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Vol. 281, Issue 2, 861-867, 1997
Departments of Oral Biology and Pharmacology, University of
Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
The serine proteases thrombin and trypsin are both powerful platelet
agonists that act by cleaving the terminal portion of the thrombin
receptor and allowing the new C-terminal to autostimulate the receptor.
Synthetic peptides, termed thrombin receptor-activating peptides
(TRAPs), have been shown to mimic many of the effects of thrombin. Here
we have compared the effects of inhibitors on platelet aggregation and
[14C]-arachidonic acid release in response to thrombin,
trypsin and TRAP. Pretreatment of human platelets with BW755C (80 µM), which inhibits both cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase, blocked
trypsin (15-20 nM)- or TRAP (4-6 µM)-induced aggregation, but not
thrombin (0.06-0.1 U/ml)-induced aggregation. The protease inhibitor
leupeptin (10 µg/ml) abolished trypsin-induced aggregation and
returned [14C]-arachidonic acid release from
[14C]-arachidonic acid-prelabeled platelets to control
levels. In contrast, leupeptin did not affect either aggregation or
[14C]-arachidonic acid release in platelets stimulated by
TRAP. Thrombin-induced aggregation and [14C]-arachidonic
acid release were only partially inhibited by leupeptin. These data are
consistent with the activation of platelets by both trypsin and TRAP
occurring via the proteolytic receptor, whereas
thrombin-induced platelet activation appears to occur by a dual
mechanism of action. One component of thrombin-induced platelet
activation is by a proteolytic action on the moderate-affinity receptor. This effect is sensitive to inhibition by leupeptin and is
mimicked by trypsin and TRAP. The other component of thrombin is
nonproteolytic and may occur by an action at a high-affinity receptor
such as glycoprotein Ib.