Enzymatic Removal of ADP from Plasma: Unaltered Platelet Adhesion but Reduced Aggregation on Subendothelium and Collagen Fibrils

1976 ◽  
Vol 35 (02) ◽  
pp. 334-341 ◽  
Author(s):  
Th B. Tschopp ◽  
H.R Baumgartner

SummarySubendothelium of rabbit aorta and fibrillar collagen were exposed to citrated human or rabbit blood which was circulated through a perfusion chamber under flow conditions similar to those found in arteries. The resulting platelet adhesion and subsequent formation of platelet micro thrombi on the exposed surfaces were measured in 0.8 μm thick sections by a morphometry technique using light microscopy.Removal of plasma ADP by the substrate-enzyme combination CP-CPK (creatine phosphate-creatine phosphokinase; 3 mM and 90 U/ml blood) did not affect the initial attachment and spreading of platelets on subendothelium, whereas platelet thrombus formation was strongly inhibited. On free collagen fibrils CP-CPK was much less inhibitory on platelet thrombus formation but platelet adhesion again was not affected. It is concluded that platelet aggregation induced by thrombogenic surfaces in the presence of arterial blood flow is at least partially governed by ADP released from adhering platelets. Platelet adhesion to the examined surfaces, however, does not seem to be mediated by plasma ADP.

1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (01) ◽  
pp. 126-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helge E Roald ◽  
Kjell S Sakariassen

SummaryPlatelet thrombus formation on collagen fibrils is most pronounced at the upstream end of the surface, and it gradually decreases along the axis in parallel with the direction of the blood flow. This phenomenon, known as axial dependent platelet thrombus formation, is explained by the balance of the platelet supply to the surface and the consumption of platelets by growing thrombi.In the present study we have affected this balance by (A) inhibiting the growth of platelet thrombi by aspirin (ASA) or clopidogrel, and thus increasing the platelet concentration at the surface, and by (B) utilising blood from cigarette smokers, who have enhanced thrombus formation immediately after smoking, and thus decreasing the platelet concentration at the surface. Thrombus formation in non-anticoagulated blood was triggered by collagen fibrils positioned in a parallel-plate perfusion chamber at a wall shear rate of 2600 s_1which is characteristic for moderately stenosed arteries. Morphometrical assessment of thrombus formation was performed at axial positions of 1 and 13 mm downstream to the blood flow inlet at the collagen surface.Platelet-collagen adhesion and thrombus volume in blood from nonsmokers were decreased at the downstream location by 39% (p ≤0.0001) and by 60% (p ≤0.0001), respectively. However, increasing the platelet concentration at the surface by partially inhibiting the thrombus growth by ASA or clopidogrel, reduced substantially the axial decrease in platelet adhesion and thrombus volume. The largest reduction was observed with clopidogrel which was also the strongest inhibitor of the thrombus growth at both axial positions investigated. The corresponding figures in blood from smokers with enhanced thrombus formation were 38% (p ≤0.0001) and 72% (p ≤0.001). Thus, enhanced upstream platelet consumption increased the axial reduction in thrombus volume, but not in platelet adhesion.These data substantiate the view that the “axial dependence phenomenon” may be explained by the balance between the platelet supply to the surface and the consumption of platelets by growing thrombi. It is also apparent that clopidogrel is a more potent inhibitor of platelet thrombus formation than ASA.


Blood ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 244-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
HJ Weiss ◽  
VT Turitto

Abstract Prostaglandin I2 (prostacyclin, PGI2), a substance synthesized in the wall of blood vessels, has been previously shown to inhibit the aggregation of platelets in stirred platelet-rich plasma. We used a method in which segments of deendothelialized rabbit aorta are perfused at arterial shear rates with human blood and found that both platelet adhesion and thrombus formation on subendothelium was inhibited in blood containing 10 nM PGI2. PGI2 appears to reduce adhesion by inhibiting platelet spreading. These findings suggest that PGI2 could regulate the deposition of platelets on vascular surfaces.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 3658-3658
Author(s):  
Junmei Chen ◽  
Miguel A. Cruz ◽  
José A. López

