that two peptides GWTVFQKRLDGSV(190-202) and GVYYQGGTYSKAS(346-358) block the alpha(v)beta(3) binding to gammaC or alpha(E)C, block the alpha(v)beta(3)-mediated clot retraction, and induce the ligand-induced binding site 2 (LIBS2) epitope in alpha(v)beta(3). Neither peptide affects fibrinogen binding to alpha(IIb)beta(3). Scrambled or inverted peptides were not effective. These results suggest that the two gammaC-derived peptides directly interact with alpha(v)beta(3) and specifically block alpha(v)beta(3)-gammaC or alpha(E)C interaction. The two sequences are located next to each other in the gammaC crystal structure, although they are separate in the primary structure. Asp-199, Ser-201, Gln-350, Thr-353, Lys-356, Ala-357, and Ser-358 residues are exposed to the surface. This suggests that the two sequences are part of alpha(v)beta(3) binding sites in fibrinogen gammaC domain. We also found that tenascin C C-terminal fibrinogen-like domain specifically binds to alpha(v)beta(3). Notably, a peptide WYRNCHRVNLMGRYGDNNHSQGVNWFHWKG from this domain that includes the sequence corresponding to gammaC GVYYQGGTYSKAS(346-358) specifically binds to alpha(v)beta(3), suggesting that fibrinogen and tenascin C C-terminal domains interact with alpha(v)beta(3) in a similar manner.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to the carboxyl terminus of the fibrinogen gamma chain inhibit the binding of fibrinogen, fibronectin, and von Willebrand factor to platelets, yet the active decapeptide sequence has only been found in fibrinogen to date. In contrast, all three proteins contain Arg-Gly-Asp sequences, and peptides containing Arg-Gly-Asp are potent inhibitors of their binding to activated platelets. We have analyzed the relationship between these peptide sets by direct binding assays. H12 (gamma 400-411) inhibited the binding of an Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptide to platelets with similar dose response to inhibition of fibronectin binding. We have previously reported that GPIIb-IIIa binds to immobilized Arg-Gly-Asp peptides and can be eluted by Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptides in solution. Both H12 and L10 (gamma 402-411) completely eluted GPIIb-IIIa bound to immobilized Arg-Gly-Asp peptides. Conversely, when GPIIb-IIIa was bound to immobilized L10, either L10 or an Arg-Gly-Asp peptide could elute it. Peptide specificity was established by the failure of Gly-Arg-Gly-Glu-Ser-Pro or acetylated L10 to elute GPIIb-IIIa from the immobilized peptides. These results indicate that the two peptide sets interact with the same receptor which contains GPIIb-IIIa.  相似文献   

9.
Thrombospondin is a multifunctional adhesive glycoprotein which binds to the surface of resting and activated platelets. Thrombospondin also binds to a variety of proteins, including fibrinogen. The interactions between platelet-bound thrombospondin and fibrinogen are thought to facilitate irreversible platelet aggregation. Both the A alpha- and B beta-chains of fibrinogen specifically bind to thrombospondin. Cyanogen bromide cleavage products of the fibrinogen A alpha- and B beta-chains, and synthetic peptides corresponding to specific regions of these cleavage products were utilized to identify the regions of the fibrinogen A alpha- and B beta-chains which bind to thrombospondin. Cyanogen bromide fragments of the A alpha- and B beta-fibrinogen chains, resolved by gel filtration and reversed-phase chromatography, were examined for thrombospondin binding activity. Thrombospondin specifically bound to the A alpha-chain fragment encompassing residues 92-147 and the B beta-chain fragment encompassing residues 243-305. Analyses of the binding characteristics of two series of overlapping synthetic peptides revealed that peptides corresponding to residues 113-126 of the A alpha-chain and residues 243-252 of the B beta-chain retained thrombospondin binding activity. Separate bovine serum albumin conjugates of the active A alpha-chain and B beta-chain peptides inhibited platelet aggregation. These studies reveal that fibrinogen possesses at least two unique sequences which are recognized by thrombospondin and that such interaction may affect platelet aggregation.  相似文献   

