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1.
It has been reported that botrocetin, a Bothrops venom factor, induces platelet aggregation dependent on von Willebrand factor (vWF), and that platelet aggregation induced by Polybrene, a synthetic polycation, is enhanced by vWF. This report describes the platelet aggregability on stimulation with botrocetin and Polybrene in four patients with platelet-type von Willebrand disease (vWD) who showed increased platelet aggregation with low concentrations of ristocetin as the result of a platelet abnormality. Enhanced platelet aggregability with botrocetin was observed in platelet-rich plasma (PRP) from the patients. Platelet aggregation induced by botrocetin in a mixture of normal washed platelets and patient plasma was either decreased or normal, being dependent on the amount of plasma vWF. In contrast with ristocetin and botrocetin, Polybrene did not cause increased aggregation of patient PRP. Polybrene aggregated normal washed platelets less extensively in the presence of patient plasma than normal plasma. These studies demonstrated that botrocetin induced heightened interaction between platelets and vWF, but Polybrene did not, in platelet-type vWD, and that the enhanced responsiveness of patient platelets to botrocetin is related to an intrinsic platelet abnormality.  相似文献   

2.
T W Chow  J D Hellums  J L Moake  M H Kroll 《Blood》1992,80(1):113-120
Platelets subjected to elevated levels of fluid shear stress in the absence of exogenous agonists will aggregate. Shear stress-induced aggregation requires von Willebrand factor (vWF) multimers, extracellular calcium (Ca2+), adenosine diphosphate (ADP), and platelet membrane glycoprotein (GP)Ib and GPIIb-IIIa. The sequence of interaction of vWF multimers with platelet surface receptors and the effect of these interactions on platelet activation have not been determined. To elucidate the mechanism of shear stress-induced platelet aggregation, suspensions of washed platelets were subjected to different levels of uniform shear stress (15 to 120 dyne/cm2) in an optically modified cone and plate viscometer. Cytoplasmic ionized calcium ([Ca2+]i) and aggregation of platelets were monitored simultaneously during the application of shear stress; [Ca2+]i was measured using indo-1 loaded platelets and aggregation was measured as changes in light transmission. Basal [Ca2+]i was approximately 60 to 100 nmol/L. An increase of [Ca2+]i (up to greater than 1,000 nmol/L) was accompanied by synchronous aggregation, and both responses were dependent on the shear force and the presence of vWF multimers. EGTA chelation of extracellular Ca2+ completely inhibited vWF-mediated [Ca2+]i and aggregation responses to shear stress. Aurin tricarboxylic acid, which blocks the GPIb recognition site on the vWF monomer, and 6D1, a monoclonal antibody to GPIb, also completely inhibited platelet responses to shear stress. The tetrapeptide RGDS and the monoclonal antibody 10E5, which inhibit vWF binding to GPIIb-IIIa, partially inhibited shear stress-induced [Ca2+]i and aggregation responses. The combination of creatine phosphate/creatine phosphokinase, which converts ADP to adenosine triphosphate and blocks the effect of ADP released from stimulated platelets, inhibited shear stress-induced platelet aggregation without affecting the increase of [Ca2+]i. Neither the [Ca2+]i nor aggregation response to shear stress was inhibited by blocking platelet cyclooxygenase metabolism with acetylsalicylic acid. These results indicate that GPIb and extracellular Ca2+ are absolutely required for vWF-mediated [Ca2+]i and aggregation responses to imposed shear stress, and that the interaction of vWF multimers with GPIIb-IIIa potentiates these responses. Shear stress-induced elevation of platelet [Ca2+]i, but not aggregation, is independent of the effects of release ADP, and both responses occur independently of platelet cyclooxygenase metabolism. These results suggest that shear stress induces the binding of vWF multimers to platelet GPIb and this vWF-GPIb interaction causes an increase of [Ca2+]i and platelet aggregation, both of which are potentiated by vWF binding to the platelet GPIIb-IIIa complex.  相似文献   

