Abstract

The cell-free medium of isolated human glomeruli exhibited a procoagulant activity and stimulated thromboxane (TXB2) synthesis in human platelets in a dose-dependent manner. The amount of TXB2 measured was 16-fold higher than what could have been predicted (TXB2 synthesized by the platelets under control conditions plus TXB2 present in the glomerular supernatant). The lipid extract of the glomerular supernatant and its purified fraction including the fatty acids was still able to stimulate--although at a lesser degree--TXB2 synthesis in platelets. Stimulation was abolished after treatment of this fraction by charcoal or albumin. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis demonstrated the presence in the purified glomerular fraction of several long-chain saturated or monoenoic fatty acids at a total concentration of 80 microM with the following order of abundance: stearic, palmitic, myristic and oleic acids. Addition to human platelets of these same exogenous synthetic acids resulted in a dose-dependent stimulation of TX synthesis. It was maximum with three or four fatty acids tested in combination, but still present with myristic acid used separately. Arachidonic acid was absent in the glomerular supernatant. Thus the stimulation observed could not be related to a greater availability of substrate. Fatty acids did not act on platelets through a non-specific detergent effect since addition of high doses of detergents inhibited TXB2 formation in platelets. The combination of fatty acids from glomerular origin identified in the present study represents a novel factor involved in the control of intracapillary hemostasis, but different from the procoagulant activity common to many tissues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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