Granulocyte-platelet interactions and platelet fibrinogen receptor exposure
E. Kornecki, Y. H. Ehrlich, R. Egbring, M. Gramse, R. Seitz, A. Eckardt, H. Lukasiewicz and S. Niewiarowski Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington 05405. We have examined the interaction of human granulocyte elastase with human platelets. Incubation of human platelets with human...
Gespeichert in:
Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology 1988-09, Vol.255 (3), p.H651-H658 |
---|---|
Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | E. Kornecki, Y. H. Ehrlich, R. Egbring, M. Gramse, R. Seitz, A. Eckardt, H. Lukasiewicz and S. Niewiarowski
Department of Psychiatry, University of Vermont, Burlington 05405.
We have examined the interaction of human granulocyte elastase with human
platelets. Incubation of human platelets with human granulocyte elastase
exposed active fibrinogen-binding sites as evidenced by 125I-labeled
fibrinogen binding and spontaneous fibrinogen-induced platelet aggregation.
The aggregation of platelets by fibrinogen occurred at low concentrations
of human granulocyte elastase (0.5-1 microgram/ml). Platelets pretreated
with human granulocyte elastase exposed an average of 10,500 fibrinogen
binding sites per platelet, i.e., about one-third the number of binding
sites exposed by optimal concentrations of ADP. With the use of a
polyclonal antiplatelet membrane antibody, the glycoproteins IIb (GPIIb),
IIIa (GPIIIa), and a 60,000-Da (60 kDa) protein (66 kDa in a reduced
system) derived from GPIIIa were immunoprecipitated from the surface of
detergent extracts of human 125I-radiolabeled platelets pretreated with
increasing concentrations of human granulocyte elastase. Experiments
performed by immunoblotting with use of polyclonal and monoclonal
antibodies directed to GPIIIa showed that pretreatment of human platelets
with granulocyte elastase resulted in the appearance of an additional
proteolytic derivative of GPIIIa migrating with an apparent molecular mass
of 120 kDa in a nonreduced system. GPIIIa appears to be the preferred
substrate of elastase, since GPIIb was not degraded by human granulocyte
elastase. We conclude that 1) the proteolytic action of human granulocyte
elastase on platelet GPIIIa results in the formation of two major
hydrolytic products, and 2) human granulocyte elastase exposes active
fibrinogen-binding sites associated with the GPIIb/GPIIIa complex,
resulting in direct platelet aggregation by fibrinogen. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0363-6135 0002-9513 1522-1539 2163-5773 |
DOI: | 10.1152/ajpheart.1988.255.3.H651 |