10.
Z Zheng  R W Ashton  F Ni  H A Scheraga 《Biochemistry》1992,31(18):4426-4431
Fibrinogen Lille, a congenital dysfibrinogenemia, has been reported to arise from a mutation from Asp to Asn at position 7 of the A alpha chain of human fibrinogen, thereby reducing the thrombin-catalyzed rate of hydrolysis of the Arg(16)-Gly(17) peptide bond of this chain. Synthetic peptides of relevant portions of the wild-type and mutant A alpha chains were prepared, and the thrombin-catalyzed rates of hydrolysis of their Arg(16)-Gly(17) peptide bonds were determined. In addition, transferred NOE measurements were made to deduce their conformations, when complexed to bovine thrombin. The kinetics data showed little difference in the hydrolysis rates between the wild-type and mutant peptides, and the NMR data indicate no difference in the bound conformation of these two peptides. Therefore, electrostatic (or salt-bridge) interactions between Asp(7) and thrombin do not influence the bound conformations of these peptides. Asp(7) may interact with a remote residue of fibrinogen, not present in these synthetic peptides, or there may be additional mutations beyond A alpha (1-20) which have not been detected in fibrinogen Lille. Alternatively, when thrombin binds to fibrinogen at its secondary binding site, its primary (active) site may display different reactivities toward wild-type fibrinogen and fibrinogen Lille.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of synthetic peptides on fibrinogen transformation to fibrin under the action of thrombin and fibrin-monomer polymerization was investigated. Peptides Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro; Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro-Lys; Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro-Lys-Boc; Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro-Arg are specific inhibitors of fibrin formation. These peptides interfere with the hydrolysing effect of thrombin due to binding to the central domain of fibrinogen. The interaction of peptides with peripheral D-domains of fibrin-monomer may account for polymerization inhibition. The latter peptide has the largest anticoagulation activity. It is likely that arginine in the fifth position stabilizes the structure of the peptides, with the additional epsilon NH2-group activating its interaction with protein.  相似文献   

12.
The glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex (GP IIb-IIIa) is a platelet cell-surface receptor for fibrinogen and fibronectin. A carboxyl-terminal decapeptide of the fibrinogen gamma-chain (Leu-Gly-Gly-Ala-Lys-Gln-Ala-Gly-Asp-Val LGGAKQAGDV] and a tetrapeptide (Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser (RGDS] from the fibrinogen alpha-chain and the fibronectin cell-binding domain appear to mediate the binding of these ligands to GP IIb-IIIa. The present study was designed to examine the effects of these and related peptides on the structure of purified platelet GP IIb-IIIa. Treatment of GP IIb-IIIa with various synthetic peptides affected the glycoprotein so that GP IIb alpha became a substrate for hydrolysis by thrombin. The order of potency of these peptides was as follows: RGDS greater than LGGAKQAGDV greater than KGDS greater than RGES. This is the same order of potency in which these peptides inhibit fibrinogen binding to platelets. This effect was time-, temperature-, and concentration-dependent; RGDS induced a half-maximal effect at approximately 60 microM. In addition, RGDS, but not RGES, decreased the intensity of the intrinsic protein fluorescence of GP IIb-IIIa. Finally, the decapeptide or RGDS decreased the sedimentation coefficient of GP IIb-IIIa from 8.5 to 7.7 or 7.4 S, respectively, whereas RGES had a minimal effect. This decrease was accompanied by an increase in the Stoke's radius from 74 to 82 A with RGDS or 85 A with the decapeptide, indicating a peptide-induced unfolding of the GP IIb-IIIa complex. This change in conformation may be related to changes in the distribution and function of GP IIb-IIIa on the platelet surface that occur when adhesive proteins or peptides from the GP IIb-IIIa binding domains of these proteins bind to GP IIb-IIIa.  相似文献   

13.
RGD (arginine-glycine-aspartic acid) is a known peptide sequence that binds platelet integrin GPIIbIIIa and disrupts platelet-fibrinogen binding and platelet cross-linking during thrombosis. RGD peptides are unsuitable for clinical applications due to their high 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) and low in vivo residence times. We addressed these issues by conjugating RGD peptides to biocompatible macromolecular carriers: hyperbranched polyglycerols (HPG) via divinyl sulfone. The GPIIbIIIa binding activity of RGD was maintained after conjugation and the effectiveness of the HPG-RGD conjugate was dependent upon molecular weight and the number of RGD peptides attached to each HPG molecule. These polyvalent inhibitors of platelet aggregation decreased the IC50 of RGD in an inverse linear manner based on the number of RGD peptides per HPG. Since HPG-RGD conjugates do not cause platelet activation by degranulation and certain substitution ratios do not increase fibrinogen binding to resting platelets, HPG-RGD may serve as a model for a novel class of antithrombotics.  相似文献   

14.
Antiplatelet agents are clinically useful as antithrombotic entities. The importance of antiplatelet agents led us to design, synthesize, and characterize a new antiplatelet peptide. This peptide is a presumptive mimic of a ligand binding site on the platelet fibrinogen receptor. Unlike peptides related to Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser and His-His-Leu-Gly-Gly-Ala-Lys-Gln-Ala-Gly-Asp-Val that bind to the fibrinogen receptor, this peptide binds to fibrinogen. The anticomplementarity hypothesis was used to design this presumptive peptide mimic of the vitronectin binding site on the fibrinogen receptor, glycoprotein IIb/IIIa complexes. The resulting peptide (Glu-His-Ile-Pro-Ala) has the characteristics of a fibrinogen binding site mimic: It binds fibrinogen and inhibits both the adhesion of platelets to fibrinogen and platelet aggregation. The peptide also inhibits the adhesion of platelets to vitronectin. The antiplatelet activity of this mimic peptide was dependent on its amino acid sequence, since closely related analogues were either inactive or less active inhibitors of platelet function than the original peptide. These results demonstrate that the peptide Glu-His-Ile-Pro-Ala has the characteristics expected of a mimic of a glycoprotein IIb/IIIa ligand binding site.  相似文献   

