Packham M A, Mustard J F
Prog Hemost Thromb. 1984;7:211-88.
Platelets do not adhere to surfaces to which flowing blood is normally exposed in vivo. When the lining of a blood vessel is altered or damaged, however, platelets do adhere to the injured site. Platelet adhesion is one of the first events in the formation of hemostatic plugs and thrombi, and plays a part in the development of atherosclerotic lesions. Other surfaces to which platelets adhere include particulate matter in the blood stream, bacteria and other microorganisms, the artificial surfaces of prosthetic devices, and some altered cells in the blood, particularly macrophages. The majority of investigators have studied the interaction of platelets with the subendothelium of normal vessels of young animals, or with isolated vessel wall constituents such as collagen. There are very few studies of platelet adhesion to repeatedly damaged or diseased blood vessels, although it is generally assumed that platelets interact with the connective tissue, fibrin, and cholesterol crystals in atherosclerotic lesions. Underlying the endothelium of blood vessel is the basement membrane, which has been shown to contain type IV collagen, elastin with its associated microfibrils, von Willebrand Factor, fibronectin, thrombospondin, laminin, and heparan sulfate. If only the endothelium is removed, the main structure exposed is the basement membrane with its associated proteins, but deeper injuries expose fibrillar type III collagen and microfibrils. In most studies in which large arteries have been injured by passage of a balloon catheter, basement membrane, type III collagen and the microfibrils around elastin have been exposed. Platelets do not react strongly with basement membrane and the type IV collagen in it is relatively inert. In contrast, platelets adhere firmly to type III (and type I) collagen and spread on it. Although in vitro studies have shown that platelets can interact with collagen in artificial media without plasma proteins, investigations of platelet adhesion at high shear rates indicate that von Willebrand Factor is necessary for firm platelet adhesion under these conditions. Fibronectin and thrombospondin may also have a role in platelet adhesion. However, platelets do not bind von Willebrand Factor or fibronectin until the platelets have been stimulated to release their granule contents, so these binding sites probably do not become available until the platelets have interacted with collagen or another release-inducing agent such as thrombin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
在体内,血小板不会黏附于正常情况下流动血液所接触的表面。然而,当血管内壁发生改变或受损时,血小板确实会黏附于损伤部位。血小板黏附是形成止血栓和血栓的首要事件之一,并且在动脉粥样硬化病变的发展过程中发挥作用。血小板黏附的其他表面包括血流中的颗粒物质、细菌及其他微生物、假体装置的人工表面以及血液中一些发生改变的细胞,尤其是巨噬细胞。大多数研究人员研究了血小板与幼年动物正常血管的内皮下层,或与诸如胶原蛋白等分离的血管壁成分之间的相互作用。尽管一般认为血小板会与动脉粥样硬化病变中的结缔组织、纤维蛋白和胆固醇晶体相互作用,但对血小板黏附于反复受损或患病血管的研究却很少。血管内皮下方是基底膜,已证明其含有IV型胶原蛋白、与其相关微原纤维的弹性蛋白、血管性血友病因子、纤连蛋白、血小板反应蛋白、层粘连蛋白和硫酸乙酰肝素。如果仅去除内皮,暴露的主要结构是带有相关蛋白质的基底膜,但更深层的损伤会暴露纤维状III型胶原蛋白和微原纤维。在大多数通过球囊导管使大动脉受损的研究中,基底膜、III型胶原蛋白和弹性蛋白周围的微原纤维都已暴露。血小板与基底膜反应不强,其中的IV型胶原蛋白相对无活性。相比之下,血小板会牢固地黏附于III型(和I型)胶原蛋白并在其上铺展。尽管体外研究表明血小板可以在没有血浆蛋白情况下在人工培养基中与胶原蛋白相互作用,但对高剪切速率下血小板黏附的研究表明,在这些条件下血管性血友病因子对于血小板的牢固黏附是必需的。纤连蛋白和血小板反应蛋白可能在血小板黏附过程中也起作用。然而,血小板在受到刺激释放其颗粒内容物之前不会结合血管性血友病因子或纤连蛋白,因此这些结合位点可能直到血小板与胶原蛋白或另一种释放诱导剂(如凝血酶)相互作用后才会出现。(摘要截选至400字)