3.
Two likely mechanisms for the initiation of arterial platelet thrombus formation under conditions of elevated fluid shear stresses are: (1) excessive adhesion and aggregation of platelets from rapidly flowing blood onto the exposed sub-endothelium of injured, atherosclerotic arteries; or (2) direct, fluid shear stress-induced aggregation of platelets in constricted arteries with intact endothelial cells. Mechanism (1) was simulated using a parallel plate flow chamber, fibrillar collagen type I-coated slides, and mepacrine-labeled (fluorescent) platelets in whole blood anticoagulated with citrate, hirudin, unfractionated porcine heparin, or low molecular weight heparin flowing for 1 to 2 minutes at wall shear rates of 100 to 3,000 seconds-1 (4 to 120 dynes/cm2). The precise sequence of interactions among von Willebrand factor (vWF), glycoprotein (GP)Ib, and GPIIb-IIIa during platelet adhesion and subsequent aggregation were resolved by direct real-time observation using a computerized epifluorescence video microscopy system. Adhesion at high shear rates was the result of the adsorption of large vWF multimers onto collagen and the binding of platelet GPIb to the insolubilized vWF. Aggregation occurred subsequently and required the binding of ligands, including vWF via its RGD binding domain, to GPIIb-IIIa. Mechanism (2) was modeled by producing shear stresses of 90 to 180 dynes/cm2 in a rotational cone and plate viscometer, which aggregates platelets from platelet-rich- plasma (PRP) anti-coagulated with citrate, hirudin, or either type of heparin in reactions that require large vWF multimers, Ca2+, adenosine diphosphate, and both GPIb and GPIIb-IIIa. Both vWF-mediated shear- aggregation in PRP and platelet-collagen adhesion in flowing whole blood (anticoagulated with citrate and hirudin) are inhibited by two potentially useful anti-arterial thrombotic agents: polymeric aurin tricarboxylic acid (ATA; 28.5 to 114 micrograms/mL), which binds to vWF and inhibits its attachment of GPIb, and a recombinant vWF fragment (rvWF445-733; 30 to 200 micrograms/mL) that binds to platelet GPIb (in the absence of any modulator) and blocks attachment of vWF multimers. Unfractionated heparin, but not low molecular weight heparin, apparently binds to rvWF445-733 and counteracts the inhibitory effects of the vWF fragment in vitro on shear-aggregation and platelet-collagen adhesion.  相似文献   

4.
Spontaneous platelet aggregation appeared in a patient with von Willebrand disease type IIB during the 37th week of pregnancy. This phenomenon was not associated with symptoms of thrombosis and the patient delivered by caesarean section with no complications. Her platelet-poor plasma (PPP) aggregated normal platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and washed platelets. Aggregation was inhibited by monoclonal antibodies with known specificity for the platelet receptors of von Willebrand factor (vWF), i.e. the glycoprotein Ib (GPIb) and the GPIIb/IIIa complex. A monoclonal antibody, which selectively inhibits the binding of vWF to the GPIIb/IIIa complex, did not block aggregation, suggesting that spontaneous aggregation is not dependent on the binding to GPIIb/IIIa of vWF from patient plasma. Aggregation induced by patient plasma could also be blocked either by two monoclonal antibodies raised against vWF or by a fragment derived from trypsin digestion of normal vWF which blocks the ristocetin-induced binding of normal vWF to platelets. These findings indicate that the spontaneous platelet aggregation in this patient results from the binding of her vWF to GPIb but is independent from the binding of her vWF to GPIIb/IIIa.  相似文献   

