The procoagulant activity obtained from bovine thrombocytes has been compared to that of lipids isolated from platelets, with and without the addition of purified bovine factor V. A one-stage assay, which consisted of delipidated bovine plasma containing RVV-activated factor X, was used to assess the activity. At low lipid concentrations no difference in coagulant activity was found between sonicated vesicles of extracted platelet lipid and lysed platelets. At higher lipid concentrations, however, the extracted lipids were found to be less active than lysed platelets. Determination of factor V in suspensions of gel-filtered platelets demonstrated that suspensions containing 2 X 10(9) platelets per ml possessed about 1% of the factor V activity present in a normal bovine plasma pool. Platelet lysis by sonication produced a five-fold increase in factor V activity. Addition of factor V to sonicated vesicles of extracted platelet lipid, so as to produce an identical factor V activity per amount of lipid as found in lysed platelets, decreased the clotting time only in the higher lipid concentration range. A further three-fold increase in the amount of factor V added to the lipid vesicles made the coagulant properties of the lipid vesicles indistinguishable from those of lysed platelets over the whole range of phospholipid concentrations tested. When the conditions of the test were changed by diminishing the concentration of factor Xa in the substrate plasma, the difference between lysed platelets and extracted platelet lipid disappeared completely. It is concluded that the higher coagulant activity of lysed platelets, as compared to that of extracted platelet lipid, can be ascribed to platelet factor V activity. Therefore there is no compelling necessity to postulate the existence of a specific procoagulant factor in the platelet other than factor V or phospholipids.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2141.1980.tb03817.x | DOI Listing |
J Neuroinflammation
January 2025
Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, University of California Irvine, Irvine, 92697, USA.
Background: Immunothrombosis is the process by which the coagulation cascade interacts with the innate immune system to control infection. However, the formation of clots within the brain vasculature can be detrimental to the host. Recent work has demonstrated that Toxoplasma gondii infects and lyses central nervous system (CNS) endothelial cells that form the blood-brain barrier (BBB).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosci Rep
September 2024
Department of Physical Chemistry, Medical University of Bialystok, Poland.
BMJ Neurol Open
July 2024
Neurology, Klinikum Chemnitz gGmbH, Chemnitz, Germany.
Objective: Interventional stroke therapy made thrombi available for histological analysis. Unfortunately, simple composition aspects such as erythrocyte versus fibrin/platelet rich did not allow a feasible allocation to thrombi's cardiac or carotid origin. Since the mentioned criteria represent characteristics of thrombus age, we used established histological criteria for determining thrombus age in patients who had an atherosclerotic (TOAST (Trial of Org 10172 in Acute stroke Treatment) 1) stroke versus patients who had a cardioembolic (TOAST 2) stroke.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Nano
June 2024
Joint Department of Biomedical Engineering of University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, United States.
Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is a pathologic state that follows systemic injury and other diseases. Often a complication of sepsis or trauma, DIC causes coagulopathy associated with paradoxical thrombosis and hemorrhage. DIC upregulates the thrombotic pathways while simultaneously downregulating the fibrinolytic pathways that cause excessive fibrin deposition, microcirculatory thrombosis, multiorgan dysfunction, and consumptive coagulopathy with excessive bleeding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld J Microbiol Biotechnol
May 2024
Faculty of Medicine, Department of Medical Microbiology, Sakarya University, Sakarya, Turkey.
In this study, it was aimed to investigate bacterial contamination in apheresis platelet suspensions (APS) by automated blood culture system and flow cytometry method (FCM).33 spiked APS each using 11 bacterial strains (5 standard strains, 6 clinical isolates), were prepared in three different dilutions (1-10, 10-50, 50-100 cfu/mL), incubated in two different temperatures (35-37 °C and 22-24 °C) and different incubation times (18-96 h) evaluated by FCM. This three different dilutions were also inoculated into special platelet culture bottles (BacT/ALERT® BPA) and loaded into the blood culture system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!