Abstract In 1999, Wu et al found that blood from patients with type 3 von Willebrand disease (lacking VWF in both plasma and platelets) could not form thrombi on a collagen surface (Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc Biol2000, 201661–1667). This suggested that VWF was absolutely required for the accumulation of platelets in thrombi under flow, even in the presence of fibrinogen. Platelets have two VWF receptors, the GP Ib-IX-V complexes and αIIbβ3 , the former mediating the initial tethering and attachment of platelets onto VWF and the latter being involved in platelet-platelet contacts. GP Ib-IX-V binds VWF within the A1 domain and αIIbβ3 is known to bind an Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequence in the C1 domain. In the study of Wu et al, reconstitution of the VWF-deficient plasma with recombinant VWF missing the A1 domain failed to restore thrombus formation, even when the collagen surface was first coated with wild-type VWF to allow platelet attachment. The A1 domain is thus important not only for initial platelet adhesion but also for thrombus accumulation, possibly by binding another platelet receptor. Consistent with this, the number of binding sites for the isolated A1 domain on the platelet surface is more than twice the number of GP Ibα polypeptides. The receptor responsible for these binding sites is unknown but αIIbβ3 is a good candidate given its high copy number and the marked defect seen in platelet thrombus formation in its absence or blockade. Of interest, while deletion of A1 prevented thrombus formation in the studies of Wu et al, mutation of the VWF RGD sequence did not. We therefore examined whether αIIbβ3 also binds within the VWF A1 domain. We found the following. 1) Purified, unactivated αIIbβ3 binds to immobilized A1 domain, binding blocked by antibodies to either αIIbβ3 or A1. 2) Unactivated αIIbβ3 does not interact with immobilized full-length VWF, but binds VWF in the presence of ristocetin. The binding of αIIbβ3 to both VWF and isolated A1 is blocked by the αIIbβ3 antibody c7E3 but not by RGD peptides, and by the A1 antibody 6G1. This suggests that the αIIbβ3 binding site in the A1 domain may overlap the 6G1 epitope (residues 700-709), which is distinct from the GPIbα binding site. 3) 6G1 inhibits shear-induced platelet aggregation—a process that requires both GP Ibα and αIIbβ3—without blocking GP Ibα binding. 4) Platelets firmly adhere on the surface containing A1 and cross-linked collagen-related peptide (CRP), a potent GP VI agonist, at high shear stresses. The CRP-GP VI interaction is not strong enough to arrest platelets under flow, suggesting that GP VI signals could activate αIIbβ3, and αIIbβ3 could mediate firm adhesion. Consistent with this, the αIIbβ3 antibody c7E3 prevented firm platelet adhesion. In summary, we find that αIIbβ3 binds to the A1 domain, in or near the sequence of Glu700-Asp709. In addition to its apparent role in platelet-platelet interactions during thrombus growth, the binding of αIIbβ3 to the VWF A1 domain may also facilitate the binding of GP Ibα to a distinct region of A1, as the site of αIIbβ3 overlaps the binding site of ristocetin and 6G1, both which induce VWF to bind GP Ibα. Therefore, by binding to the same site as 6G1 and ristocetin in the C-terminal peptide of A1, αIIbβ3 may regulate the affinity of A1 for GP Ibα in flowing blood.


2006 ◽  
Vol 290 (4) ◽  
pp. H1671-H1679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rolando E. Rumbaut ◽  
Ricardo V. Bellera ◽  
Jaspreet K. Randhawa ◽  
Corie N. Shrimpton ◽  
Swapan K. Dasgupta ◽  
...  

Endotoxemia promotes adhesive interactions between platelets and microvascular endothelium in vivo. We sought to determine whether endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) modified platelet thrombus formation in mouse cremaster venules and whether Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) and neutrophils were involved in the response. Intravital videomicroscopy was performed in the cremaster microcirculation of pentobarbital-anesthetized mice; venular platelet thrombi were induced with a light/dye endothelial injury model. C57BL/6 mice treated with Escherichia coli endotoxin had enhanced rates of venular platelet thrombus formation: the time to microvessel occlusion was reduced by ∼50% ( P < 0.005) compared with saline-treated animals. Enhanced microvascular thrombosis was evident as early as 2 h after LPS administration. LPS had no effect on thrombosis in either of two mouse strains with altered TLR4 signaling (C57BL/10ScNJ or C3H/HeJ), whereas it enhanced thrombosis in the control strains (C57BL/10J and C3H/HeN). LPS also enhanced platelet adhesion to endothelium in the absence of light/dye injury. Platelet adhesion, but not enhanced thrombosis, was inhibited by depletion of circulating neutrophils. LPS failed to enhance platelet aggregation ex vivo and did not influence platelet P-selectin expression, a marker of platelet activation. These findings support the notion that endotoxemia promotes platelet thrombus formation independent of neutrophils and without enhancement of platelet aggregation, via a TLR4-dependent mechanism.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3650-3650 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Kasirer-Friede ◽  
Edgar Gutierrez ◽  
Brian Petrich ◽  
Sanford J. Shattil ◽  
Mark H. Ginsberg ◽  
...  

