Effect of Biotinylation on Fibrinogen Function and Fibrinogen-Platelet Interaction

1997 ◽  
Vol 3 (S2) ◽  
pp. 157-158
Author(s):  
JC Mattson ◽  
DW Estry ◽  
DM Farrah ◽  
HH Wolak ◽  
S Westley

Biotinylation of antibodies to be used in immunolocalization studies is a well established approach to mapping epitopes in biological specimens at both the light and ultrastructural level. Biotinylation of antibodies does not appear to significantly alter their interaction with antigen. A similar approach has been proposed for examining ligand interaction with receptors. Producing a soluble biotinylated ligand that behaves similarly to unlabeled ligand avoids the problems introduced by particulate labels such as ferritin, gold and latex. Particulate labels for ligands can be especially problematic in studies of receptor behavior in live cells since viable cells may directly react to the particulate probe itself. The interaction of plasma fibrinogen with its receptor on blood platelets, GPIIb-IIIa, is required for platelet-platelet cohesion and subsequent formation of a hemostatic platelet plug at sites of vascular injury. To study the events that follow binding of fibrinogen to its receptor5 we have produced a series of fibrinogens biotinylated with molar ratios of biotin:fibrinogen that range from 5 to 50.

2002 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 251-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
SCOTT L. BURNETT ◽  
LARRY R. BEUCHAT

Confocal scanning laser microscopy (CSLM) was used to differentiate viable and nonviable cells of Escherichia coli O157:H7 on and in raw apple tissues following treatment with water and 200 or 2,000 ppm active chlorine solution. Whole unwaxed Red Delicious cultivar apples at 25°C were inoculated by dipping in a suspension of E. coli O157:H7 (8.48 log10 CFU/ml) at 4°C, followed by treatment in water or chlorine solution at 21°C for 2 min. The dead cells on and in apples were distinguished from live cells by treating tissue samples with SYTOX green nucleic acid stain. Viable and dead cells were then labeled with an antibody conjugated with a fluorescent dye (Alexa Fluor 594). The percentage of viable cells on the apple surface, as well as at various depths in surface and internal structures, was determined. The mean percentages of viable cells located at the sites after treatment with water or chlorinated water were in the following order, which also reflects the order of protection against inactivation: floral tube wall (20.5%) > lenticels (15.0%) > damaged cuticle surrounding puncture wounds (13.0%) > intact cuticle (8.1%). The location of viable cells within tissues was dependent on the structure. Except for lenticels, the percentage of viable cells increased as depth into the CSLM stacks increased, indicating that cells attached to subsurface structures were better protected against inactivation with chlorine than were cells located on exposed surfaces. Further research is warranted to investigate the efficacy of other chemical sanitizers, as well as that of surfactants and solvents in combination with sanitizers, in removing or killing E. coli O157:H7 lodged in protective structures on the surface and within tissues of apples.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 574-574
Author(s):  
Vincent Hayes ◽  
Ian Johnston ◽  
Douglas B. Cines ◽  
Lubica Rauova ◽  
Mortimer Poncz

