Arterial blood flow enhances glycoprotein Ibα (GPIbα) binding to vWF, which initiates platelet adhesion to injured vessels. Mutations in the vWF A1 domain that cause type 2B von Willebrand disease (vWD) reduce the flow requirement for adhesion. Here we show that increasing force on GPIbα/vWF bonds first prolonged ("catch") and then shortened ("slip") bond lifetimes. Two type 2B vWD A1 domain mutants, R1306Q and R1450E, converted catch bonds to slip bonds by prolonging bond lifetimes at low forces. Steered molecular dynamics simulations of GPIbα dissociating from the A1 domain suggested mechanisms for catch bonds and their conversion by the A1 domain mutations. Catch bonds caused platelets and GPIbα-coated microspheres to roll more slowly on WT vWF and WT A1 domains as flow increased from suboptimal levels, explaining flowenhanced rolling. Longer bond lifetimes at low forces eliminated the flow requirement for rolling on R1306Q and R1450E mutant A1 domains. Flowing platelets agglutinated with microspheres bearing R1306Q or R1450E mutant A1 domains, but not WT A1 domains. Therefore, catch bonds may prevent vWF multimers from agglutinating platelets. A disintegrin and metalloproteinase with a thrombospondin type 1 motif-13 (ADAMTS-13) reduced platelet agglutination with microspheres bearing a tridomain A1A2A3 vWF fragment with the R1450E mutation in a shear-dependent manner. We conclude that in type 2B vWD, prolonged lifetimes of vWF bonds with GPIbα on circulating platelets may allow ADAMTS-13 to deplete large vWF multimers, causing bleeding.
We present a method for fabricating anchored polymers with a gradual variation of grafting densities on solid substrates. The technique for generating such structures comprises (i) formation of a molecular gradient of polymerization initiator on the solid substrate and (ii) polymerization from the substrate-bound initiator centers ("grafting from"). We measure the mushroom-to-brush transition in grafted polyacrylamides and show that the mushroom and brush behavior can be described using existing scaling theories.
We describe experiments pertaining to the formation of surface-anchored poly(acrylic acid) (PAA)
brushes with a gradual variation of the PAA grafting densities on flat surfaces and provide detailed analysis of
their properties. The PAA brush gradients are generated by first covering the substrate with a molecular gradient
of the polymerization initiator, followed by the “grafting from” polymerization of tert-butyl acrylate (tBA) from
these substrate-bound initiator centers, and finally converting the PtBA into PAA. We use spectroscopic ellipsometry
to measure the wet thickness of the grafted PAA chains in aqueous solutions at three different pH values (4, 5.8,
and 10) and a series of ionic strengths (IS). Our measurements reveal that at low grafting densities, σ, the wet
thickness of the PAA brush (H) remains relatively constant, the polymers are in the mushroom regime. Beyond
a certain value of σ, the macromolecules enter the brush regime, where H increases with increasing σ. For a
given σ, H exhibits a nonmonotonic behavior as a function of the IS. At large IS, the H is small because the
charges along PAA are completely screened by the excess of the external salt. As IS decreases, the PAA enters
the so-called salt brush (SB) regime, where H increases. At a certain value of IS, H reaches a maximum and then
decreases again. The latter is a typical brush behavior in so-called osmotic brush (OB) regime. We provide
detailed discussion of the behavior of the grafted PAA chains in the SB and OB regimes.
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