5.
A case is reported of a 49-year-old woman with a mild bleeding tendency. Her bleeding time, platelet count and size, plasma ristocetin cofactor activity, von Willebrand factor (vWF) antigen, and vWF multimeric pattern are all within normal limits. Spontaneous platelet aggregation is observed when citrated platelet-rich plasma (PRP) is stirred in an aggregometer cuvette. This aggregation is completely is only slightly diminished by an antiglycoprotein (GP) IIb/IIIa or by an anti GPIb monoclonal antibody. The patient's PRP shows increased sensitivity to ristocetin. The distinct feature of this patient, also present in two family members studied, is that platelet aggregation is initiated by purified vWF in the absence of any other agonist. The vWF- induced platelet aggregation is abolished by anti-GPIb and anti- GPIIb/IIIa monoclonal antibodies and by EDTA (5 mmol/L). Apyrase inhibits the second wave of aggregation. Patient's platelets in PRP are four to six times more reactive to asialo vWF-induced platelet aggregation than normal platelets. The amount of radiolabeled vWF bound to platelets in the presence of either low concentration of ristocetin or asialo vWF was increased 30% compared with normal. The patient's platelet GPIb was analyzed by SDS page and immunoblotting and by binding studies with anti-GPIb monoclonal antibodies showed one band with slightly increased migration pattern and a normal number of GPIb molecules. Unlike the previously reported patients with pseudo or platelet-type von Willebrand disease, this patient has normal vWF parameters.  相似文献   

6.
Platelet adherence to human artery subendothelium in blood from eight normal subjects, four patients with Glanzmann's thrombasthenia (deficiency of platelet membrane glycoproteins IIb and IIIa: GPIIb-IIIa), two patients with Bernard-Soulier syndrome (deficiency of platelet membrane glycoprotein Ib: GPIb) and one patient with von Willebrand's disease (VWD subtype III. deficient in factor VIII-von Willebrand factor: FVIII-VWF) was compared at various wall shear rates (300, 500, 1000, 1800 and 2500 s-1). Platelet adherence in blood from the patients with Glanzmann's thrombasthenia was within the normal range at shear rates below 1000 s-1. There was some decrease in adhesion at higher shear rates and platelets were less spread out on the subendothelium than normally at all shear rates. Platelet aggregate formation was almost totally absent. Platelet adherence in blood from patients with the Bernard-Soulier syndrome was strongly impaired at all shear rates. Platelet adherence in blood from the patient with VWD subtype III was normal at shear rates of 300 and 500 s-1, but impaired at shear rates above 1000 s-1. Aggregate formation was also decreased at these shear rates. Platelet adhesion was strongly inhibited by a monoclonal antibody against glycoprotein Ib, which had previously been shown to inhibit ristocetin-induced aggregation, at shear rates of 500 and 1800 s-1 but not at 300 s-1. Platelet adhesion at 1800 s-1 was also inhibited, though to a lesser extent, by two antibodies against GPIIb-IIIa. These antibodies also inhibited platelet aggregate formation. The data indicates that GPIb is involved in adhesion at the same shear rates as von Willebrand factor. Absence or inhibition of GPIIb-IIIa primarily causes a defect of aggregate formation but GPIIb-IIIa may also play a role in adhesion, particularly at high shear rates. The defect of adhesion in the Bernard-Soulier syndrome may be dependent on factors other than a deficiency of GPIb alone.  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the molecular basis of thrombus formation by measuring the extent of platelet deposition from flowing whole blood onto fibrin-coated glass coverslips under well-defined shear conditions in a rectangular perfusion chamber. Platelets readily and specifically adhered to fibrin-coated coverslips in 5 minute perfusion experiments done at either low (300 s-1) or high (1,300 s-1) wall shear rates. Scanning electron microscopic examination of fibrin-coated coverslips after perfusions showed surface coverage by a monolayer of adherent, partly spread platelets. Platelet adhesion to fibrin was effectively inhibited by a monoclonal antibody (MoAb) specific for glycoprotein (GP) IIb:IIIa. The dose-response curve for inhibition of adhesion by anti-GPIIb:IIIa at both shear rates paralleled that for inhibition of platelet aggregation. Platelet aggregation and adhesion to fibrin were also blocked by low concentrations of prostacyclin. In contrast, anti-GPIb reduced adhesion by 40% at 300 s-1 and by 70% at 1,300 s-1. A similar pattern of shear rate-dependent, incomplete inhibition resulted with a MoAb specific for the GPIb-recognition region of von Willebrand factor (vWF). Platelets from an individual with severe von Willebrand's disease, whose plasma and platelets contained essentially no vWF, exhibited defective adhesion to fibrin, especially at the higher shear rate. Addition of purified vWF restored adhesion to normal values. These results are consistent with a two-site model for platelet adhesion to fibrin, in which the GPIIb:IIIa complex is the primary receptor, with GPIb:vWF providing a secondary adhesion pathway that is especially important at high wall shear rates.  相似文献   

