Abstract

Human megakaryocytes and platelets contain counterparts of several plasma proteins. The origin of most of these alpha-granule proteins is unclear. Fibrinogen represents one of those molecules, being essential in hemostasis, thrombosis, and platelet aggregation. To study whether fibrinogen is endocytosed by megakaryocytes and packaged into alpha-granules or newly synthesized by these cells, we established a highly sensitive nested primer polymerase chain reaction for the detection of human fibrinogen gamma-chain mRNA. In enriched megakaryocyte fractions, as well as fluorescence-activated cell sorter-purified megakaryocytes from bone marrow samples of healthy volunteers, no fibrinogen gamma-chain mRNA could be detected, despite the presence of the corresponding fibrinogen gamma-chain DNA. We conclude that fibrinogen gamma-chain mRNA, as detectable by our amplification system, is missing in megakaryocytes. This finding suggests that fibrinogen might be acquired from plasma by endocytosis and sequestered in alpha-granules before reentering the circulation after platelet activation.

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