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      Low-Density Lipoprotein Enhances Platelet Secretion Via Integrin-α IIb β 3 –Mediated Signaling

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          Abstract

          Abstract —LDL is known to increase the sensitivity of human platelets for agonists and to induce aggregation and secretion independently at high concentrations, but its mechanism of action is largely obscure. To clarify how LDL increases platelet sensitivity, cells were incubated in lipoprotein-poor plasma and treated with collagen at a concentration that induced ≈20% secretion of 14 C-serotonin. Preincubation with LDL (30 minutes at 37°C) enhanced secretion in a dose-dependent manner to 60±14% at a concentration of 2 g LDL protein/L. Similar stimulation by LDL was seen when secretion was induced by the thrombin receptor–activating peptide. This enhancement was strongly reduced (1) in the presence of monoclonal antibody PAC1 against activated α IIb β 3 , a polyclonal antibody against α IIb , and in the presence of the fibrinogen peptides GRGDS and HHLGGAKQAGDV; (2) in α IIb β 3 -deficient platelets; and (3) after dissociation of α IIb β 3 . In contrast, binding of 125 I-LDL to normal platelets in the presence of PAC1, anti-α IIb , GRGDS, and HHLGGAKQAGDV, and to α IIb β 3 -deficient platelets was normal. LDL increased the surface expression of fibrinogen in lipoprotein-poor plasma and fibrinogen-free medium, suggesting that extracellular and granular fibrinogen bind to α IIb β 3 after platelet-LDL interaction. Platelets deficient in fibrinogen (<0.5% of normal) or von Willebrand Factor (<1% of normal) but containing normal amounts of other ligands for α IIb β 3 preserved responsiveness to LDL, indicating that occupancy of α IIb β 3 was not restricted to fibrinogen. Inhibition of protein kinase C (bisindolylmaleimide) diminished fibrinogen binding and sensitization by LDL; inhibition of tyrosine kinases (herbimycin A) left fibrinogen binding unchanged but diminished sensitization by LDL. We conclude that an increased concentration of LDL, such as observed in homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, sensitizes platelets to stimulation by collagen and thrombin receptor–activating peptide via ligand-induced outside-in signaling through integrin-α IIb β 3 .

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          Most cited references49

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          The distribution and chemical composition of ultracentrifugally separated lipoproteins in human serum.

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            The bisindolylmaleimide GF 109203X is a potent and selective inhibitor of protein kinase C.

            Staurosporine is the most potent inhibitor of protein kinase C (PKC) described in the literature with a half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 10 nM. Nevertheless, this natural product is poorly selective when assayed against other protein kinases. In order to obtain specific PKC inhibitors, a series of bisindolylmaleimides has been synthesized. Structure-activity relationship studies allowed the determination of the substructure responsible for conferring high potency and lack of selectivity in the staurosporine molecule. Several aminoalkyl bisindolylmaleimides were found to be potent and selective PKC inhibitors (IC50 values from 5 to 70 nM). Among these compounds GF 109203X has been chosen for further studies aiming at the characterization of this chemical family. GF 109203X was a competitive inhibitor with respect to ATP (Ki = 14 +/- 3 NM) and displayed high selectivity for PKC as compared to five different protein kinases. We further determined the potency and specificity of GF 109203X in two cellular models: human platelets and Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts. GF 109203X efficiently prevented PKC-mediated phosphorylations of an Mr = 47,000 protein in platelets and of an Mr = 80,000 protein in Swiss 3T3 cells. In contrast, in the same models, the PKC inhibitor failed to prevent PKC-independent phosphorylations. GF 109203X inhibited collagen- and alpha-thrombin-induced platelet aggregation as well as collagen-triggered ATP secretion. However, ADP-dependent reversible aggregation was not modified. In Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts, GF 109203X reversed the inhibition of epidermal growth factor binding induced by phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate and prevented [3H] thymidine incorporation into DNA, only when this was elicited by growth promoting agents which activate PKC. Our results illustrate the potential of GF 109203X as a tool for studying the involvement of PKC in signal transduction pathways.
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              Quantitative estimation of proteins by electrophoresis in agarose gel containing antibodies.

              C Laurell (1966)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
                ATVB
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                1079-5642
                1524-4636
                February 1999
                February 1999
                : 19
                : 2
                : 239-247
                Affiliations
                [1 ]From the Departments of Clinical Chemistry (C.M.H., M.H., M.W.P., H.J.M.v.R.) and Haematology (C.M.H., M.H., H.K.N., J.-W.N.A.), University Hospital Utrecht, and Institute for Biomembranes, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
                Article
                10.1161/01.ATV.19.2.239
                7e667c1b-6bb6-4693-84a2-00f69bdc94cb
                © 1999
                History

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