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HEMOSTASIS, THROMBOSIS, AND VASCULAR BIOLOGY
From the Laboratory of Thrombosis and Haemostasis,
Department of Hematology, Julius Center for Patient Oriented Research,
and Department of Pathology, University Medical Center Utrecht,
Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Platelet thrombus formation on collagen is initiated by platelet
GPIb interaction with von Willebrand factor (vWF) bound to collagen, followed by firm attachment of the platelet to collagen by
the integrin Hemostasis and thrombosis are initiated by the
adhesion of platelets to collagen.1 First, platelet
velocity is reduced by the interaction between GPIb on the platelet
surface and von Willebrand factor (vWF), which is attached to
collagen.2,3 This allows the binding of
The number of We have studied the relations between genetic and acquired variations
of Patients
Adhesive surfaces
Reagents Monoclonal antibody (MoAb) 6F1 and MoAb 176D7, directed against the 2 subunit of the integrin
2 1, were kindly provided by Dr B. Coller14 (Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, NY) and by Dr
H. R. Gralnick15 (National Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, MD), respectively.
Bleeding time measurement The bleeding time was determined using the Simplate IIR 59271 device (Organon Technica, Durham, NC), according to Mielke.16 After bleeding time measurement, the opposite arm was used for blood sampling.Perfusions Blood was anticoagulated with 1:10 volume of 150 U/mL Orgaran (a low-molecular-weight heparinoid [LMWH]; Organon, Oss, the Netherlands). Perfusions were routinely performed in a single-pass parallel-plate perfusion chamber with a slit height of 0.1 mm,17 corresponding to a flow rate of 260 µL/min (shear rate = 1300/s). Blood was prewarmed at 37°C for 10 minutes and was drawn by a Harvard infusion pump (pump 22, model 2400-004; Natick, MA) through 4 parallel connected perfusion chambers for 5 minutes. After each perfusion run, the 4 coverslips were removed from the perfusion chambers, rinsed with PBS, fixed in glutardialdehyde (0.5% 10 mmol/L sodium phosphate, 150 mmol/L NaCl, pH 7.4), and stained with May-Grünwald-Giemsa.18 Platelet adhesion was quantified with a light microscope (at 1000× magnification) equipped with a CCD camera (JAI-CV-235C, Copenhagen, Denmark) coupled to a Matrox frame grabber (Matrox Electronic Systems, Quebec, Canada) using Optimas 6.0 software (Optimas, Seattle, WA). Three lines perpendicular to the flow direction were evaluated: 1 line in the center of the coverslip and 2 lines, 3 mm to the right and 3 mm to the left of the center. Platelet adhesion was expressed as the percentage of the surface covered with platelets.Quantitation of platelet 2 1 on the platelet surface was quantified
as mean fluorescence intensity (MIF).
Determination of 2 subunit of
2 1 was amplified in 20 mmol/L Tris/HCl, pH 8.0, 2.5 mmol/L MgCl2, 50 mmol/L KCl, 0.1 mg/mL bovine
serum albumin, 0.4 pmol of 3' primer
(5'-TGTTTAACTTGAACACATATAAAACC-3'), 0.4 pmol of 5' primer
(5'-GATTTAACTTTCCCAGCTGCCTTC-3'), 0.42 mmol/L of each nucleotide
(Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden), 0.075 U superTAQ polymerase (HT
Biotechnology Ltd., Cambridge, UK), and 5 µL DNA. Amplification was
performed with an MJ Research PTC200 multicycler (MJ Research,
Watertown, MA). Temperature cycles were: 4 minutes at 94°C, 33 cycles
of 40 seconds at 94°C, 40 seconds at 55°C, and 2 minutes at 72 °C. The reaction was terminated with 10 minutes of incubation at
72°C. Genotype was determined from each DNA fraction by dot blotting
and hybridization with antigen-specific oligonucleotides.20 The antigen-specific oligonucleotide
for the C807 allele was 5'- 32P-
AATTGCTCCGAATGTGTT-3' and for the 807T allele was
5'- 32P-AATTGCTCCAAATGTGTT-3'. Dots were visualized
on x-ray films (DuPont, Brussels, Belgium).
Platelet aggregation in response to collagen Blood was anticoagulated with 1:10 volume of 150 U/mL Orgaran or with 130 mmol/L trisodium citrate. Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) was obtained by centrifugation, and the platelet count was adjusted to 250 × 103 platelets/µL. A total of 500 µL of PRP was prewarmed at 37°C for 3 minutes, and aggregation was initiated by fibrillar collagen type I or III. Fibrillar collagen types I and III were solubilized in 0.1 mol/L acetic acid at 1 mg/mL and were dialyzed twice for 24 hours at 4°C against a sodium phosphate buffer (20 mmol/L Na2HPO4) at pH 7.4.2 Threshold values of collagen types I and III to obtain platelet aggregation were measured in a Lumiaggregometer (Chronolog, Havertown, PA) at 37°C.Platelet aggregation in response to arachidonic acid Platelet aggregation in response to arachidonic acid was determined to exclude the volunteers who had taken aspirin or other platelet-function inhibitors. Blood was anticoagulated with 1:10 volume of 250 U/mL LMWH. A total of 450 µL of PRP (250 × 103 platelets/µL) was prewarmed at 37°C for 3 minutes, and aggregation was initiated by 50 µL arachidonic acid (15 mmol/L; Biodata, Horsham, PA) in a Chronolog Lumiaggregometer at 37°C.vWF in plasma and in platelets Blood was anticoagulated in 1:10 volume of acid-citrate-dextrose anticoagulant (85 mmol/L trisodium citrate·2H2O, 71 mmol/L citric acid, and 111 mmol/L glucose). Platelet-poor plasma (PPP) and PRP were prepared by centrifugation. PPP was immediately frozen at 70°C for the
determination of vWF in plasma. After sedimentation, the platelets were
washed 3 times in washing buffer (5 mmol/L sodium citrate, 0.15 mol/L
NaCl, pH 6.5; containing 5 mmol/L EDTA, 10 µmol/L leupeptin, 6 mmol/L
N-ethylmaleimide, and 10 ng/mL Iloprost, pH 6.5) and then resuspended
at 106/µL in the same buffer. Lysis was obtained by
incubating the platelet suspension with 1:40 volume of 20% Triton
X-100 for 1 hour at 37°C. The insoluble fraction was precipitated by
centrifugation at 10 000g for 20 minutes, and the
supernatant was frozen at 70°C for the determination of vWF in
platelets. The vWF antigen was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent
assay with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-vWF (Dako A/S,
Glostrup, Denmark).
