학술논문

γ and α Chains of Human Fibrinogen Possess Sites Reactive with Human Platelet Receptors
Document Type
research-article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 1982 Mar . 79(6), 2068-2071.
Subject
Medical Sciences
Platelet Aggregation
Adhesion
Antibody Probe
Platelets
Receptors
Aggregation
Platelet aggregation
Social interaction
Antibodies
Blood
Reactivity
Biochemistry
Blood proteins
Language
English
ISSN
00278424
Abstract
Fibrinogen, a clottable plasma protein, agglutinates both prokaryotic cells (e.g., staphylococci) and eukaryotic cell fragments (e.g., platelets) through interaction with specific receptors. To identify the region of the fibrinogen molecule responsible for its interaction with human platelets, we prepared polypeptide chain subunits (α,β , and γ ) of human fibrinogen by reduction and carboxymethylation. A mixture of the chains induced aggregation (clumping) of human platelets separated from plasma proteins and treated with ADP. When individual chains of fibrinogen were tested, γ -chain multimers caused platelet aggregation at a molar concentration comparable with that of intact human fibrinogen. The β chain remained inactive, and the α chain was 1/4th to 1/5th as reactive as the γ chain. Monospecific antibody fragments against the γ chain inhibited binding of 125 I-labeled fibrinogen to the human platelet receptor and blocked aggregation of platelets induced by ADP in the presence of fibrinogen of γ -chain multimers. These results indicate that the γ chain of human fibrinogen bears the main site for interaction with the platelet receptor.