Abstract
Abstract 474
Thrombin (Th) is a pleiotropic protease with prothrombotic, anticoagulant and proinflammatory functions. We have characterized the mechanisms through which the binding of Th to glycoprotein (GP) Ibα, a component of the GPIb-IX-V complex on platelets, may regulate these activities. First, we tested the hypothesis, based on crystallographic evidence, that both exosite I and II of α-Th are required for binding to GPIbα. For these studies, in addition to α-Th we used meizothrombin (M-Th), a precursor with functional exosite I but without exosite II, and γ-Th, a degradation product of α-Th with intact exosite II but structurally deranged exosite I. For experiments with purified components, we used a fully sulphated recombinant fragment of human GPIbα (residues -2-290; herein designated GPIbαN) with wild-type sequence (WT) or with the single mutations Y279F (prevents sulphation) or D277N. These residues are predicted to influence predominantly or exclusively the interaction with thrombin exosite I or II, respectively. In experiments measuring the formation of a stable complex in solution, GPIbαN-WT bound α-Th and γ-Th with similar characteristics, while there was no complex formed with M-Th under the same conditions. The mutation Y279F had only a modest effect, while the mutation D277N abolished formation of all complexes, indicating that exosite II is predominantly involved in binding a GPIbα fragment in solution. To obtain more biologically relevant findings, we generated BL6 mice with platelets expressing human GPIbα replacing the corresponding murine component in the GPIb-IX-V complex, either with wild-type sequence (h-WT strain) or with the mutations Y279F (h-279F strain) or D277N (h-277N strain). All had comparable surface expression of GPIbα (∼7,000 molecules/platelet). Platelets from h-WT mice bound α-Th and γ-Th in a saturable manner and with a similar apparent kd (∼50 nM) as human platelets. Because we could not label thrombin directly without affecting binding to platelet GPIbα, we used an indirect approach with biotin-PPACK inserted into the active site of α-Th, γ-Th or M-Th detected by fluorescent streptavidin-PE. With this method, there was no demonstrable M-Th binding to platelet GPIbα. Platelets from h-279F mice showed a markedly decreased binding of α-Th (∼16% of that seen with h-WT platelets and kd of 450 nM) and no binding of γ-Th. Neither α-Th or γ-Th bound to h-277N platelets. Altogether, these results show that α-Th binding to platelet GPIbα concurrently involves exosite I and II, and suggest that the deranged exosite I of γ-Th can contribute to the interaction but is not fully functional, as shown by the greater effect of the mutation Y279F on the binding with γ-Th than α-Th. Functionally, h-279F and h-277N platelets showed a significantly decreased response to stimulation by α-Th and decreased aggregation as compared to h-WT platelets, indicating that GPIbα contributes to this prothrombotic function of α-Th. In contrast, h-WT but not h-279F or h-277N platelets inhibited fibrinogen clotting, likely a consequence of GPIbα competing with fibrinogen for binding to α-Th exosite I, indicating that α-Th binding to GPIbα can also have anticoagulant consequences. Thus, we have shown that GPIbα is a relevant modulator of α-Th activity with potentially opposite effects on thrombogenesis possibly depending on the type of vascular lesion involved. Effects on inflammation remain to be explored.
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.
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