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. 2005 Jun 21;62(13):1514–1525. doi: 10.1007/s00018-005-5099-y

Activated scramblase and inhibited aminophospholipid translocase cause phosphatidylserine exposure in a distinct platelet fraction

J L N Wolfs 1, P Comfurius 1, J T Rasmussen 2, J F W Keuren 3, T Lindhout 1, R F A Zwaal 1, E M Bevers 1,
PMCID: PMC11138384  PMID: 15971000

Abstract.

Platelet procoagulant activity is mainly determined by the extent of surface-exposed phosphatidylserine (PS), controlled by the activity of aminophospholipid translocase and phospholipid scramblase. Here, we studied both transport activities in single platelets upon stimulation with various agonists. Besides the formation of procoagulant microparticles, the results show that a distinct fraction of the platelets exposes PS when stimulated. The extent of PS exposure in these platelet fractions was similar to that in platelets challenged with Ca2+-ionophore, where all cells exhibit maximal attainable PS exposure. The size of the PS-exposing fraction depends on the agonist and is proportional to the platelet procoagulant activity. Scramblase activity was observed only in the PS-exposing platelet fraction, whereas translocase activity was exclusively detectable in the fraction that did not expose PS. We conclude that, irrespective of the agonist, procoagulant platelets exhibit maximal surface exposure of PS by switching on scramblase and inhibiting translocase activity.

Key words. Procoagulant activity, scramblase, aminophospholipid translocase, thrombin, collagen, platelet, phosphatidylserine, microparticle

Footnotes

Received 8 March 2005; received after revision 19 April 2005; accepted 13 May 2005


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