Abstract

The electron microscopic localization of von Willebrand factor (vWF) was studied in platelets from normal and von Willebrand disease (vWD) pigs. In normal pig platelets, immunolabeling for vWF was far more intense and extensive than in human platelets and was either localized at one pole of the alpha-granule or all along its periphery or long axis. As in human platelets, this immunolabeling coincided with the presence of tubules about 200 nm in diameter. These structures were more numerous than in human platelets, with up to 30 tubules per alpha-granule. They were easily identified either in transverse sections, usually grouped in a less electron-dense part of the matrix at one pole of the alpha-granule, or in longitudinal sections parallel to the long axis of the elongated granules, or coiled around the alpha-granule core. They closely resemble those structures found in Weibel-Palade bodies. In platelets from pigs with severe vWD, these structures were absent, as was the immunolabeling for vWF; however, cytoplasmic microtubules were normally present in these platelets. Thus, the granule-associated tubules can be distinguished from the microtubules, which are larger in diameter (250 nm), are present in both normal and vWD platelets, and do not stain for vWF. These results strongly suggest that the tubular structures present in the alpha-granules of normal porcine platelets correspond to the vWF molecule itself.

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