Albumin and fibrinogen were competitively adsorbed onto dimethyldichlorosilane-coated glass (DDS-glass) and platelet activation was examined as a function of the surface fibrinogen concentration. The weight ratio of albumin to fibrinogen in the adsorption solution was varied from 10 to 700. Platelet activation was quantitated by the area and circularity of spread platelets. When the DDS-glass was coated with albumin alone, platelets were only contact adherent and could not spread at all. After competitive adsorption of fibrinogen and albumin, however, platelets were able to spread on the surface. Platelet activation increased linearly as the surface fibrinogen concentration increased up to 0.02 micrograms/cm2. Platelets were able to activate fully if the surface fibrinogen concentration was 0.02 micrograms/cm2 or higher, even though the surface was dominated by albumin. It appears that platelets can activate fully as long as only a small fraction (2-15%) of the surface is covered with tightly bound fibrinogen.
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