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J Biol Chem, Vol. 274, Issue 2, 972-980, January 8, 1999
From the Department of Biochemistry, University of Vermont College
of Medicine, Burlington, Vermont 05405
The platelet high affinity binding site for
thrombin appears to be described by a classical receptor-ligand
interaction that is distinct from the platelet thrombin
receptor/substrate, PAR-1. However, the identification and function of
the high affinity binding site with respect to its physiological
importance have continued to elude investigators. Prior studies using
two mutant thrombins suggested that thrombin interaction with the
platelet high affinity binding site is mediated through an extensive
portion of the thrombin molecule involving residues within the
substrate binding pocket and the anion binding exosite (Leong, L.,
Henriksen, R. A., Kermode, J. C., Rittenhouse, S. E., and Tracy,
P. B. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 2567-2575) and may mimic a
thrombin-hirudin interaction. To test this hypothesis, an anti-hirudin
peptide antibody (anti-hirpeptide Ab) was raised against a peptide
mimicking the COOH terminus of hirudin. The Ab recognized adherent
platelets and those in suspension as determined by enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay and immunofluorescence microscopy, respectively.
125I-Thrombin binding to platelets was inhibited in the
presence of the anti-hirpeptide Ab in a dose-dependent
manner with maximal inhibition >90%. Analyses of data from binding
studies of 125I-thrombin to platelets at a fixed Ab
concentration indicated that the anti-hirpeptide Ab inhibited the high
affinity binding interaction exclusively. In addition, thrombin-induced
increases in platelet [Ca2+]i
were enhanced by blocking the high affinity binding site with the Ab
due to redistribution of the agonist to PAR-1. Thrombin Quick I-induced
platelet calcium mobilization was unaffected by the presence of the Ab,
consistent with the inability of thrombin Quick I to bind to the high
affinity site. Even though glycoprotein (GP) Ib contains a hirudin-like
region within the
subunit, the postulated high affinity binding
site, direct binding of 125I-thrombin could not be
demonstrated to transfected Chinese hamster ovary and L cells
expressing the GP Ib-IX-V complex. Furthermore, an anti-GP Ib Ab,
raised to the peptide region proposed as the thrombin high affinity
site, did not enhance thrombin-induced platelet calcium mobilization.
The anti-hirpeptide Ab recognized a population of platelet membrane
proteins distinct from PAR-1 and GP Ib by three-color
immunofluorescence using confocal microscopy. These combined studies
demonstrate that the high affinity binding site for thrombin is a
unique platelet protein distinct from GP Ib which modulates the
effective thrombin concentration localized at the human platelet surface.
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