Optical Density Variations and Microscopic Observations in the Evaluation of Platelet Shape Change and Microaggregate Formation

1980 ◽  
Vol 44 (03) ◽  
pp. 154-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Kitek ◽  
K Breddin

SummaryAddition of Ristocetin to formalin-fixed platelets suspended in diluted PPP induces a marked increase in turbidity which is not caused by platelet shape change but by the formation of microaggregates. If diluted PPP of patients with severe von Willebrand's disease is used, only an initial increase in turbidity and no further decrease is observed without any form variation of the platelets but again with formation of many microaggregates. In normal PRP diluted with buffered EDTA, ADP induces an increase in turbidity without further changes in optical density. Simultaneously platelets immediately change their shape with formation of pseudopodes and sphering but at the same time also microaggregates appear. Shape change and microaggregate formation can also be observed after the addition of Collagen to undiluted PRP which is followed by the formation of large aggregates and a decrease in optical density. Increase in optical density in undiluted PRP is not a specific indicator of platelet shape changes. Microaggregates can alone or partially be responsible for these changes. For the evaluation of platelet shape changes but also for the estimation of microaggregate formation microscopic methods are preferred.

1976 ◽  
Vol 230 (5) ◽  
pp. 1406-1410 ◽  
Author(s):  
RA Grant ◽  
MB Zucker ◽  
J McPherson

Human plasma von Willebrand factor (vWF) plus the antibiotic ristocetin, or bovine or porcine vWF alone, agglutinates platelets in either normal human ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA)-treated citrated platelet-rich plasma (PRP) or citrated PRP from patients with the congenital platelet defect thrombasthenia. The prior addition of 1-10 muM ADP, which causes platelet shape change but not aggregation under these conditions, inhibited vWF-mediated agglutination. Inhibition was prevented by 200 muM ATP. Addition of ADP caused prompt reversal of established vWF-mediated agglutination, which resumed when the ADP was enzymatically removed. EDTA-treated, Formalin-fixed, washed normal platelets also underwent vWF-mediated agglutination. ADP was inhibitory only when added before fixation. Epinephrine (40 muM), prostaglandin E1 (7 muM), or serotonin (2 muM) added before fixation caused slight to moderate inhibition but always less than ADP. Platelets from blood chilled before fixation were fully active. Platelets fixed in freshly prepared PRP did not agglutinate as well as those fixed after incubation of PRP, probably because centrifugation exposes the platelets to ADP. It concluded that ADP causes a reversible decrease in the accessibility of the membrane receptor to vWF.


2001 ◽  
Vol 85 (02) ◽  
pp. 303-308 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Rolf ◽  
Charles Brearley ◽  
Martyn Mahaut-Smith

SummarySimultaneous measurements of [Ca2+]i and light transmission were used to examine the relationship between P2X1 receptor activation and functional platelet responses. The P2X1 agonist α,β-MeATP evoked a transient [Ca2+]i increase and a reversible decrease in light transmission; both responses required external Ca2+ and the nucleotidase apyrase. The transmission response was due to shape change only, verified by scanning electron microscopy and insensitivity to Reopro, a GPIIbIIIa antagonist. α,β-MeATP stimulated smaller shape changes than ADP, however P2X1 responses had a lifespan of <2 h following resuspension in saline and may be considerably larger in vivo. A peak [Ca2+]i increase of >50 nM was required for detectable shape change. Overlap of concentration-response relationships for α,β-MeATP-evoked [Ca2+]i and shape change suggests that other second messengers are not involved. Therefore, the physiological P2X1 agonist ATP can contribute to platelet activation, in contrast to its previously described inhibitory action at metabotropic platelet purinoceptors.


Blood ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 96 (12) ◽  
pp. 3786-3792 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hervé Falet ◽  
Kurt L. Barkalow ◽  
Vadim I. Pivniouk ◽  
Michael J. Barnes ◽  
Raif S. Geha ◽  
...  

