Platelet glycoprotein VI binds to polymerized fibrin and promotes thrombin generation

E Mammadova-Bach, V Ollivier, S Loyau… - Blood, The Journal …, 2015 - ashpublications.org
E Mammadova-Bach, V Ollivier, S Loyau, M Schaff, B Dumont, R Favier, G Freyburger
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2015ashpublications.org
Fibrin, the coagulation end product, consolidates the platelet plug at sites of vascular injury
and supports the recruitment of circulating platelets. In addition to integrin αIIbβ3, another as-
yet-unidentified receptor is thought to mediate platelet interaction with fibrin. Platelet
glycoprotein VI (GPVI) interacts with collagen and several other adhesive macromolecules.
We evaluated the hypothesis that GPVI could be a functional platelet receptor for fibrin.
Calibrated thrombin assays using platelet-rich plasma (PRP) showed that tissue factor …
Abstract
Fibrin, the coagulation end product, consolidates the platelet plug at sites of vascular injury and supports the recruitment of circulating platelets. In addition to integrin αIIbβ3, another as-yet-unidentified receptor is thought to mediate platelet interaction with fibrin. Platelet glycoprotein VI (GPVI) interacts with collagen and several other adhesive macromolecules. We evaluated the hypothesis that GPVI could be a functional platelet receptor for fibrin. Calibrated thrombin assays using platelet-rich plasma (PRP) showed that tissue factor–triggered thrombin generation was impaired in GPVI-deficient patients and reduced by the anti-GPVI Fab 9O12. Assays on reconstituted PRP and PRP from fibrinogen-deficient patients revealed a fibrinogen-dependent enhancement of thrombin generation, which relied on functional GPVI. The effect of GPVI was found to depend on fibrin polymerization. A binding assay showed a specific interaction between GPVI-Fc and fibrin, inhibited by the Fab 9O12. This Fab also reduced platelet adhesion to fibrin at low (300 s−1) and high (1500 s−1) wall shear rates. Platelets adherent to fibrin displayed shape change, exposure of procoagulant phospholipids, and the formation of small clots. When hirudinated blood was perfused at 1500 s−1 over preformed fibrin-rich clots, the Fab 9O12 decreased the recruitment of platelets by up to 85%. This study identifies GPVI as a platelet receptor for polymerized fibrin with 2 major functions: (1) amplification of thrombin generation and (2) recruitment of circulating platelets to clots. These so-far-unrecognized properties of GPVI confer on it a key role in thrombus growth and stabilization.
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