8.
H J Weiss  I I Sussman 《Blood》1986,68(1):149-156
We report three members of a family who had reduced levels of plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) and increased ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation (RIPA) (aggregation of platelet-rich plasma with ristocetin at a concentration of 0.45 mg/mL), as previously reported in type IIB and pseudo-von Willebrand's disease (vWD). However, in contrast to the latter two disorders in which the larger vWF multimers are absent in plasma, the entire range of vWF multimers was observed in the patients' plasma after sodium dodecyl sulfate-agarose gel electrophoresis, and all vWF multimers (including the largest) were present in the same proportion as in normal plasma and type I vWD. Thus, despite increased RIPA, the levels and multimeric pattern of vWF in this family's plasma were indistinguishable from those in type I vWD in which RIPA is usually decreased. Addition of ristocetin to the patients' platelet- rich plasma resulted in the removal of vWF (and, more selectively, of the large multimers) at lower concentrations of ristocetin than normal, as in type IIB and pseudo-vWD. The defect in the patients was localized to their vWF, which had an enhanced capacity for aggregating washed normal platelets in the presence of low concentrations of ristocetin and for aggregating pseudo-vWD platelets (in the absence of ristocetin). Both glycoproteins (GP) Ib and IIb-IIIa were involved in the enhanced aggregation response. RIPA (at low ristocetin concentrations) in the patients' platelet-rich plasma was abolished by a monoclonal antibody (AP1) to GPIb and was markedly reduced by monoclonal antibodies (10E5 and LJP9) that block adenosine diphosphate and thrombin-induced binding of vWF and fibrinogen to GPIIb-IIIa but was unaffected by an antibody (LJP5) that only blocks vWF binding. Partial inhibition of the initial aggregation slope (and complete inhibition of second phase aggregation) was achieved with creatine phosphate/creatine phosphokinase. EDTA blocked second-phase aggregation but was without effect on the initial slope. The findings in this family combine some features of both type I vWD (normal pattern of vWF multimers in plasma) and type IIB vWD (increased RIPA) and further demonstrate the increasing complexity of the structure-function relationships in vWD.  相似文献   

9.
Ross  JM; McIntire  LV; Moake  JL; Rand  JH 《Blood》1995,85(7):1826-1835
Type VI collagen is a subendothelial constituent that binds von Willebrand factor (vWF) and platelets. The interaction of platelets with type VI collagen and the roles of platelet glycoprotein (GP) receptors and vWF were studied under flow conditions using epi- fluorescent videomicroscopy coupled with digital image processing. We found that surface coverage was less than 6% on collagen VI at a relatively high-wall shear rate (1,000 s-1) and was approximately 60% at a low-wall shear rate (100 s-1). The molecular mechanisms involved in low-shear platelet binding were studied using monoclonal antibodies to platelet GPIb and GPIIb-IIIa, and polymeric aurin tricarboxylic acid. Anti-GPIIb-IIIa was the most effective in eliminating adhesion (surface coverage, 0.8%), followed by anti-GPIb (4.3%), and ATA (12.6%). Experiments with von Willebrand disease blood indicate that vWF is involved in platelet adhesion to collagen VI at 100 s-1. In the absence of vWF, there may be direct binding of platelet GPIIb-IIIa complexes to collagen VI. Adhesion and aggregation on collagen VI are different in shear rate dependence from collagen I. Our results suggest a possible role for collagen VI and vWF in platelet adhesion and aggregation in vascular regions with low shear rates.  相似文献   

