A Val193Met mutation in GPIIIa results in a GPIIb/IIIa receptor with a constitutively high affinity for a small ligand |
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Authors: | John Fullard Ronan Murphy Sarah O''Neill Niamh Moran Brian Ottridge Desmond J. Fitzgerald |
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Affiliation: | Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland. |
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Abstract: | We have identified a patient designated as (GTa) with Glanzmann's Thrombasthenia (GT) diagnosed on the basis of a prolonged bleeding time and failure of the patient's platelets to aggregate. The number of glycoprotein (GP)IIb/IIIa receptors on the platelet surface was 37% of normal and those receptors displayed a defect in soluble fibrinogen binding. Nevertheless, GTa platelets showed increased adhesion to solid-phase fibrinogen and binding affinity for the RGD-mimetic (3)H-SC52012, a non-peptide GPIIb/IIIa antagonist. Dithiothreitol (DTT) and ADP enhanced the affinity for [(3)H]-SC52012 in normal platelets, but had little effect in GTa platelets. These findings suggested that GTa platelets were locked in an altered affinity state. Genetic analysis showed that GTa was a compound heterozygote for the GPIIIa gene. One allele showed a deletion at the 3' end of exon 3 resulting in a premature stop codon. The second GPIIIa allele had a G to A transition at nucleotide 577, resulting in a Val193Met substitution. HEK 293T cells transfected with mutant GPIIb/IIIaV193M bound [(3)H]-SC52012 with a higher affinity than wild-type GPIIb/IIIa, and this was not increased by DTT. The mutant receptor distinguishes between platelet adhesion and aggregation, and demonstrates the phenotype that may be expected when platelet aggregation alone is inhibited. |
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Keywords: | platelet Glanzmann's thrombasthenia glycoprotein IIb IIIa adhesion qualitative quantitative mutations |
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