Proteolysis leads to the appearance of the long form of beta3-endonexin in human platelets.

Exp Cell Res

Laboratoire d'Etude de la Différenciation et de l'Adhérence Cellulaires, UMR UJF/CNRS 5538, Institut Albert Bonniot, Faculté de Médecine de Grenoble, Domaine de la Merci, 38706 La Tronche Cedex, France.

Published: May 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • After a vessel injury, platelets stick to the damaged area, activating an integrin (alpha(IIb)beta3) that helps aggregate platelets through fibrinogen binding.
  • The protein beta3-endonexin can activate this integrin and several forms exist, but the specific isoforms in platelets and their function during blood clotting (haemostasis) are not fully understood.
  • The study identifies the long form of beta3-endonexin (EN-L) present in platelets after thrombus formation, highlighting that its generation involves temperature, calcium levels, and proteolysis, and is linked to the aging of stored platelets and potential late-stage clotting events.

Article Abstract

After vessel injury, platelets adhere to the subendothelial matrix. Platelet adhesion leads to activation of the platelet integrin alpha(IIb)beta3, which then binds to fibrinogen, leading to platelet aggregation. It has been shown that a beta3-integrin binding protein, beta3-endonexin, can activate the integrin alpha(IIb)beta3 expressed in transfected CHO cells. Several isoforms of beta3-endonexin are known but it is not clear which isoforms are expressed in platelets and what role they may play during haemostasis. Here, we show that the long form of beta3-endonexin (EN-L) can be detected in platelet lysates several hours after thrombus formation, after long-term storage of platelets and after glucose deprivation. After subcellular fractionation, EN-L is found in the detergent insoluble fraction suggesting that it might be associated with the cytoskeleton. EN-L generation is temperature and Ca++ dependent and requires physiological salt concentrations. Proteolysis is responsible for the appearance of EN-L since a calpain inhibitor prevents its formation and the addition of calpain to platelet lysates induces its formation. The appearance of EN-L seems to be linked to apoptotic events occurring during long-term storage of platelets and, possibly, during late steps of haemostasis after thrombus formation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yexcr.2005.02.003DOI Listing

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