10.
Although it is well established that plasma von Willebrand Factor (vWF) is essential to platelet adhesion to subendothelium at high shear rates, the role of platelet vWF is less clear. We studied the respective role of both plasma and platelet vWF in mediating platelet adhesion to fibrillar collagen in a parallel-plate perfusion chamber. Reconstituted blood containing RBCs, various mixtures of labeled washed platelets and plasma from controls or five patients with severe von Willebrand disease (vWD), was perfused through the chamber for five minutes at a shear rate of 1,600 s-1. Platelet-collagen interactions were estimated by counting the radioactivity in deposited platelets and by quantitative morphometry. When the perfusate consisted of normal platelets suspended in normal plasma, platelet deposition on the collagen was 24.7 +/- 3.6 X 10(6)/cm2 (mean +/- SEM, n = 6). Significantly less deposition (16 +/- 2.3) was observed when vWD platelets were substituted for normal platelets. In mixtures containing vWD plasma, significantly greater deposition (9 +/- 2.2) was obtained with normal than with vWD platelets (1 +/- 0.4) demonstrating a role for platelet vWF in mediating the deposition of platelets on collagen. Morphometric analysis confirmed these data. Our findings indicate that platelet, as well as plasma, vWF mediates platelet-collagen interactions at a high shear rate.  相似文献   

11.
We recently reported that after activation of human platelets by thrombin, glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX complexes are translocated to the surface-connected canalicular system (SCCS) (Blood 76:1503, 1990). As GPIb is a major receptor for von Willebrand factor (vWF) in platelet adhesion, we have now examined the consequences of thrombin activation on the organization of vWF bound to GPIb on the platelet surface. Studies were performed using monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies in either immunogold staining and electron microscopy (Au-EM) or in flow cytometry. When unstirred platelet-rich plasma was incubated with ristocetin, bound vWF was located by Au-EM as discrete masses regularly distributed over the cell surface. Platelets from a patient with Glanzmann's thrombasthenia, lacking GPIIb-IIIa complexes, gave a similar pattern, confirming that this represented binding to GPIb. That ristocetin was not precipitating vWF before their binding to the platelets was shown by the detection of similar masses on the surface of platelets of a patient with type IIB von Willebrand disease. Experiments were continued using washed normal platelets incubated in Tyrode-EDTA, the purpose of the EDTA being to limit the surface expression of endogenous vWF after platelet stimulation. Under these conditions, platelets were treated with ristocetin for 5 minutes at 37 degrees C in the presence of increasing amounts of purified vWF. This was followed by incubation with thrombin (0.5 U/mL) for periods of up to 10 minutes. Flow cytometry showed a time-dependent loss in the surface expression of vWF bound to GPIb and these changes were confirmed by Au-EM. In particular, immunogold staining performed on ultrathin sections showed that the bulk of the vWF was being cleared to internal membrane systems. Surface clearance of vWF during thrombin-induced platelet activation is a potential mechanism for regulating platelet adhesivity.  相似文献   

12.
Platelet adhesion to fibrin at high shear rates depends on both the glycoprotein (GP) IIb:IIIa complex and a secondary interaction between GPIb and von Willebrand factor (vWF). This alternative link between platelets and vWF in promoting platelet adhesion to fibrin has been examined in flowing whole blood with a rectangular perfusion chamber. Optimal adhesion required both platelets and vWF, as shown by the following observations. No binding of vWF could be detected when plasma was perfused over a fibrin surface or when coated fibrinogen was incubated with control plasma in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. However, when platelets were present during perfusion, interactions between vWF and fibrin could be visualized with immunoelectron microscopy. Exposure of fibrin surfaces to normal plasma before perfusion with severe von Willebrand's disease blood did not compensate for the presence of plasma vWF necessary for adhesion. vWF mutants in which the GPIIb:IIIa binding site was mutated or the GPIb binding site was deleted showed that vWF only interacts with GPIb on platelets in supporting adhesion to fibrin and not with GPIIb:IIIa. Complementary results were obtained with specific monoclonal antibodies against vWF. Thus, vWF must first bind to platelets before it can interact with fibrin and promote platelet adhesion. Furthermore, only GPIb, but not GPIIb:IIIa is directly involved in this interaction of vWF with platelets.  相似文献   