Abstract Interactions of platelets and their adhesion receptors with extracellular matrices are essential for hemostasis. Platelets experience different shear rates as they circulate through the vasculature. Conventional studies of platelets in shear flow are performed in simple flow chambers with relatively large volumes of cells and reagents, limiting testing when these are in short supply. Microfluidics technology should enable the concurrent study of multiple small volume samples across a wide range of shear rates, thereby allowing trends to emerge that might be difficult to detect otherwise. To achieve this goal, we fabricated PDMS microfluidic devices that permit testing of dynamic platelet adhesion over a 100-fold span of shear rates from a single 200μl blood sample. Alternate device design permits synchronous monitoring of platelet adhesion from two genetically distinct blood samples or treatment groups. We have used this technology to gain new insights into integrin αIIbβ3 function in mepacrine-labeled platelets under shear flow. In whole blood, the adhesion of wild-type mouse platelets to a fibrinogen-coated substrate was shear rate-dependent, similarly to human platelets. In contrast, adhesion of αIIbβ3-deficient (β3−/−) platelets was virtually absent above a shear rate of 100 s−1. To distinguish between requirements for the presence of an intact extracellular αIIbβ3 ligand binding domain versus an intact integrin activation process, we used mice with a Y/A mutation at residue 747 in the β3 cytoplasmic tail (β3Y747A), that selectively blocks talin interaction with β3, agonist-induced αIIbβ3 activation, and platelet thrombus formation in vivo. When compared to wild-type and β3−/− platelets, a normal αIIbβ3 extracellular domain on β3Y747A platelets partially rescued dynamic adhesion to fibrinogen by 50–80% at ≤130 s−1, but by only 25% at 250 s−1. Treatment of wild-type platelets with PGE1 to inhibit platelet activation similarly reduced adhesion to fibrinogen at higher shear rates. On fibrillar type I collagen, wild-type platelets formed an initial monolayer and progressively larger thrombi over time. In addition, platelets supported rolling and firm adhesion of granulocytes in a manner dependent on shear rate, platelet P-selectin and granulocyte PSGL1. In contrast, no platelet thrombus growth on collagen was observed with αIIbβ3-deficient or β3Y747A platelets, or with wild-type platelets treated with PGE1. Furthermore, even the initial adhesion of αIIbβ3-deficient and β3Y747A platelets to collagen rapidly declined at increasing shear rates (120%, 30% and 7% of wild-type platelets at 70, 1000 and 4000 s−1, respectively (p &lt; 0.01)). Taken together, these studies establish that microfluidics provides an efficient and high-throughput platform to study mechanisms of dynamic platelet adhesion, activation and thrombus formation on extracellular matrices. Furthermore, they demonstrate a role for talin-dependent αIIbβ3 activation in all of these processes. This platform will be particularly useful under conditions where blood sample volumes or reagents are limiting, such as in neonates, and genetically-modified model organisms.


1987 ◽  
Author(s):  
E Bastida ◽  
G Escolar ◽  
R Castillo ◽  
A Ordinas ◽  
J J Sixma

Fibronectin (FN) plays a role in several adhesion mediated functions including the interaction of platelets with subendothelium.We investigated the role of plasma FN in platelet adhesion and platelet thrombus formation under flow conditions.To do this we used two different perfusion models:1)the annular chamber with α -chymotrypsin-treated rabbit vessel segments and 2)the flat chamber with coverslips coated with fibrillar purified human collagen type III.Perfusates consisted of washed platelets, and washed red blood celIs,suspended in normal or FN-depleted plasma.Perfusions were carried out for 10 min at shear rates of 300 or 1300 sec™1 Platelet deposition and thrombus dimensions were morphometrically evaluated by a computerized system. We found that depletion of plasma FN significantly reduced the percentage of total coverage surface and percentage of platelet thrombus, at both shear rates studied, and in both perfusion systems (p < 0.01)(p < 0.01).The dimensions of the platelet thrombi formed in perfusions at high shear rate were also significantly reduced in perfusions carried out with FN-depleted plasma.(p < 0.01). Addition of purified FN to FN-depleted perfusates restored all the values to those measured in the control perfusions.These results indicate that, in addition to supporting platelet adhesion to the subendothelium and to fibrillar collagen, FN contributes to platelet thrombus formation under flow conditions.


Blood ◽  
1979 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 244-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
HJ Weiss ◽  
VT Turitto

Prostaglandin I2 (prostacyclin, PGI2), a substance synthesized in the wall of blood vessels, has been previously shown to inhibit the aggregation of platelets in stirred platelet-rich plasma. We used a method in which segments of deendothelialized rabbit aorta are perfused at arterial shear rates with human blood and found that both platelet adhesion and thrombus formation on subendothelium was inhibited in blood containing 10 nM PGI2. PGI2 appears to reduce adhesion by inhibiting platelet spreading. These findings suggest that PGI2 could regulate the deposition of platelets on vascular surfaces.


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