Abstract How platelet shape change initiated by a collagen-related peptide (CRP) specific for the GPVI/FcRγ-chain complex (GPVI/FcRγ-chain) is coupled to SLP-76, phosphoinositide (PI) 3-kinase, and gelsolin is reported. As shown by video microscopy, platelets rapidly round and grow dynamic filopodial projections that rotate around the periphery of the cell after they contact a CRP-coated surface. Lamellae subsequently spread between the projections. All the actin-driven shape changes require SLP-76 expression. SLP-76 is essential for the Ca++mobilization induced by CRP, whereas PI 3-kinase only modulates it. The extension of lamellae requires net actin assembly and an exposure of actin filament barbed ends downstream of PI 3-kinase. Gelsolin expression is also required for the extension of lamellae, but not for the formation of filopodia. Altogether, the data describe the role of SLP-76 in the platelet activation initiated by GPVI/FcRγ-chain and the roles of PI 3-kinase and gelsolin in lamellae spreading.


Blood ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 96 (12) ◽  
pp. 3786-3792 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hervé Falet ◽  
Kurt L. Barkalow ◽  
Vadim I. Pivniouk ◽  
Michael J. Barnes ◽  
Raif S. Geha ◽  
...  

How platelet shape change initiated by a collagen-related peptide (CRP) specific for the GPVI/FcRγ-chain complex (GPVI/FcRγ-chain) is coupled to SLP-76, phosphoinositide (PI) 3-kinase, and gelsolin is reported. As shown by video microscopy, platelets rapidly round and grow dynamic filopodial projections that rotate around the periphery of the cell after they contact a CRP-coated surface. Lamellae subsequently spread between the projections. All the actin-driven shape changes require SLP-76 expression. SLP-76 is essential for the Ca++mobilization induced by CRP, whereas PI 3-kinase only modulates it. The extension of lamellae requires net actin assembly and an exposure of actin filament barbed ends downstream of PI 3-kinase. Gelsolin expression is also required for the extension of lamellae, but not for the formation of filopodia. Altogether, the data describe the role of SLP-76 in the platelet activation initiated by GPVI/FcRγ-chain and the roles of PI 3-kinase and gelsolin in lamellae spreading.


Blood ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 85 (7) ◽  
pp. 1796-1804 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Winokur ◽  
JH Hartwig

The so-called cold activation of platelets that precludes refrigeration of platelets for storage has long been recognized, but its mechanism has remained a mystery. Cooling of discoid resting platelets to temperatures below 15 degrees C causes shape distortions, and the chilled cells rewarmed to above 25 degrees C are spheres rather than discs. As platelet shape change responsive to receptor activation at normal temperatures requires the remodeling of an actin scaffolding (Hartwig JH, 1992, J Cell Biol 118:1421–1442), we examined the role of actin in the morphologic changes induced by cooling. The addition of actin monomers onto the fast-exchanging (barbed) ends of actin filaments accompanies the initial physiologic platelet shape changes, and a key control point in this growth is the removal of proteins (caps) from the filament ends. This uncapping of actin filament ends is mediated by polyphosphoinositide aggregates in vitro, suggesting that cold-induced phase changes in membrane lipids might uncap actin filaments and thereby account for actin assembly-mediated shape alterations during cooling. Consistent with this hypothesis, reversible inhibition of actin assembly with cytochalasin B prevented the distortions in shape, although cooled platelets had increased actin nucleation sites and became spherical. Another step in normal platelet shape changes requires the severing of actin filaments that maintain the resting platelet. The proteins that sever initially bind to the broken filament ends, and uncapping of these fragmented filaments provides numerous nucleation sites for growth of actin filaments to fill in spreading filopodia and lamellae. Actin filament fragmentation requires a rise in intracellular calcium, and we showed that chilling platelets from 37 degrees C to 4 degrees C increases free cytosolic calcium levels from 80 nmol/L to approximately 200 nmol/L in minutes, thus providing an explanation for the spherical shape of cooled, rewarmed platelets. Blocking the calcium transient with nanomolar concentrations of the permeant calcium chelators Quin-2 and Fura-2 prevented the increase in nucleation sites and the sphering, but not the other shape changes of chilled and rewarmed platelets. However, a combination of micromolar cytochalasin B and millimolar intracellular calcium chelators preserved the discoid shapes of chilled and rewarmed platelets. After removal of cytochalasin B and addition of sufficient extracellular calcium, these platelets responded with normal morphologic alterations to glass and thrombin activation.