13.
Type 2B von Willebrand disease (vWD) is a von Willebrand factor (vWF) subtype with increased binding affinity for platelet glycoprotein (GP) Ib and is characterized by increased ristocetin-induced platelet agglutination at low concentrations of ristocetin. Usually there are no high molecular weight multimers of vWF, and platelet counts are within normal ranges in patients with type 2B vWD. We identified a variant of type 2B vWD showing the full range of vWF multimers in plasma accompanied by thrombocytopenia, which seemed to be caused by circulating platelet aggregation. Since the A1 domain and surrounding region of vWF alleles, in which mutation sites are known to be clustered in type 2B vWD, appeared normal on nucleotide sequencing, this increased binding affinity of vWF for GPIb may be due to a novel mechanism differing from that which usually underlies type 2B vWD.  相似文献   

14.
We investigated shear-induced platelet aggregation (SIPA) in 30 patients with chronic renal failure (CRF) undergoing haemodialysis. 26 patients showed a significant decrease in SIPA at high shear stress but no change in SIPA at low shear stress. The former reaction reflects the interaction between plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) and its platelet receptors, glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX and lIb/ IlIa complex, whereas the latter is assumed to involve the binding of plasma fibrinogen to GP IIb/IIIa complex. These SIPA profiles in CRF patients after haemodialysis showed almost no change compared to those before haemodialysis.
The ratio of ristocetin cofactor/vWF antigen in plasma was slightly lower in CRF patients than in controls (P<0.01). However, the level of GPIb antigen in the platelets of these patients was significantly reduced (42.1±20-3% of normal platelets), with partial destruction of GPIb antigen. The number of vWF receptors on the GPIb molecule was quantitated using the GPIb-binding protein alboaggregin-B (AL-B), purified from the snake venom of Trimeresurus albolabris. AL-B bound to GPIb at a total of 48 760±9944 molecules per normal platelet and a Kd of 85.44±15.70 nM at saturation. In contrast, binding in CRF platelets was 22 980±6395 molecules per platelet and Kd was 50.08±13.83 nM. Taking these results together, we conclude that the impaired SIPA found in CRF patients is due to both abnormalities in plasma vWF and in its platelet GPIb receptor.  相似文献   