ADP and ATP in platelets PRP was prepared from fresh citrated blood (130 mmol/L trisodium citrate) by centrifugation. ATP and ADP in the metabolic pool as well as in the storage pool were collected by extraction with ethanol. One milliliter of PRP was mixed with 2 mL cold EDTA-ethanol solution (1:10 volume of 0.1 mol/L EDTA, pH 7.4, and 9:10 volume of ethanol 96%) and was immediately frozen at 70°C. ATP was measured by using firefly
luminescence. ADP was converted into ATP by phospho enol
pyruvate-pyruvate kinase (PEP-PK) (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) and was measured separately by the same
method.21
Magnesium in plasma PPP was prepared by centrifugation of blood anticoagulated with unfractionated heparin (5 U/mL) and was immediately frozen at 70°C.
The total magnesium concentration was measured with an Ektachem
Analyzer E700 XR (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY); the ionized magnesium
concentration was measured with an ion-selective electrode from NOVA
Biomedical (Waltman, MA).
Statistical analysis The population mean and standard error of the mean were calculated for continuous variables. Dichotomous variables were expressed as the fraction of the total population. Differences in 2 1 density; platelet adhesion to collagen
types I, III, and IV; Simplate bleeding time; and threshold values of
collagen types I and III for platelets to aggregate under static
conditions according to 2 1 genotype were
analyzed with independent-sample t-test analyses. The
correlations between 2 1 density, plasma
vWF and platelet vWF, and ADP levels and ADP/ATP ratio were calculated
using linear regression analysis; as were platelet adhesion to collagen
types I, III, and IV; Simplate bleeding time; and threshold values of
collagen types I and III for platelets to aggregate under
static conditions. Subgroup analysis was performed according
to 2 1 density lower or greater than the
median and plasma vWF lower or greater than the median. Subjects who
had both 2 1 density and plasma vWF lower
than the median were defined as the reference group. Differences
between subgroups and the reference group were tested by
independent-sample t-test analyses. Similarly, subgroup
analysis was performed on 2 1 density and
platelet vWF.
Our study population comprised 17 men and 15 women (Table
1). The average age was 36.9 years, and 8 subjects were smokers. Platelets from 5 subjects did not
respond to arachidonic acid, although none of the subjects reported
that they had used aspirin.
The
Table 2 shows the relation of
Comparable results were found for
The interaction between
Subjects with both platelet vWF levels and
In this report, we have shown that the C807T polymorphism in
To appreciate our findings, some characteristics of our study need to
be addressed. Collagen-adhesion experiments were performed under flow
conditions at a shear rate of 1300/s, which approximates the
physiologic shear rate in arterioles. This allows the platelets to
aggregate via the multistep process starting with the binding of vWF to
collagen. Subsequently, GPIb on the platelet surface can bind vWF to
reduce the velocity of platelets4,5 and to realize firm
attachment of platelets to collagen through the interaction of
Our study population was based on 32 unselected laboratory employees.
Platelet-adhesion experiments, Platelet coverage on the collagen surface was measured in a standard
way after 5 minutes of perfusion. Single-time-point measures of
platelet deposition may give an underestimation of the platelet adhesion rate. We expect that the differences in platelet deposition between Our findings that platelet adhesion to collagen types I and III depends
on plasma levels of vWF and that this relation is strongly enhanced by
increased The finding that platelet adhesion to collagen type IV was mainly
dependent on We did not observe a relation between Simplate bleeding time and
The absence of a relation between ADP levels and platelet deposition to collagen may be a consequence of the small population size of our study relative to the high standard deviations of the ADP levels. Therefore, the confidence intervals were too wide to draw firm conclusions in relation to platelet deposition to collagen. The relation between ADP levels and reduced bleeding time was mainly a consequence of extreme values in one subject. We therefore cannot draw conclusions on a relation between ADP levels and bleeding time for the total population. In summary, plasma and platelet vWF levels and
The finding that genetic and phenotypic variations of
Submitted December 28, 1999; accepted April 7, 2000.
Supported by grant nos. 93.112 and 95.165 from The Netherlands Heart Foundation to M.R. and G.H.v.Z.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. section 1734.
Reprints: Mark Roest, University Medical Center Utrecht, Department of Hematology, PO Box 85500, 3508 GA Utrecht, The Netherlands.
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© 2000 by The American Society of Hematology.
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