15.
The binding of fibrinogen to M-related protein (Mrp) is known to contribute to the ability of Streptococcus pyogenes to evade phagocytosis by preventing the deposition of complement on the streptococcal surface. The objectives of this investigation were to map the common fibrinogen-binding domain of Mrp and to determine if this domain has a therapeutic potential to enhance phagocytosis of S. pyogenes in human blood. Using a series of recombinant, truncated proteins of Mrp, two fibrinogen-binding domains (FBD) were mapped. FBD1 was contained within amino acid residues 1-55 of Mrp and FBD2 within residues 81-138. FBD2 is found in all Mrp sequenced to date whereas FBD1 is not. Both FBD1 and FBD2 peptides but not a control peptide blocked the binding of fibrinogen to S. pyogenes and promoted phagocytosis of the streptococci in human blood. The data support the hypothesis that the binding of fibrinogen by S. pyogenes is centrally involved in their resistance to phagocytosis in human blood and suggest that treatments that interfere with the binding of fibrinogen to S. pyogenes may help in fighting infections by these organisms.  相似文献   

16.
C S Chen  S H Chou  P Thiagarajan 《Biochemistry》1988,27(16):6121-6126
The binding of fibrinogen to activated platelets leads to platelet aggregation. Fibrinogen has multiple binding sites to platelet membrane glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex. At least two well-defined sequences in fibrinogen, Arg-Gly-Asp sequence of A alpha 95-97 and A alpha 572-574 and gamma 400-411, have been shown to interact with glycoprotein IIb-IIIa. A possible binding site on the amino-terminal end of fibrinogen to platelet glycoprotein IIb-IIIa has also been reported. In this paper the effect of synthetic peptides derived from the amino-terminal end of the B beta chain on platelet aggregation and fibrinogen binding has been examined. B beta 15-42 peptide inhibits platelet aggregation and 125I-fibrinogen binding to activated platelets in a dose-dependent manner. Since B beta 15-42 contains a previously identified fibrinogen binding site, B beta 15-18, exposed by thrombin cleavage of native fibrinogen, we also examined the effect of B beta 15-18, B beta 19-42, and B beta 1-14 (fibrinopeptide B) on platelet aggregation and fibrinogen binding. Synthetic fibrinopeptide B and B beta 15-18 had no effect on platelet aggregation and fibrinogen binding while B beta 19-42 retained the inhibitory effect. When fibrinogen is chromatographed on a column of agarose-bound B beta 15-42, a cation-dependent retention of fibrinogen on the peptide column was observed, and fibrinogen was eluted from the column by B beta 15-42 but not by B beta 1-14. Under the same conditions, platelet glycoprotein IIb-IIIa was not retained in the column. Thus, the observed inhibitory effect is due to its interaction with fibrinogen rather than to platelet glycoprotein IIb-IIIa.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
S González  J Ortín 《The EMBO journal》1999,18(13):3767-3775
The influenza virus RNA polymerase is a heterotrimer comprising the PB1, PB2 and PA subunits. PB1 is the core of the complex and accounts for the polymerase activity. We have studied the interaction of PB1 with model cRNA template by in vitro binding and Northwestern analyses. The binding to model cRNA was specific and showed an apparent Kd of approximately 7x10(-8) M. In contrast to the interaction with vRNA, PB1 was able to bind equally the 5' and 3' arm of the cRNA panhandle. The N-terminal 139 amino acids of PB1 and sequences between positions 267 and 493 proved positive for binding to cRNA, whereas the interaction with vRNA template previously was mapped to the N- and C-terminal regions. Competition experiments using the 5' and 3' arms of either the vRNA or cRNA panhandle indicated that the N-terminal binding site is shared by both templates. The data indicate that the PB1 RNA-binding sites are constituted by: (i) residues located at the N-terminus (probably common for vRNA and cRNA binding) and, either (ii) residues from the central part of PB1 (for cRNA) or (iii) residues from the C-terminal region of PB1 (for vRNA), and suggest that PB1 undergoes a conformational change upon binding to cRNA versus vRNA templates.  相似文献   

