Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.5 (thrombin)
33,306 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this study, the clinical history of two patients with the gray platelet syndrome, a rare congenital disorder associating thrombopathia and myelofibrosis is recalled. Complementary studies on platelets and megakaryocytes were performed, mainly with an immunocytochemical approach. In gray platelets, a general decrease of alpha-granule proteins, including PF4, beta tg and PDGF was observed. The decrease in platelet mitogenic activity (PDGF) was confirmed by biological and radio-immunological measurements. An abnormally high level of these compounds was also found in the plasma. In megakaryocytes cultured from the bone marrow of these patients, alpha-granule proteins were normally expressed in early maturation stages, whereas they were found to be absent in the mature megakaryocytes. An alpha-granule membrane glycoprotein, GMP 140 has been studied in resting and thrombin stimulated gray platelets and was found to be normally expressed at the surface of stimulated platelets. GMP140 was studied in resting platelets by immunoelectron microscopy and found to be present in vacuole probably corresponding to empty granules. This observation allows to conclude that alpha-granule membrane is formed in the gray platelet syndrome, but that there is a storage defect of alpha-granule soluble proteins, possibly due to an abnormal targetting of these proteins to the alpha-granule. Synthesis and subsequent release of these proteins, namely of the mitogenic factors, which can induce myelofibrosis and lung fibrosis by abnormal fibroblast stimulation, is discussed.
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PMID:[Gray platelet syndrome, an example of myelofibrosis of megakaryocytic origin]. 180 89

Gel filtered human platelets contaminated with less than 0.02% of plasma protein S contained 490 ng of protein S antigen per 3 X 10(8) platelets, equivalent to 2.5% of protein S in whole blood. Three patients with heterozygous plasma protein S deficiency, a congenital disorder associated with venous thrombotic disease, had platelet protein S antigen levels that were 40% of the mean platelet level in ten normal volunteers. In immunoblotting analysis, platelet protein S was indistinguishable from plasma protein S. Thrombin stimulation of platelets caused release of 63% of total protein S antigen and this release was abolished when platelets were preincubated with metabolic inhibitors. Thrombin effected limited proteolysis of platelet protein S and this reaction was inhibited by calcium ions. Immunofluorescent staining of platelets using protein S antibodies demonstrated that protein S colocalized with fibrinogen, an established alpha-granule protein. Thus, human platelets contain protein S in alpha granules that can be released by thrombin stimulation. The released protein S may bind to stimulated platelets and thereby promote and localize the anticoagulant activity of activated protein C on the platelet surface.
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PMID:Identification and quantitation of protein S in human platelets. 293 98