Rooney M M, Farrell D H, van Hemel B M, de Groot P G, Lord S T
Departments of Chemistry and Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC27599, USA.
Blood. 1998 Oct 1;92(7):2374-81.
Fibrinogen is a plasma protein that interacts with integrin alphaIIb beta3 to mediate a variety of platelet responses including adhesion, aggregation, and clot retraction. Three sites on fibrinogen have been hypothesized to be critical for these interactions: the Ala-Gly-Asp-Val (AGDV) sequence at the C-terminus of the gamma chain and two Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequences in the Aalpha chain. Recent data showed that AGDV is critical for platelet adhesion and aggregation, but not retraction, suggesting that either one or both of the RGD sequences are involved in clot retraction. Here we provide evidence, using engineered recombinant fibrinogen, that no one of these sites is critical for clot retraction; fibrinogen lacking all three sites still sustains a relatively normal, albeit delayed, retraction response. Three fibrinogen variants with the following mutations were examined: a substitution of RGE for RGD at position Aalpha 95-97, a substitution of RGE for RGD at position Aalpha 572-574, and a triple substitution of RGE for RGD at both Aalpha positions and deletion of AGDV from the gamma chain. Retraction rates and final clot sizes after a 20-minute incubation were indistinguishable when comparing the Aalpha D97E fibrinogen or Aalpha D574E fibrinogen with normal recombinant fibrinogen. However, with the triple mutant fibrinogen, clot retraction was delayed compared with normal recombinant fibrinogen. Nevertheless, the final clot size measured after 20 minutes was the same size as a clot formed with normal recombinant fibrinogen. Similar results were observed using platelets isolated from an afibrinogenemic patient, eliminating the possibility that the retraction was dependent on secretion of plasma fibrinogen from platelet alpha-granules. These findings indicate that clot retraction is a two-step process, such that one or more of the three putative platelet binding sites are important for an initial step in clot retraction, but not for a subsequent step. With the triple mutant fibrinogen, the second step of clot retraction, possibly the development of clot tension, proceeds with a rate similar to that observed with normal recombinant fibrinogen. These results are consistent with a mechanism where a novel site on fibrin is involved in the second step of clot retraction.
纤维蛋白原是一种血浆蛋白,它与整合素αIIbβ3相互作用,介导多种血小板反应,包括黏附、聚集和凝块回缩。纤维蛋白原上的三个位点被认为对这些相互作用至关重要:γ链C末端的丙氨酸-甘氨酸-天冬氨酸-缬氨酸(Ala-Gly-Asp-Val,AGDV)序列以及α链中的两个精氨酸-甘氨酸-天冬氨酸(Arg-Gly-Asp,RGD)序列。最近的数据表明,AGDV对血小板黏附和聚集至关重要,但对凝块回缩并非如此,这表明RGD序列中的一个或两个参与了凝块回缩。在此,我们使用工程重组纤维蛋白原提供证据表明,这些位点中没有一个对凝块回缩至关重要;缺乏所有三个位点的纤维蛋白原仍能维持相对正常的凝块回缩反应,尽管有所延迟。我们检测了具有以下突变的三种纤维蛋白原变体:α链95-97位的RGD被RGE取代、α链572-574位的RGD被RGE取代,以及α链两个位置的RGD均被RGE取代且γ链的AGDV缺失。将α链D97E纤维蛋白原或α链D574E纤维蛋白原与正常重组纤维蛋白原进行比较时,孵育20分钟后的凝块回缩率和最终凝块大小没有差异。然而,对于三重突变纤维蛋白原,与正常重组纤维蛋白原相比,凝块回缩有所延迟。尽管如此,20分钟后测量的最终凝块大小与正常重组纤维蛋白原形成的凝块大小相同。使用从无纤维蛋白原血症患者分离的血小板也观察到了类似结果,排除了凝块回缩依赖于血小板α颗粒分泌血浆纤维蛋白原的可能性。这些发现表明,凝块回缩是一个两步过程,因此三个假定的血小板结合位点中的一个或多个对凝块回缩的初始步骤很重要,但对后续步骤并非如此。对于三重突变纤维蛋白原,凝块回缩的第二步,可能是凝块张力的发展,其进行速率与正常重组纤维蛋白原观察到的速率相似。这些结果与一种机制一致,即纤维蛋白上的一个新位点参与了凝块回缩的第二步。