Abstract The most feared feature of HIT is antibody-mediated thrombosis. We have shown that this prothrombotic state is related to binding of platelet factor 4 (PF4), a chemokine densely packaged into platelet alpha-granules, to surface glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) expressed on hematopoietic and vascular cells. PF4/GAG surface complexes are recognized by HIT antibodies, activating the targeted cells. Unlike platelets that express only low-affinity chondroitin sulfate surface GAGs, endothelial cells (EC) express a glycocalyx enriched in heparan sulfate, which has higher affinity for PF4, potentially increasing their propensity to become a target for immune injury leading to thrombosis. We examined the details of the development of in situ thrombi using the cremaster arteriole laser injury model beginning with transgenic mice expressing only human PF4 (hPF4+), but lacking FcγRIIA. These mice do not develop thrombocytopenia or thrombosis when injected with the HIT-like monoclonal antibody KKO or IgGs isolated from patients with HIT. In these mice, antigenic PF4/GAG complexes were recognized by KKO at sites of vascular injury even in the absence of infused heparin. In fact, infusion of sufficient heparin dissociated PF4 from sites of injury, consistent with its higher affinity for PF4 than cell surface GAGs. This suggests that antigenic PF4/GAG complexes normally develop intravascularly whenever thrombus formation occurs, yet these complexes do not typically initiate antibody-mediated thrombosis. Real-time confocal imaging of injured vessels revealed that PF4 first bound almost exclusively to the peri-injury endothelium. This was especially evident immediately upstream of the thrombus where turbulent blood flow may lead to platelet degranulation and subsequent adherence of the released PF4 to the glycocalyx. Beginning approximately two minutes post-injury, binding of KKO, presumably to PF4/GAG complexes on platelets, is seen at the interface between the shell and core of the thrombus. We then repeated these same studies in hPF4+/FcγRIIA+ mice, where infused KKO or HIT IgGs leads to significant thrombocytopenia and widespread development of thrombi as in HIT. Similar adherence of PF4 to the peri-injury EC and then to the core/shell interface of the thrombus as seen in the hPF4+ mice, but the changes were more extensive in hPF4+/FcγRIIA+ mice after KKO infusion and often lead to vascular occlusion. To further define the basis of the prothrombotic state in HIT and to extend our studies to a human system, we examined thrombus formation in HIT in a novel microfluidic system in which vascular injury was induced in an upstream portion of a human umbilical vein EC-lined channel by reactive oxygen species generated through excitation of infused hematoporphyrin by blue light (490 nm). Following infusion of human blood, platelets accumulated and released PF4, which bound the injured endothelium, while the downstream endothelium remained quiescent. Addition of KKO to the infused whole blood lead to a HIT-like state with marked increase in platelet adhesion and binding of PF4 to the injured endothelium, but binding of PF4 now spread downstream of the boundary between injured and uninjured endothelium. This was followed by downstream platelet adhesion and often occlusion of the channel. We proposed that this spread in EC injury was a result of a “rolling barrage” of PF4 released from platelets binding to the injured patch of EC complexing to the downstream glycocalyx on the non-injured endothelium followed by KKO binding and subsequent endothelial activation. The newly activated ECs bound additional platelets and the process repeats, rolling downstream and extending thrombus growth. Thus, these studies provide important new insights into the local sequence of events that propagate clots in HIT: Targeting of the endothelial glycocalyx by HIT antibodies is a major contributor to the prothrombotic state. Platelets adherent to the site of original injury release PF4, which then binds to downstream EC glycocalyx and initiates repetitive cycles of PF4 binding, EC activation and platelet adherence, and further release of PF4 that propagates growth of thrombi to previously uninvolved vasculature. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregor Majdič ◽  
Metka Voga ◽  
Ana Pleterski

Abstract: Some limited reports suggest that cells can survive in the cadavers for much longer than it was previously thought.  In our study we explored how time after death, tissue type (muscle, brain and adipose tissue), storage temperature of cadavers (4 °C or at room temperature) and form of tissue storage (stored as cadavers or tissue pieces in phosphate buffered saline) affect the success of harvesting live cells from mice after death. Cells were isolated from dead tissues and grown in standard conditions. Some cells were used for RNA extraction and RT² Profiler™ PCR Array for cell lineage identification was performed to establish which lineages the cells obtained from post mortem tissues belong to. Results of our study showed that viable cells can be regularly isolated from muscle and brain tissue 3 days post mortem and with difficulty up to 6 days post mortem. Viable cells from brain tissue can be isolated up to 9 days post mortem. No cells were isolated from adipose tissue except immediately after death. In all instances viable cells were isolated only when tissues were stored at 4 °C. Tissue storage did not affect cell isolation. Isolated cells were progenitors from different germ layers. Our results show that live cells could be obtained from mouse cadavers several days after death.Key words: mouse; cadaver; stem cells; brain; muscle; adipose tissue IZOLACIJA ŽIVIH CELIC IZ RAZLIČNIH TKIV MIŠI DO DEVET DNI PO SMRTI Izvleček: Nekatere raziskave kažejo, da je preživetje celic v truplih precej daljše, kot je bilo znano do sedaj. V naši raziskavi smo proučevali, kako na uspešnost izolacije živih celic po smrti miši vplivajo različen čas izolacije po smrti, vrsta tkiva (mišično, možgansko in maščobno), temperatura shranjevanja trupel ter oblika shranjenega tkiva (kot koščki tkiv ali kot celi kadavri). Izolacija in gojenje celic iz tkiv mrtvih miši sta potekali pod standardnimi pogoji. Da bi ugotovili, katerim celičnim linijam pripadajo izolirane celice, je bil del celic uporabljen za izolacijo RNK in nadaljno uporabo v sistemu identifikacije izvornih celičnih linij z verižno reakcijo s polimerazo v realnem času. Rezultati naše raziskave so pokazali, da je žive celice mogoče izolirati iz mišičnega in možganskega tkiva 3 dni po smrti, pogojno tudi do 6 dni po smrti. Iz možganskega tkiva je bilo žive celice mogoče izolirati tudi do 9 dni po smrti. Iz maščobnega tkiva je bilo celice mogoče izolirati zgolj takoj po smrti, ne pa tudi v kasnejših časovnih intervalih. V vseh primerih so bile celice izolirane samo v primeru shranjevanja tkiv pri 4°C. Oblika shranjenega tkiva na izolacijo celic ni vplivala. Izolirane celice so pripadale različnim zarodnim plastem. Rezultati raziskave so pokazali, da je žive celice iz mišjih trupel mogoče izolirati tudi več dni po smrti.Ključne besede: miš; truplo; matične celice; možgansko tkivo; mišično tkivo; maščobno tkivo