18.
Binding and processing of fibrinogen by rabbit hepatocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We describe a specific fibrinogen-hepatocyte interaction. Rabbit 125I-labeled fibrinogen (125I-FGN) was incubated at 4 degrees C with suspensions of rabbit hepatocytes (approximately 1 X 10(6) cells/ml). Bound ligand was separated from free by centrifugation of cells through oil and quantitated by gamma-scintillation counting. Specific binding, determined by subtraction of nonspecific binding in the presence of 8 mM EDTA from total binding in the presence of 2 mM CaCl2, required 3 h to plateau and represented approximately 70% of total binding. Specific binding was calcium-dependent and was negligible in buffer containing 2 mM MgCl2. Half-maximal saturation occurred at approximately 30 nM 125I-FGN with approximately 480,000 molecules/cell at saturation. Dilution experiments revealed comparable affinities for labeled and unlabeled fibrinogen. Total binding was irreversible as determined by addition of excess unlabeled fibrinogen or EDTA. Specific binding of 25 nM 125I-FGN was inhibited, in a concentration-dependent fashion, by unlabeled fibrinogen or fibrinogen fragment D95 (Mr = 95,000), but not by fibrinogen fragment E or Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptides. Unlabeled fibrinogen (3.1 microM) completely abolished specific binding, whereas greater than 80% inhibition was achieved with 10 microM fragment D95. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography of 125I-FGN bound in the presence of calcium demonstrated disappearance of A alpha chains with formation of products of Mr greater than 200,000; EDTA or unlabeled fibrinogen prevented fibrinogen processing. These data describe a unique fibrinogen-hepatocyte interaction which differs considerably from the platelet-fibrinogen interaction, especially with regard to the processing of the fibrinogen molecule.  相似文献   

19.
Peptides that bind to fibrin but not to fibrinogen or serum albumin were selected from phage display libraries as targeting moieties for thrombus molecular imaging probes. Three classes of cyclic peptides (cyclized via disulfide bond between two Cys) were identified with consensus sequences XArXCPY(G/D)LCArIX (Ar = aromatic, Tn6), X(2)CXYYGTCLX (Tn7), and NHGCYNSYGVPYCDYS (Tn10). These peptides bound to fibrin at ~2 sites with K(d) = 4.1 μM, 4.0 μM, and 8.7 μM, respectively, whereas binding to fibrinogen was at least 100-fold weaker. The peptides also bind to the fibrin degradation product DD(E) with similar affinity to that measured for fibrin. The Tn7 and Tn10 peptides bind to the same site on fibrin, while the Tn6 peptides bind to a unique site. Alanine scanning identified the N- and C-terminal ends of the Tn6 and Tn7 peptides as most tolerant to modification. Peptide conjugates with either fluorescein or diethylenetriaminepentaaceto gadolinium(III) (GdDTPA) at the N-terminus were prepared for potential imaging applications, and these retained fibrin binding affinity and specificity in plasma. Relaxivity and binding studies on the GdDTPA derivatives revealed that an N-terminal glycyl linker had a modest effect on fibrin affinity but resulted in lower fibrin-bound relaxivity.  相似文献   

20.
Arietin, an Arg-Gly-Asp containing peptide from venom of Bitis arietans, inhibited aggregation of platelets stimulated by a variety of agonists with a similar IC50, 1.3-2.7.10(-7) M. It blocked aggregation through the interference of fibrinogen binding to fibrinogen receptors on platelet surface. In this paper, we further demonstrated that arietin had no significant effect on the intracellular mobilization of Ca2+ in Quin2-AM-loaded platelets stimulated by thrombin. It inhibited 125I-fibrinogen binding to ADP-stimulated platelets in a competitive manner (IC50, 1.1.10(-7) M). 125I-arietin bound to unstimulated, ADP-stimulated and elastase-treated platelets in a saturable manner and its Kd values were estimated to be 3.4.10(-7), 3.4.10(-8) and 6.5.10(-8) M, respectively, while the corresponding binding sites were 46,904, 48,958 and 34,817 per platelet, respectively. Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser (RGDS) inhibited 125I-arietin binding to ADP-stimulated platelets in a competitive manner. RGD-containing peptides, including trigramin and rhodostomin, EDTA and monoclonal antibody, 7E3, raised against glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex, inhibited 125I-arietin binding to ADP-stimulated platelets, indicating that the binding sites of arietin appear to be located at or near glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex. In conclusion, arietin and other RGD-containing trigramin-like peptides preferentially bind to the fibrinogen receptors associated with glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex of the activated platelets, thus leading to the blockade of fibrinogen binding to its receptors and subsequent aggregation. The presence of RGD of arietin is essential for the expression of its biological activity. Its binding sites are overlapped with those of trigramin, rhodostomin and the monoclonal antibody, 7E3.  相似文献   

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