Abstract

The present study was designed to examine the interaction of the purified platelet glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex (GP IIb-IIIa or integrin alpha IIb beta 3) and the individual subunits of the complex with immobilized fibrinogen. Although 125I-GP IIb-IIIa binding to fibrinogen immobilized on Sepharose was specific, this interaction exhibited properties distinct from those of reversible fibrinogen binding to platelets: 125I-GP IIb-IIIa binding appeared irreversible, but non-covalent, Ca(2+)-independent, and was inhibited only weakly, or not at all, by the anti-(GP IIb-IIIa) monoclonal antibodies 10E5 and 7E3 and synthetic peptides from known platelet-binding domains of fibrinogen. Reversibly dissociated GP IIb or GP IIIa subunits inhibited 125I-GP IIb-IIIa binding to immobilized fibrinogen and bound directly to the fibrinogen. However, these subunits did not bind to peptides derived from known platelet-binding domains within the fibrinogen alpha- and gamma-chains, although the GP IIb-IIIa complex did. These results show that the complexed form of full-length GP IIb and GP IIIa is required for binding to these synthetic peptides, but not necessarily for binding to immobilized fibrinogen. Thus GP IIb-IIIa can bind to immobilized fibrinogen by a distinct mechanism that appears to involve novel binding sites on each subunit of the GP IIb-IIIa complex and on fibrinogen.

Full Text
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