15.
We describe glycoprotein (GP) Ib as a mediator of adhesion to fibronectin, specifically in flow. A monoclonal antibody (MoAb) directed to the von Willebrand factor (vWF)-binding site on this receptor or the absence of this receptor on the platelet membrane, in the case of a patient with the Bernard-Soulier syndrome, reduced platelet coverage to fibronectin to approximately 30% of the control value. A MoAb directed to the GP Ib-binding site on vWF showed a similar effect. With washed platelets in the absence of plasma vWF, the inhibitory effect of the anti-GP Ib antibody was the same as with whole blood. No inhibition with the anti-GP Ib antibody was observed when we used blood from patients with severe von Willebrand disease (vWD) or from a patient with vWD type I (platelet low). Addition of vWF to vWD blood resulted in restoration of adhesion. Immunoelectron microscopy on platelets adhering to fibronectin showed that GP Ib was homogeneously distributed over the entire surface of the platelet. vWF was present at the central zone and the edges of the platelet and at the basal interface between the platelet and the fibronectin surface. No direct binding of vWF to fibronectin could be demonstrated. These data indicate that GP Ib-mediated adhesion to fibronectin fully depends on vWF and that normal levels of plasma or platelet vWF are sufficient for optimal adhesion to fibronectin. The data suggest that the presence of platelets during perfusion is a prerequisite for vWF to support platelet adhesion to fibronectin.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of neutrophil cathepsin G on the glycoprotein (GP) Ib-IX complex of washed platelets were examined. Cathepsin G resulted in a concentration- and time-dependent decrease in the platelet surface GPIb- IX complex, as determined by flow cytometry, binding of exogenous von Willebrand factor (vWF) in the presence of ristocetin, and ristocetin- induced platelet agglutination. Cathepsin G resulted in proteolysis of the vWF binding site on GPIb alpha (defined by monoclonal antibody [MoAb] 6D1), as determined by increased supernatant glycocalicin fragment (a proteolytic product of GPIb alpha); decreased total platelet content of GPIb; and lack of effect of either cytochalasin B (an inhibitor of actin polymerization), prostaglandin I2 (an inhibitor of platelet activation), or prior fixation of the platelets. However, cathepsin G resulted in minimal decreases in the binding to fixed platelets of MoAbs TM60 (directed against the thrombin binding site on GPIb alpha) and WM23 (directed against the macroglycopeptide portion of GPIb alpha). In contrast to its proteolytic effect on GPIb alpha, the cathepsin G-induced decrease in platelet surface GPIX and the remnant of the GPIb-IX complex (defined by MoAbs FMC25 and AK1) was via a cytoskeletal-mediated redistribution, as determined by lack of change in the total platelet content of GPIX and the GPIb-IX complex; complete inhibition by cytochalasin B, prostaglandin I2, and prior fixation of platelets. Experiments with Serratia protease-treated and Bernard- Soulier platelets showed that neither platelet surface GPIb nor cathepsin G-induced proteolysis of GPIb were required for the cathepsin G-induced redistribution of the remnant of the GPIb-IX complex or the cathepsin G-induced increase in platelet surface P-selectin. In summary, neutrophil cathepsin G modulates the platelet surface expression of the GPIb-IX complex both by proteolysis of the vWF binding site on GPIb alpha and by a cytoskeletal-mediated redistribution of the remainder of the complex. Prior studies show that, although thrombospondin 1, antiserine proteases, and plasma are all inhibitors of cathepsin G, the effects of cathepsin G on platelets, including an increase in surface GPIIb-IIIa, occur during close contact between neutrophils and platelets in a protective microenvironment (eg, thrombosis and local inflammation).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Naimushin YA  Mazurov AV 《Platelets》2004,15(7):419-425
In this study we investigated mechanisms of platelet interaction with von Willebrand factor (vWF) induced by activating anti-glycoprotein (GP)IIb-IIIa antibody CRC54 directed against LIBS (ligand-induced binding site epitope) in GPIIIa. It was demonstrated that aggregation of washed platelets (measured in Born aggregometer) could be stimulated by CRC54 not only in the presence of fibrinogen but vWF as well. The level of aggregation induced in the presence of saturating concentrations of vWF (approximately 80 microg/ml) was even higher than that in the presence of 1 mg/ml of fibrinogen. Aggregation supported by vWF unlike fibrinogen supported aggregation was almost completely inhibited not only by GPIIb-IIIa antagonists (F(ab')2 fragment of blocking anti-GPIIb-IIIa antibody CRC64 and peptidomimetic aggrastat) but also by anti-GPIb blocking antibody AK2. Aggregation response induced by CRC54 in the presence of vWF was much lower when normal platelets were substituted with GPIb-deficient platelets and this residual aggregation was not affected by anti-GPIb antibody AK2 but still inhibited by anti-GPIIb-IIIa blocking antibody fragment. CRC54-induced aggregation supported by vWF (as well as by fibrinogen) was only partially inhibited by prostaglandin E1, indicating that at least its initiation does not require activation of platelets. CRC54, both in the presence of vWF and fibrinogen, failed to stimulate serotonin secretion at physiological Ca2+ concentration of 1 mM, although substantial release reaction was detected when Ca2+ concentration was decreased to 0.1 mM. CRC54 could also stimulate platelet interaction with immobilized vWF and fibrinogen. However, unlike platelet aggregation in suspension mediated by flow phase vWF, platelet adhesion to adsorbed vWF (in a same way as to fibrinogen) was inhibited only by GPIIb-IIIa but not GPIb antagonists. The data obtained indicated that vWF support platelet aggregation induced by activating anti-GPIIb-IIIa via interaction with two receptors - activated GPIIb-IIIa and GPIb.  相似文献   

