The platelet storage and release mechanisms for the heparin-neutralizing activity (HNA), adenosine diphosphate (ADP), serotonin, and lysosomal enzymes were investigated in normal human platelets and in platelets with defective storage or release of ADP and serotonin. The time course of release of HNA from normal washed platelets by thrombin and collagen was slower than that of serotonin. Lysosomal enzymes were not released by collagen from normal washed platelets, whereas under the same conditions HNA was released. In four of six patients with storage pool deficiency, the platelets contained normal amounts of HNA but definitely decreased amounts of ADP and serotonin, whereas in the remaining two patients the total contents of ADP, serotonin, and HNA were all definitely lower than normal. In four of six patients with storage pool deficiency, the amounts and per cents of total HNA released by collagen were normal, whereas the amounts and per cents of total ADP released were diminished compared with normal. Platelets from patients with the aspirinlike platelet release defect and from aspirin-treated normal subjects contained normal quantities of ADP, serotonin, and HNA, but HNA and ADP were not released in response to collagen. It is concluded that either HNA is stored in and released from dense granules by mechanisms different from those for ADP and serotonin, or that HNA is stored in and released from granules other than the dense granules, which contain ADP and serotonin and the α-granules, which contain lysosomal enzymes.

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