1996 ◽  
Vol 76 (05) ◽  
pp. 768-773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eefke J Petersen ◽  
Eelke Posthumus ◽  
Jan J Sixma

SummaryThe GpIb-IX complex constitutes the major receptor for von Wille-brand factor (vWF) on the surface of blood platelets. The vWF-binding site has been mapped to one of the three constituent chains, Gplba. Surface expression of Gplba depends on the. correct intracellular assembly with the Gplb(3 and GpIX chains. We have now grafted a portion of the extracellular domain of Gplba containing the vWF binding site onto the transmembrane/intracellular domain of the single chain surface molecule ICAM-1. Transient transfection of this chimeric protein in COS cells resulted in surface expression as assessed by immunostain-ing of live cells. Similar results were obtained after stable transfection into BHK cells. Purified vWF bound to the surface of transfected cells in the presence of ristocetin and botrocetin with a Kd of 52 ng/ml, comparable to the Kd for fixed platelets (65.5 ng/ml). This study indicates that functional expression of the vWF-binding domain of GpIbα on the surface of mammalian cells can be obtained in the absence of GpIbβ and GpIX. Furthermore, this model system simplifies existing methods for the assessment of the functional consequences of mutations in Gplba as found in pseudo-von Willebrand disease and Bemard-Soulier syndrome.


1964 ◽  
Vol 11 (02) ◽  
pp. 355-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. G Iatridis ◽  
J. H Ferguson ◽  
S. G Iatridis

SummaryBlood platelet suspensions from normal (N) or hemophilia A (VIII-) subjects contain active SF (surface factor or activation product) in their plasmatic atmosphere. Since factor XII is an essential precursor, SF is not formed on platelets from a Hageman-deficient. Experimental evidence establishing these facts was obtained by means of clotting tests (PCa and PTT) and the thrombelastograph (TEG). The SF activity of normal platelets, like a plasma SF preparation, corrects the deficiencies in XII- plasmas, best tested in silicone or the stainless steel cuvette of the TEG. An anti-SF preparation inhibited the platelet SF activity. Allowing for the SF effect, there was no evidence for any significant factor VIII (AHF) in the platelet plasmatic atmospheres.How surface factor (SF) activation from precursors (XII, XI) in the plasma and plasmatic atmosphere of altering platelets may combine in a mutually reinforcing reaction to trigger intrinsic blood clotting is discussed. When stress, vascular injury, stasis, and other factors enter the picture, the stage may be set for the occurrence of thrombosis in vivo.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elliot K. Chin ◽  
Colin A. Grant ◽  
Mehmet Giray Ogut ◽  
Bocheng Cai ◽  
Naside Gozde Durmus

AbstractSorting methods that remove non-viable cells and debris, while retaining a high yield of viable cells, are crucial for many applications in biotechnology, genomics, tissue engineering and medicine. However, a significant challenge is gentle sorting of these different cell states based on very minute differences in density and magnetic signatures, without relying on any labels, tags or markers. Here, a new magnetic levitation-based technology, CelLEVITAS, is developed for the label-free sorting and enrichment of live cells. This work reports the first use of magnetic levitation for sorting of viable and non-viable cells within a microfluidic device and demonstrates extremely effective removal of dead cells and debris from heterogeneous samples. First, the levitation conditions for separating viable and non-viable cells under a magnetic field were fine-tuned. Levitation trajectories of live and dead cell states were then monitored in real-time, as cells magnetically focused to their corresponding levitation bands. CelLEVITAS successfully sorted and enriched live cells from a variety of input cell concentrations (100-200,000 cells/mL) and a variety of input purities (10-50%) into consistently high output purities (>80%). This method is sensitive, does not impair cell viability during sorting, and significantly increases the input sample viability up to 7-fold. Overall, this new magnetic levitation-based sorting strategy drastically reduces the processing time to a single-step, 30-minute sorting protocol and eliminates the manual pre-processing and labeling steps that are required for traditional flow cytometry techniques.


