Platelet glycoprotein VI (GPVI), a 62kD membrane protein, has been identified as one of the platelet receptors for collagen, since GPVI-deficient platelets exhibit abnormal responses to collagen and an abnormal bleeding tendency. We report a female patient with a mild bleeding history whose platelets expressed 10% GPVI of normal platelets. Shape change, aggregation and ATP release of the patient's platelets were completely absent in response to 1-5 micrograms/ml collagen but present normally in response to ADP and Ca2+ ionophore A23187. Adhesion of the patient's platelets to coated collagen was mildly affected (40-60% of normal platelets) in spite of only 10% expression of GPVI. Flow cytometrical studies revealed that the patient's platelets expressed normal amounts of the GPIa/IIa complex. These results suggest that platelet GPVI is less involved in adhesion to collagen than shape change and aggregation induced by collagen.
The accumulation of monocyte/macrophages and T lymphocytes in arterial intima is a hallmark of early atherogenesis. To investigate the temporal relationships between endothelial expression of adhesion molecules (eg, P-selectin and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 [VCAM-1]) and intimal accumulation of macrophages and T lymphocytes, immunostaining was performed by using serial frozen sections from intercostal branch points of thoracic aortas of New Zealand White rabbits that had been fed a 0.3% cholesterol diet. After 1 week of cholesterol feeding, neither macrophages nor T lymphocytes were detected, although endothelial expression of P-selectin and VCAM-1 was observed. After 3 weeks, macrophages were detectable in 75% and T lymphocytes were present in 25% of the rabbits. Expression of P-selectin and VCAM-1 was sustained until 10 weeks. Infiltration of T lymphocytes was restricted in areas in which macrophages were accumulated and did not appear to precede macrophage infiltration. E-selectin expression was not detectable before accumulation of mononuclear leukocytes; however, very few endothelial cells covering foam cell lesions expressed E-selectin after 6 weeks. Similar results were obtained in Watanabe heritable hyperlipidemic rabbits aged 1, 2, and 3 months. Taken together, localized expression of P-selectin and VCAM-1 may play a key role in the initial recruitment of macrophages and T lymphocytes in early atherogenesis.
The individual contributions of glycoprotein Ib (GPIb) and the seven transmembrane domain receptor (STDR) to increases in platelet [Ca2+]i induced by alpha-thrombin or the tethered ligand peptide (TLP; SFLLRNPNDKYEPF) have been determined in control platelets, in platelets where the thrombin binding site on GPIb was blocked with the monoclonal antibodies TM60 and LJ-Ib10, in platelets where access of thrombin to the STDR was blocked by polyclonal antipeptide antibodies, and in Bernard-Soulier platelets which constitutively lack GPIb. Curve-fitting analyses (LIGAND) showed that binding of PPACK-thrombin and alpha-thrombin to the moderate-affinity site was not detected in the best-fit model in the presence of anti-STDR antibodies although with alpha-thrombin there was also decreased binding at the high-affinity site. Conversely, TM60 blocked binding of alpha-thrombin to the high-affinity site but also decreased binding at the moderate affinity site. Separately, either TM60 or anti-TNA (150 micrograms/mL) reduced thrombin (0.5 nM)-induced elevations in [Ca2+]i to 50% of control values, but Ca2+ elevations were essentially abrogated (4.2 +/- 5%) when the two were added in combination. [Ca2+]i dose-response curves for alpha-thrombin were curvilinear and were only 50% of controls in the presence of anti-GPIb or anti-STDR antibodies at up to 10 nM alpha-thrombin, with their greatest sensitivity being below 2 nM. With Bernard-Soulier platelets, changes in [Ca2+]i were not detectable at < or = 0.5 nM alpha-thrombin but were also 50% of controls at 5-10 nM alpha-thrombin. [Ca2+]i responses to TLP (1-100 microM) of antibody-blocked platelets were identical to those of controls whereas responses were approximately 50% of controls in Bernard-Soulier platelets. The rate of increase in [Ca2+]i in controls was twice that seen in antibody-blocked platelets and about 5-fold greater than in Bernard-Soulier platelets. These results demonstrate that both GPIb and the STDR are required to ensure the optimal rate and extent of platelet activation over a range of alpha-thrombin concentrations (0.3-10 nM) and that the STDR corresponds to the previously described moderate-affinity thrombin receptor.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.