1984 ◽  
Vol 52 (03) ◽  
pp. 267-270 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hoyu Takahashi ◽  
Akira Shibata

SummaryThe interaction of platelets and von Willebrand factor (vWF) in platelet-type von Willebrand’s disease (vWD) was characterized using formalin-fixed platelets from the patients. Formalin-fixed patient platelets were agglutinated directly by human vWF in normal plasma and type IIB vWD plasma, but not in type IIA vWD plasma. In the presence of a small amount of normal vWF, ristocetin-induced agglutination of patient platelets was enhanced with low concentrations of ristocetin. Wheat germ agglutinin and EDTA inhibited vWF-induced agglutination, although EDTA had no effect on ristocetin (plus vWF)-induced agglutination. These results demonstrate that vWF-induced agglutination of platelet-type vWD platelets is independent of active platelet metabolism but requires divalent cations, and suggest that platelet membrane glycoprotein I (GPI) would be involved in this agglutination.


1990 ◽  
Vol 64 (01) ◽  
pp. 117-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandra Casonato ◽  
M Teresa Sartori ◽  
Luigi de Marco ◽  
Antonio Girolami

SummaryWe have investigated the effects of 1-desamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (DDAVP) infusion on platelet count and bleeding time in 4 patients with type IIB von Willebrand’s disease (vWd). Three of four patients showed a normalization of the bleeding time within 1 h after the infusion, while bleeding time was not modified in the fourth. In accordance with the literature, thrombocytopenia was observed after DDAVP infusion, but this thrombocytopenia was due to the anticoagulants used for blood collection. In two patients (F. I., G. F.) no thrombocytopenia was observed when platelets were counted by fingerstick method but there was a 20% platelet decrease in blood samples collected in sodium citrate and a 50% decrease in samples collected in EDTA. Dramatic falls in platelet counts (70–95%) were observed in the additional two patients (C. A., D.Z.) after DDAVP infusion, when both sodium citrate or EDTA were used as anticoagulants. In the latter two patients there was also a 50% decrease in platelet count when the fingerstick method was used. The decrease in the patient’s platelet count in EDTA samples after DDAVP infusion could be prevented, in part, by the previous additions of an anti GPIb monoclonal antibody and an anti GPIIb-IIIa monoclonal antibody.Thus, the thrombocytopenia observed in the four IIB vWd patients studied after DDAVP infusion seems to be, at least partially, a pseudothrombocytopenia depending on the calcium concentration in the blood samples and the availability of GPIb and GPIIb-IIIa receptors. These findings and the normalization of the bleeding time observed in three of the four patients has led us to reconsider the possible use of DDAVP in the treatment of our IIB vWd patients.


1989 ◽  
Vol 61 (01) ◽  
pp. 111-116
Author(s):  
Sharron L Pfueller ◽  
Robyn A Bilston ◽  
Dana Logan ◽  
Rosemary David ◽  
Ian G Sloan ◽  
...  

SummaryReactivity of quinine- and quinidine-dependent antiplatelet antibodies has been compared in platelet-rich-plasma (PRP) from normal donors and from patients with von Willebrand’s disease (vWd). One quinine-dependent antibody (Q. Ab) caused platelet aggregation and [14C] serotonin release with only 7 of 12 normal donors, while another Q. Ab and a quinidine-dependent antibody (Qd. Ab) caused aggregation and release with all 12. Drug- dependent IgG binding and PF 3 availability induced by the antibodies were, however, comparable in all donors. Differences in responsiveness were associated with platelets and not plasma. vWd platelets showed normal drug-dependent IgG binding, but decreased aggregation and serotonin release to most drug- dependent antibodies. Responsiveness was not restored by purified vWf:Ag, but, in one case, was corrected by normal plasma or cryoprecipitate. Drug-dependent binding of the Q. Ab which caused variable responsiveness in normals was to the same platelet antigens (GPIb and GPIIIa) in both normal and vWd platelets and did not require plasma components. Reduced PF 3 availability was seen with some antibodies in some vWd patients. Plasma from two of these patients inhibited aggregation of normal platelets to Q. Ab and one of these inhibited aggregation to ADP. Antiplatelet antibodies were detected in these two plasmas by ELISA. Thus some Q. Ab produce different responses with platelets from different donors. In vWd, reduced responsiveness to Q.Ab and Qd. Ab may result from production of inhibitory antiplatelet antibodies.


