Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0001511 (
Adhesion
)
5,955
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Herpesviral infection of endothelial cells (ECs) induces arterial injury. We now demonstrate that such infection promoted enhanced monocyte-endothelial adhesion. Enhanced adhesion was blocked by monoclonal antibodies to the viral-encoded cell surface glycoprotein gC but not by antibodies to gD or gE.
Adhesion
was also blocked by treating ECs with specific thrombin inhibitors or by growing cells in
prothrombin
-depleted serum. We found that gC bound and promoted activation of factor X on infected ECs, thereby contributing to thrombin generation. Factor X also bound to transfected L cells that were induced to express gC. Cross-linking and immunoprecipitation studies demonstrated factor X-gC complex formation on the surface of these cells. We suggest that gC-dependent thrombin generation by herpes-infected endothelium may be an important mediator of vascular pathology during viral infection.
...
PMID:Viral activation of the coagulation cascade: molecular interactions at the surface of infected endothelial cells. 216 Aug 55
In order to understand some of the haemostatic mechanisms in rats for the interpretation of toxicological data, basic haemostatic parameters with a special emphasis on platelet functions were first measured in vitro. The results of reactions of rat platelets to many aggregating agents suggest that only ADP may be a consistently significant aggregator. The search for physiologic aggregators revealed ADP to be available from erythrocytes.
Adhesion
reaction also required ADP. Collagen was not considered to be essential for either reaction. Aggregation and adhesion were probably both reversible in flowing blood, while irreversible thrombi were formed in blood at rest ex vivo. Blood coagulation parameters determined revealed that the intrinsic pathway may be more important than the extrinsic one. The rate of intrinsic coagulation reaction was rapid, and plasma coagulation appeared to be of primary importance while the influence of platelet aggregation was minor. A simple model of rat haemostatic mechanism is proposed based on these results. Additionally, to define the relative contribution of platelets versus other cellular and plasma coagulation in vivo, rats were administered antiplatelet drugs (ticlopidine, suprofen and clopidogrel) and an anticoagulant (warfarin) intraperitoneally. Bleeding times (BTs) were significantly increased in all treated groups. ADP-induced platelet aggregations were significantly depressed by the administration of the three antiplatelet drugs, while kaolon-activated partial thromboplastin time and
prothrombin
time were greatly increased in the warfarin-treated rats. The increase in BT may be due to the inhibition of platelet activity or blood coagulation defect in rats given antiplatelet drugs or warfarin, respectively. These results suggest that platelets play a key role in haemostasis in the rat. Two possible explanations of the disparity between in vitro and in vivo results may be that functional tests used here are not adequate to cover the properties of rat platelets or that mechanisms leading to the formation of platelet thrombi in rats are ADP-dependent adhesion and ADP-induced aggregation.
...
PMID:Characteristics of rat platelets and relative contributions of platelets and blood coagulation to haemostasis. 1071 61
Adhesion
of platelets to immobilized collagen induces the expression of anionic phospholipids, e.g. phosphatidylserine (PS), in the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane of these platelets. In contrast, of the platelets that adhere to immobilized fibrinogen only a small sub-population representing 10 +/- 3% of the total population of the fibrinogen-adherent platelets has exposed PS as probed by annexin V binding. Although the presence of PS is thought to be critical for thrombin generation at the platelet surface, no information is available about the effect of this differential PS exposure on the ability of adherent platelets to support thrombin generation. Perfusion of the fibrinogen- or collagen-adherent platelets with solutions containing factor Xa and
prothrombin
resulted in thrombin generation that i) increased linear during the first perfusion minutes, ii) was about two-fold faster at collagen-adherent than at fibrinogen-adherent platelets and iii) was for more than 98% restricted to the surface of the adherent platelets. It appeared that the lower thrombin generating capacity of fibrinogen-adherent platelets is not due to a lower overall surface density of PS, but is caused by lower amounts of platelet-bound factor Va. Firstly, in both cases thrombin generation could be completely attenuated with antibodies against human factor Va, and secondly, in the presence of an excess of exogenous plasma-derived factor Va similar initial rates of thrombin formation were measured for collagen- and fibrinogen-adherent platelets. Our findings suggest a unique role for immobilized collagen in maintaining haemostasis.
...
PMID:Contribution of platelet-derived factor Va to thrombin generation on immobilized collagen- and fibrinogen-adherent platelets. 1168 47
TP508, a 23-amino acid RGD-containing synthetic peptide representing residues 508 to 530 of human
prothrombin
, mitigates the effects of endothelial dysfunction in ischaemic reperfusion injury. The objective of this study was to investigate whether TP508 binds to members of the integrin family of transmembrane receptors leading to nitric oxide synthesis. Immobilised TP508 supported adhesion of endothelial cells and alphavbeta3-expressing human embryonic kidney cells in a dose- and RGD-dependent manner. Soluble TP508 also inhibited cell adhesion to immobilised fibrinogen. The involvement of alphavbeta3 was verified with function-blocking antibodies and surface plasmon resonance studies.
Adhesion
of the cells to immobilised TP508 resulted in an induction of phosphorylated FAK and ERK1/2. In endothelial cells, TP508 treatment resulted in an induction of nitric oxide that could be inhibited by LM609, an alphavbeta3-specific, function-blocking monoclonal antibody. Finally, TP508 treatment of isolated rat aorta segments enhanced carbachol-induced vasorelaxation. These results suggest that TP508 elicits a potentially therapeutic effect through an RGD-dependent interaction with integrin alphavbeta3.
...
PMID:RGD-dependent binding of TP508 to integrin alphavbeta3 mediates cell adhesion and induction of nitric oxide. 2050 1
Adhesion
of Staphylococcus aureus to blood vessels under shear stress requires von Willebrand factor (VWF). Several bacterial factors have been proposed to interact with VWF, including VWF-binding protein (vWbp), a secreted coagulase that activates the host's
prothrombin
to generate fibrin. We measured the adhesion of S aureus Newman and a vWbp-deficient mutant (vwb) to VWF, collagen, and activated endothelial cells in a microparallel flow chamber. In vivo adhesion of S aureus was evaluated in the mesenteric circulation of wild-type (WT) and VWF-deficient mice. We found a shear-dependent increase in adhesion of S aureus to the (sub)endothelium that was dependent on interactions between vWbp and the A1-domain of VWF.
Adhesion
was further enhanced by coagulase-mediated fibrin formation that clustered bacteria and recruited platelets into bacterial microthrombi. In vivo, deficiency of vWbp or VWF as well as inhibition of coagulase activity reduced S aureus adhesion. We conclude that vWbp contributes to vascular adhesion of S aureus through 2 independent mechanisms: shear-mediated binding to VWF and activation of
prothrombin
to form S aureus-fibrin-platelet aggregates.
...
PMID:Adhesion of Staphylococcus aureus to the vessel wall under flow is mediated by von Willebrand factor-binding protein. 2519 Jul 52