4.8 Article

Integrin α6β1 Is the Main Receptor for Vascular Laminins and Plays a Role in Platelet Adhesion, Activation, and Arterial Thrombosis

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 128, Issue 5, Pages 541-U170

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.112.000799

Keywords

blood platelets; integrin alpha(6)beta(1); laminin; thrombosis

Funding

  1. INSERM
  2. Etablissement Francais du Sang
  3. Association de Recherche et Developpement en Medecine et Sante Publique
  4. Fondation de France
  5. Institut National du Cancer
  6. Fondation pour la Recherche sur le Cancer
  7. Ligue contre le Cancer-Alsace
  8. French government
  9. INSERM-Region Alsace grant
  10. Fondation Franco-Chinoise pour la Science et ses Applications
  11. China Scholarship Council

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background-Laminins are major components of basement membranes, well located to interact with platelets upon vascular injury. Laminin-111 (alpha(1)beta(1)gamma(1)) is known to support platelet adhesion but is absent from most blood vessels, which contain isoforms with the alpha(2), alpha(4), or alpha(5) chain. Whether vascular laminins support platelet adhesion and activation and the significance of these interactions in hemostasis and thrombosis remain unknown. Methods and Results-Using an in vitro flow assay, we show that laminin-411 (alpha(4)beta(1)gamma(1)), laminin-511 (alpha(5)beta(1)gamma(1)), and laminin-521 (alpha(5)beta(2)gamma(1)), but not laminin-211 (alpha(2)beta(1)gamma(1)), allow efficient platelet adhesion and activation across a wide range of arterial wall shear rates. Adhesion was critically dependent on integrin alpha(6)beta(1) and the glycoprotein Ib-IX complex, which binds to plasmatic von Willebrand factor adsorbed on laminins. Glycoprotein VI did not participate in the adhesive process but mediated platelet activation induced by alpha(5)-containing laminins. To address the significance of platelet/laminin interactions in vivo, we developed a platelet-specific knockout of integrin alpha(6). Platelets from these mice failed to adhere to laminin-411, laminin-511, and laminin-521 but responded normally to a series of agonists. alpha(6)beta(1)-Deficient mice presented a marked decrease in arterial thrombosis in 3 models of injury of the carotid, aorta, and mesenteric arterioles. The tail bleeding time and blood loss remained unaltered, indicating normal hemostasis. Conclusions-This study reveals an unsuspected important contribution of laminins to thrombus formation in vivo and suggests that targeting their main receptor, integrin alpha(6)beta(1), could represent an alternative antithrombotic strategy with a potentially low bleeding risk.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available