1974 ◽  
Vol 31 (03) ◽  
pp. 519-520
Author(s):  
Leo R. Zacharski ◽  
Robert Rosenstein

1978 ◽  
Vol 40 (02) ◽  
pp. 288-301 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Meucci ◽  
I R Peake ◽  
A L Bloom

SummaryFactor VIII-related activities have been studied in platelet fractions in order to try to reconcile the conflicting findings of other workers, and to extend the studies. In platelets from 16 normal subjects procoagulant factor VIII was not detected. The amount of factor VIII-related antigen (FVIIIR: AG) in the cytosol per mg of protein was about twice that in the membrane fraction and about ten times that in the debris fraction. There was no significant difference between the amount of FVIIIR: AG and ristocetin cofactor (RistCof) activity in each fraction. The findings in haemophilic platelets were similar. In von Willebrand’s disease (vWd) one serverely affected patient had no detectable factor VIII related activities in any platelet fraction. In 5 patients with intermediate vWd results were normal. In a further 5, with more prolonged bleeding times, no FVIIIR: RistCof was detected in platelets, despite a normal amount of FVIIIR: AG in the cytosol and debris. The electrophoretic mobility of cytosol FVIIIR: AG was increased in all normals and patients, while that in the membrane and debris fractions had normal mobility. Cytosol FVIIIR: AG eluted later than normal FVIIIR: AG on gel filtration on Sepharose 2B, and also showed reduced antibody binding in an immunoradiometric assay. Precipitation of FVIIIR: AG by concanavalin A was incomplete in all platelet fractions from normals, and even more reduced in vWd platelet fractions. The results suggest the possibility of two types of platelet FVIIIR: AG.A factor VIII-related antigen was shown to be associated with normal washed platelets by immunofluorescence techniques (Bloom et al. 1973). Since then, several studies have been reported on the localisation of factor VIII related antigen (FVIIIR: AG), factor VIII procoagulant activity (FVIII: C) and factor VIII related ristocetin cofactor activity (FVIIIR: RistCof) within the platelets. Initially, Howard et al. (1974) indicated that FVIIIR: AG was firmly bound to the platelet membrane, and noted that in lysed platelets the level of FVIIIR: AG as measured by electroimmunodiffusion was higher than that in whole platelet suspensions. However, further studies by Nachman and Jaffe (1975) showed that FVIIIR: AG was also present to a considerable extent in the granules, and they detected none in the platelet cytosol. Bouma and colleagues (1975) were, however, able to find FVIIIR: AG and FVIIIR: RistCof in the cytosol upon freezing and thawing platelets. This FVIIIR: AG had an electrophoretic mobility comparable to that of normal plasma. They also noted that platelets which were air dried apparently had a granular FVIIIR:AG localisation by immunfluorescence; however, intact platelets in suspension did not stain by this method.Recently Ruggeri et al. (1977) and Sultan et al. (1977) have also found FVIIIR: AG in the cytosol, and the former authors reported it to have increased electrophoretic mobility when compared to normal plasma FVIIIR:AG. Results concerning the localisation of FVIIIR: AG in normal platelets have thus been conflicting. Similarly, in the few reports available concerning platelet FVIIIR: AG in von Willibrand’s disease variable results have also been obtained (Ruggeri et al. 1977, Howard et al. 1974, Shearn et al. 1974 and Bouma et al. 1975).In this study we report on the localisation of factor VIII-related activities in normal, haemophilic and von Willebrand’s disease platelets using available standard techniques as well as precipitation of FVIIIR: AG with the plant lectin concanavalin A, a procedure which has been shown to detect abnormal forms of FVIIIR:AG in certain types of von Willebrand’s disease (Peake and Bloom 1977).


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