Abstract

EL-4 tumor cells were assayed in vitro for their ability to aggregate two kinds of platelets. An inhibition study showed that the EL-4 tumor cell can induce platelet aggregation by at least two different mechanisms. One, mediated by thrombin, was dominant with rabbit platelets because hirudin, which specifically inhibits thrombin, considerably suppressed the rabbit platelet aggregation induced by EL-4 tumor cells. In contrast, EL-4 cells induced the aggregation of human platelets even in citrated PRP. It is the apyrase-sensitive pathway that is believed to work in human platelets. The human platelet responses to EL-4 tumor cells clearly differed from those of rabbit platelets in terms of inhibition by hirudin and apyrase and of reactivity in citrated PRP. Both phospholipase A2 and dibutyryl cAMP strongly inhibited EL-4 tumor cell-induced platelet aggregation in both rabbit and human platelets. These two compounds may block a vital step in platelet aggregation that is elicited by the EL-4 tumor cells. Our results show that human platelet response to tumor cells is not necessarily deducible from experimental data obtained with animal platelets.

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