Thromb Haemost 2001; 86(04): 1065-1069
DOI: 10.1055/s-0037-1616534
Special Article
Schattauer GmbH

Both the High Affinity Thrombin Receptor (GPIb-IX-V) and GPIIb/IIIa Are Implicated in Expression of Thrombin-induced Platelet Procoagulant Activity

Authors

  • Ira B. Dicker

    1   DuPont Pharmaceuticals Company, Wilmington, DE, USA
  • Donna L. Pedicord

    1   DuPont Pharmaceuticals Company, Wilmington, DE, USA
  • Dietmar A. Seiffert

    1   DuPont Pharmaceuticals Company, Wilmington, DE, USA
  • G.A. Jamieson

    2   American Red Cross, Rockville, MD, USA
  • Nicholas J. Greco

    2   American Red Cross, Rockville, MD, USA
Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

Received 02. August 2000

Accepted after resubmission 06. Juni 2001

Publikationsdatum:
09. Dezember 2017 (online)

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Summary

Platelets activated by -thrombin express surface procoagulant activity (PCA) that accelerates the conversion of prothrombin to α-thrombin. Following activation with 10 nM α-thrombin, the PCA of normal platelets was approximately five-fold higher than that of Bernard-Soulier platelets (lacking GPIb). Normal platelet PCA was inhibited ~50 % by activation in the presence of the anti-GPIb MoAbs LJIb10 or TM60. Moreover, normal platelet PCA was completely abrogated in the presence of a combination of both LJIb10 and c7E3, a MoAb directed against αIIbβ3 (GPIIb/IIIa). In contrast, PCA expressed by Bernard Soulier or Glanzmann platelets was not inhibited by either LJIb10 or c7E3 MoAb. The platelet activating peptide SFLLRN at 10 μM, a concentration which fully activates platelet aggregation and Ca2+ mobilization, generated PCA activity one fifth of that generated by α-thrombin at 10 nM but anti-PAR1 antibodies did not affect thrombin-induced PCA expression. These results demonstrate that GPIb mediates, at least in part, the thrombin-induced activation of platelets that leads to PCA, and that αIIbβ3 is also involved in PCA generation, but these results do not support a major role for PAR1 in this activation.