Abstract

The direct membrane effect of propranolol was studied in vitro on washed platelet preparations. Propranolol has been reported to inhibit platelet aggregation by mechanisms unrelated to its β-blocking activity. In the present study, the drug was found to enhance 1-anilino-8-naphthalene sulfonate binding to platelet membrane by increasing the number of binding sites. Steady-state anisotropy was studied by labeling the platelets with the hydrophobic fluorescent probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene. Propranolol was observed to decrease the equivalent microviscosity of the membrane. When the infinitely slow decaying component of fluorescence anisotropy ( r α), which is proportional to the square of lipid order parameter, was calculated from the anisotropy data, a decrease in these parameters was also indicated. A higher fusion activation energy for viscosity in the propranolol-treated platelets reflected a lesser degree of order of the hydrocarbon chains in the lipid bilayer.

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