18.
Von Willebrand factor (vWF) was purified from the plasma of a patient with type IIB von Willebrand disease (vWF from such a patient, IIB vWF) who had a normal platelet count and showed no evidence of spontaneous platelet aggregation. Large multimers of IIB vWF were absent from purified preparations and from plasma. Ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation was enhanced by purified IIB vWF. The aggregation of washed normal platelets mixed with IIB vWF (0.4 microgram/ml) required lower amounts of ristocetin than the aggregation of normal platelets mixed with the same concentrations of normal vWF. Moreover, purified IIB vWF alone induced aggregation of platelet-rich plasma at concentrations as low as 10 micrograms of IIB vWF/ml in the absence of any other agonist. Aggregation was blocked by a monoclonal antibody against the platelet membrane glycoprotein, GPIb, as well as by an anti-GPIIb/IIIa antibody. Washed platelet suspensions were promptly aggregated by IIB vWF only when fibrinogen and CaCl2 were added to the mixture. Purified IIB vWF induces the binding of fibrinogen to platelets. Such binding was blocked by the anti-GPIb monoclonal antibody as well as by the anti-GPIIb/IIIa monoclonal antibody that inhibited aggregation. A second anti-GPIIb/IIIa antibody, which has the property of blocking vWF but not fibrinogen binding to platelets, blocked neither aggregation nor fibrinogen binding induced by IIB vWF. These studies demonstrate that platelet aggregation is triggered by the initial interaction of IIB vWF with GPIb which is followed by exposure of fibrinogen binding sites on GPIIb/IIIa. Fibrinogen binds to these sites and acts as a necessary cofactor for the aggregation response.  相似文献   

19.
Summary. The ability of certain strains of Streptococcus sanguis to aggregate human platelets in vitro may be related to their virulence in the pathogenesis of infective endocarditis. We have studied the mechanisms of aggregation of human platelets by S. sanguis strain NCTC 7863. Platelet aggregation follows incubation of S. sanguis cells with platelet-rich plasma from normal, healthy adults, after a lag of 7–19 min. Platelet aggregation was accompanied by 5-hydroxytryptamine release and thromboxane B2 production. Aggregation was prevented by aspirin and by EDTA. Platelets from two patients with Glanzmann's thrombasthenia did not respond to bacteria. Fixed, washed platelets resuspended in normal plasma were not agglutinated by S. sanguis.
Blocking the glycoprotein Ib receptor with a monoclonal antibody inhibited aggregation of PRP. However, S. sanguis did not induce von Willebrand factor (vWF) binding to platelets; nor did the bacteria prevent ristocetin-induced platelet agglutination or vWF binding. The aggregation response was not related to plasma vWF activity levels in normal subjects or in patients with von Willebrand's disease.
The platelet response to S. sanguis therefore resembles true aggregation, requiring the cyclo-oxygenase pathway and the presence of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa. The mechanism also involves glycoprotein Ib, but not apparently through irreversible binding of vWF.  相似文献   

20.
Botrocetin, a protein isolated from the venom of the snake Bothrops jararaca, induces platelet aggregation/agglutination by von Willebrand factor (vWF) binding to the membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ib, an action resembling that of ristocetin. However, some differences in the interaction between vWF and platelet GPIb induced by these two substances have been reported. We have recently shown that the GPIb binding domain on the vWF molecule, in both instances, resides in the tryptic 52/48 kDa fragment extending from amino acid residue 449 to 728 of the constituent subunit. In the present report, we demonstrate that botrocetin does not induce agglutination of formalin-fixed platelets from a patient with Bernard-Soulier syndrome congenitally lacking GPIb and GPIX as well as GPV, a finding similar to that shown with ristocetin. A monoclonal antibody against GPIb (AP-1) inhibits either ristocetin- or botrocetin-dependent vWF binding to formalin-fixed platelets from normal individuals. Therefore, botrocetin-induced vWF binding to formalin-fixed platelets may reflect the interaction between vWF and platelet GPIb. To strengthen this concept, we have now found that heightened botrocetin-induced type IIB vWF binding to platelet GPIb causes hyperagglutination of normal platelets.  相似文献   

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