Affiliation:
1. Laboratoire Central d'Hématologie, Hopital Hôtel Dieu, Paris, France.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Plasmin has been reported both to activate platelets and to inhibit platelet functions. The latter effect was thought to be caused by proteolysis of the main membrane glycoproteins.
METHODS AND RESULTS
We found that incubation of citrated human platelet-rich plasma with streptokinase (SK) (300 IU/ml) does not produce any detectable activation but leads to a time-dependent inhibition of ADP-induced aggregation accompanied by substantial fibrinogenolysis. These effects were abrogated by previous addition of a plasmin inhibitor, aprotinin. Crossover experiments (SK-treated or control platelets mixed with SK-treated or control plasma) demonstrated that the platelets remained functional and that the aggregation defect was caused by fibrinogenolysis. Further experiments (addition of purified fibrinogen to fibrinogen-depleted plasma with either SK or thrombin) suggested that in addition to the low residual level of fibrinogen, fibrinogen degradation products had an inhibitory effect. Under the same conditions, tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) (3,000 ng/ml) had no effect on platelet aggregation, and plasma fibrinogen was not significantly lowered. The effects on glycoproteins IIb-IIIa of incubation with SK, t-PA, or plasmin were assessed with immunoblots with murine monoclonal antibodies directed against either part of the complex, which is the receptor for fibrinogen. Proteolysis was detected only in the presence of EDTA, a potent chelator of divalent cations.
CONCLUSIONS
The incubation of human platelets in citrated plasma with SK concentrations obtained during therapy leads to an aggregation defect that is related to the decrease in fibrinogen, the adhesive protein involved in this function, and to the impeding effect of fibrinogen degradation products on its binding onto platelets but not to an alteration of the corresponding platelet receptor, the heterodimer glycoproteins IIb-IIIa.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
44 articles.
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