4.6 Article

Platelet microparticle membranes have 50-to 100-fold higher specific procoagulant activity than activated platelets

Journal

THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS
Volume 97, Issue 3, Pages 425-434

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1160/TH06-06-0313

Keywords

platelet; PMPs; procoagulant activity; spatial dynamics of coagulation; thrombin generation; factor X; phosphatidylserine; CD-61; CD-62P

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Platelet microparticles (PMPs) are small vesicles released from blood platelets upon activation. The procoagulant activity of PMPs has been previously mainly characterized by their ability to bind coagulation factors VIII and Va in reconstructed systems. It can be supposed that PMPs can contribute to the development of thrombotic complications in the pathologic states associated with the increase of their blood concentration. In this study, we compared procoagulant properties of calcium ionophore A23187-activated platelets and PMPs using several in-vitro models of hemostasis. Surface densities of phosphatidylserine, CD61, CD62P and factor X bound per surface area unit were determined by flow cytometry. They were 2.7-, 8.4-, 4.3-, and 13-fold higher for PMPs than for activated platelets, respectively. Spatial clot growth rate (V-clot) in the reaction-diffusion experimental model and endogenous thrombin potential (ETP) were determined in plasma, which was depleted of phospholipid cell surfaces by ultra-centrifugation and supplemented with activated platelets or PMPs at different concentrations. Both V-clot and ETP rapidly increased with the increase of PMP or platelet concentration until saturation was reached. The plateau values of V-clot and ETP for activated platelets and PMPs were similar. In both assays, the procoagulant activity of one PMP was almost equal to that of one activated platelet despite at least two-orders-of-magnitude difference in their surface areas. This suggests that the PMP surface is approximately 50- to 100-fold more procoagulant than the surface of activated platelets.

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