Specific Adsorption of a Platelet Membrane Glycoprotein by Human Insoluble Collagen
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A platelet membrane glycoprotein, 61 kDa, has been identified, which binds specifically to insoluble collagen. The detection of this protein was accomplished by incubating radiolabeled Triton-solubilized platelet supernatant with insoluble collagen, and, after washing the collagen pellet, extracting the 61-kDa glycoprotein from the pellet with sodium dodecyl sulfate buffer. The optimal conditions for specific binding were incubation of 120 micrograms of total platelet supernatant protein with 2 mg of collagen at 4 degrees C for 0.5 h in 0.5 ml of the incubating buffer (20 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM CaCl2, 1 mM MgCl2, and 0.2% Triton, pH 7.4). The 61-kDa glycoprotein is cleaved by trypsin into a major peptide (44 kDa) and a smaller peptide(s) linked together by disulfide bonds in a molecule which still binds to collagen. When intact platelets are treated first with trypsin and then with dithiothreitol, the 44-kDa peptide is released and was shown to bind to collagen. We conclude that the 61-kDa glycoprotein is a platelet membrane protein which specifically interacts through its extracellular domain with insoluble collagen, and, thus, must be considered as a possible component of the initial platelet-matrix adhesion process which leads to platelet aggregation in vivo.
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