4.7 Article

Temporal quantitative phosphoproteomics of ADP stimulation reveals novel central nodes in platelet activation and inhibition

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 129, Issue 2, Pages E1-E12

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2016-05-714048

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Funding

  1. Ministerium fur Innovation
  2. Wissenschaft und Forschung des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen
  3. Senatsverwaltung fur Wirtschaft, Technologie und Forschung des Landes Berlin
  4. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung [0315395A, 0315395D, 01EO1003, 01EO1503]
  5. German Research Foundation DGF [SFB688 TPA2, ZA 639/4-1, Ju 2735/2-1]

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Adenosine diphosphate (ADP) enhances platelet activation by virtually any other stimulant to complete aggregation. It binds specifically to the G-protein-coupled membrane receptors P2Y1 and P2Y12, stimulating intracellular signaling cascades, leading to integrin aIIbb3 activation, a process antagonized by endothelial prostacyclin. P2Y12 inhibitors are among the most successful antiplatelet drugs, however, show remarkable variability in efficacy. We reasoned whether a more detailed molecular understanding of ADP-induced protein phosphorylation could identify (1) critical hubs in platelet signaling toward aggregation and (2) novel molecular targets for antiplatelet treatment strategies. We applied quantitative temporal phosphoproteomics to study ADP-mediated signaling at unprecedented molecular resolution. Furthermore, to mimic the antagonistic efficacy of endothelial-derived prostacyclin, we determinedhow Iloprost reverses ADP-mediated signaling events. We provide temporal profiles of 4797 phosphopeptides, 608 of which showed significant regulation. Regulated proteins are implicated in well-known activating functions such as degranulation and cytoskeletal reorganization, but also in less well-understood pathways, involving ubiquitin ligases and GTPase exchange factors/GTPaseactivating proteins (GEF/GAP). Our data demonstrate that ADP-triggered phosphorylation occurs predominantly within the first 10 seconds, with many short rather than sustained changes. For a set of phosphorylation sites (eg, PDE3A(Ser312), CALDAG-GEFI(Ser587), ENSA(Ser109)), we demonstrate an inverse regulation by ADP and Iloprost, suggesting that these are central modulators of platelet homeostasis. This study demonstrates an extensive spectrum of human platelet protein phosphorylation in response to ADP and Iloprost, which inversely overlap and represent major activating and inhibitory pathways.

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