Abstract

Essentials Dimeric high‐affinity collagen receptor glycoprotein VI (GPVI) is present on resting platelets.Spatio‐temporal organization of platelet GPVI‐dimers was evaluated using advanced microscopy.Upon platelet adhesion to collagenous substrates, GPVI‐dimers coalesce to form clusters.Clustering of GPVI‐dimers may increase avidity and facilitate platelet activation SummaryBackgroundPlatelet glycoprotein VI (GPVI) binding to subendothelial collagen exposed upon blood vessel injury initiates thrombus formation. Dimeric GPVI has high affinity for collagen, and occurs constitutively on resting platelets.ObjectiveTo identify higher‐order oligomerization (clustering) of pre‐existing GPVI dimers upon interaction with collagen as a mechanism to initiate GPVI‐mediated signaling.Methods GPVI was located by use of fluorophore‐conjugated GPVI dimer‐specific Fab (antigen‐binding fragment). The tested substrates include Horm collagen I fibers, soluble collagen III, GPVI‐specific collagen peptides, and fibrinogen. GPVI dimer clusters on the platelet surface interacting with these substrates were visualized with complementary imaging techniques: total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to monitor real‐time interactions, and direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM), providing relative quantification of GPVI cluster size and density. Confocal microscopy was used to locate GPVI dimer clusters, glycoprotein Ib, integrin α2β1, and phosphotyrosine.ResultsUpon platelet adhesion to all collagenous substrates, GPVI dimers coalesced to form clusters; notably clusters formed along the fibers of Horm collagen. dSTORM revealed that GPVI density within clusters depended on the substrate, collagen III being the most effective. Clusters on fibrinogen‐adhered platelets were much smaller and more numerous; whether these are pre‐existing oligomers of GPVI dimers or fibrinogen‐induced is not clear. Some GPVI dimer clusters colocalized with areas of phosphotyrosine, indicative of signaling activity. Integrin α2β1 was localized to collagen fibers close to GPVI dimer clusters. GPVI clustering depends on a dynamic actin cytoskeleton.ConclusionsPlatelet adhesion to collagen induces GPVI dimer clustering. GPVI clustering increases both avidity for collagen and the proximity of GPVI‐associated signaling molecules, which may be crucial for the initiation and persistence of signaling.

Highlights

  • Upon blood vessel injury, circulating platelets interact with exposed subendothelial collagen through the collagen receptor glycoprotein VI (GPVI)

  • Loyau et al, employing GPVI dimer-specific mAb 9E18, reported that GPVI dimerization was induced by soluble agonists or von Willebrand factor (VWF), with almost no dimers being detected on resting platelets [12], leading them to propose dimer formation as a means to control collagen-induced platelet activation

  • total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM) imaging of GPVI dimer cluster formation in live platelets interacting with immobilized collagenous substrates

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Summary

Introduction

Upon blood vessel injury, circulating platelets interact with exposed subendothelial collagen through the collagen receptor glycoprotein VI (GPVI). Monomeric and dimeric recombinant D1D2 showed similar affinities for collagenrelated peptide (CRP), a triple-helical peptide containing 10 contiguous GPO triplets, suggesting that GPVI dimers may have a specific conformation that recognizes the higherorder structure of fibrous collagen, beyond the GPO sequences. In 2009, Jung et al provided direct evidence for the presence of dimers on the resting platelet surface with GPVI dimer-specific, inhibitory m-Fab-F [9]. Later, they reported a non-inhibitory Fab, 204-11, which recognized GPVI dimers [10], and used it to show that GPVI dimers were constitutively present on resting platelets. The Src-family kinase Lyn associates with the cytoplasmic tail of GPVI [14], which lacks intrinsic kinase activity, so that FcRc attached to one GPVI monomer might be phosphorylated by Lyn associated with a second monomer, brought into proximity by dimerization

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