1996 ◽  
Vol 109 (7) ◽  
pp. 1909-1917 ◽  
Author(s):  
B.J. Soltys ◽  
M. Falah ◽  
R.S. Gupta

Giardia lamblia trophozoites contain a complex endomembrane system as demonstrated by fluorescence and cryoelectron microscopy. The endomembrane system was weakly detected in live cells using the fluorescent membrane dye 3,3′-dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide. The definitive identification of endoplasmic reticulum required the development of a molecular label. We expressed Giardial Bip in Escherichia coli and raised a polyclonal antibody to the purified protein. In western blots, the antibody was specific for Giardial Bip and did not react with human, monkey and rodent homologs. By immunofluorescence microscopy in methanol fixed cells the antibody visualized tubular structures and other subcellular components that required characterization by electron microscopy. Using cryotechniques we directly demonstrate the presence of a complex endomembrane system at the ultrastructural level. In conjunction with Bip immunogold labeling of cryosections we identify: (1) endoplasmic reticulum cisternae and tubules; (2) stacked perinuclear membranes; and (3) Bip presence in the nuclear envelope. Both the endoplasmic reticulum and nuclear envelope were found either with or without a cleft region suggesting each may contain common specialized sub-regions. In stacked perinuclear membranes, which may represent either multilamellar endoplasmic reticulum or a Golgi apparatus, Bip labeling was restricted to peripheral layers, also suggesting specialized sub-regions. Labeled endomembrane systems could be observed associated with microtubule structures, including axonemes and the adhesive disk. The presence of an extensive endomembrane system in Giardia lamblia, which represents one of the earliest diverging eukaryotic species, supports the view that both the nucleus and endomembrane system co-evolved in a common ancestor of eukaryotic cells.


2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (04) ◽  
pp. 431-442
Author(s):  
Emmanuel J. Favaloro

Abstractvon Willebrand factor (VWF) represents a large and complex adhesive plasma protein whose main function is to provide a bridge between blood platelets and damaged endothelium, and thus facilitate primary hemostasis. VWF also binds to FVIII, preventing early proteolysis, and delivers this cargo to sites of vascular injury, thereby promoting clot formation and secondary hemostasis. An absence, deficiency, or defect in VWF can lead to a bleeding diathesis called von Willebrand disease (VWD), considered the most common inherited bleeding disorder. Contemporary laboratory assays used in VWD diagnosis/exclusion comprise a myriad of assays that identify the quantity (level) of VWF, as well as the multitude of VWF activities. These may use the following test abbreviations: VWF:Ag, VWF:RCo, VWF:CB, VWF:GPIbR, VWF:GPIbM, VWF:FVIIB, VWF:Ab. The current review explains what these assays are, as well as their place in VWD diagnostics.


1977 ◽  
Vol 38 (04) ◽  
pp. 0939-0954 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harold L. James ◽  
Pankaj Ganguly ◽  
Carl W. Jackson

SummaryThe discovery of thrombin-clottable protein in platelet homogenates initiated studies on the location, properties, and origin of such material, the ultimate aim of which has been to define its physiologic role. It was established that fibrinogen is present both on the platelet membrane as well as in the cytoplasmic α-granules. The membrane-bound material is apparently fibrinogen adsorbed from plasma, while the intracellular fibrinogen appears to have unique biochemical and functional properties. Differences in properties observed between platelet fibrinogen and plasma fibrinogen are not due to in vitro modifications during handling. Whether the intracellular fibrinogen is synthesized in the platelet (or megakaryocyte) or whether it is derived through uptake and limited modification of plasma fibrinogen in vivo has remained an open question. Thus, to investigate the aspect of origin of platelet fibrinogen, radioactively-labelled fibrinogen was injected into rats, blood was collected at time intervals and the radioactivity in the subcellular fractions of platelets was examined. A part of the injected fibrinogen became associated with the platelets, but very little was found in the granule fraction. Previous findings on human platelet fibrinogen, together with the present data obtained using rats, suggest that platelet fibrinogen may not be derived from plasma fibrinogen in vivo. It thus is apparent that the intracellular fibrinogen is synthesized by a unique genetic mechanism. Molecular properties of fibrinogen derived from rat platelet granules were shown analogous to the properties of fibrinogen from human platelet granules. Fibrinogen of intracellular origin is less stable than its plasma counterpart. The results obtained by others in which identity of platelet and plasma fibrinogens was reported may be explained on the basis of recovery of only the fibrinogen component bound to the platelet membrane, which is adsorbed plasma fibrinogen. It is suggested that the term platelet fibrinogen may be used to denote that present in the α-granules, with the membrane-bound component being referred to as platelet-associated fibrinogen.


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