Abstract

The role of calpain in platelet function is generally associated with aggregation and clot retraction. In this report, data are presented to show that one component of the platelet secretory machinery, SNAP-23, is specifically cleaved by calpain in activated cells. Other proteins of the membrane fusion machinery, e.g. syntaxins 2 and 4 and alpha-SNAP, are not affected. In vitro studies, using permeabilized platelets, demonstrate that cleavage is time- and calcium-dependent. Analysis of SNAP-23 cleavage products suggests that the calpain cleavage site(s) is in the C-terminal third of the molecule potentially between the cysteine-rich acyl attachment sites and the C-terminal coiled-coil domain. The time course of cleavage is most consistent with late calpain-mediated events such as pp60(c-src) cleavage, but not early events such as protein-tyrosine phosphatase-1B activation. SNAP-23 cleavage is inhibited by calpeptin, calpastatin, calpain inhibitor IV, and E-64d, but not by caspase 3 inhibitor III or cathepsin inhibitor I. When tested for their effect on secretion, none of the calpain-specific inhibitors significantly affected release of soluble components from any of the three platelet granule storage pools. These results indicate that SNAP-23 cleavage occurs after granule release and therefore may play a role in affecting granule membrane exteriorization. This is consistent with the ultrastructural morphology of calpeptin-treated platelets after activation.

Highlights

  • Platelets play a critical role in hemostasis by recognizing vascular lesions, binding to the damaged site, and sealing the breach [1]

  • When tested for their effect on secretion, none of the calpainspecific inhibitors significantly affected release of soluble components from any of the three platelet granule storage pools. These results indicate that SNAP-23 cleavage occurs after granule release and may play a role in affecting granule membrane exteriorization

  • Initial experiments demonstrate that calpain cleaves one of the central elements of the platelet secretory machinery, SNAP-23, a t-SNARE required for all three platelet release events [3, 5,6,7]

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Summary

Introduction

Platelets play a critical role in hemostasis by recognizing vascular lesions, binding to the damaged site, and sealing the breach [1]. Data are presented to show that one component of the platelet secretory machinery, SNAP-23, is cleaved by calpain in activated cells. Calpain cleavage of SNAP-23 was dependent on platelet activation in both intact and permeabilized cells and was specific, because other components of the secretory machinery, other t-SNAREs, were left intact.

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