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Protease-activated receptor 4 activity promotes platelet granule release and platelet-leukocyte interactions

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-12-18, 13:22 authored by Rachel A. Rigg, Laura D. Healy, Tiffany T. Chu, Anh T. P. Ngo, Annachiara Mitrugno, Jevgenia Zilberman-Rudenko, Joseph E. Aslan, Monica T. Hinds, Lisa Dirling Vecchiarelli, Terry K. Morgan, András Gruber, Kayla J. Temple, Craig W. Lindsley, Matthew T. Duvernay, Heidi E. Hamm, Owen J. T. McCarty

Human platelets express two protease-activated receptors (PARs), PAR1 (F2R) and PAR4 (F2RL3), which are activated by a number of serine proteases that are generated during pathological events and cause platelet activation. Recent interest has focused on PAR4 as a therapeutic target, given PAR4 seems to promote experimental thrombosis and procoagulant microparticle formation, without a broadly apparent role in hemostasis. However, it is not yet known whether PAR4 activity plays a role in platelet-leukocyte interactions, which are thought to contribute to both thrombosis and acute or chronic thrombo-inflammatory processes. We sought to determine whether PAR4 activity contributes to granule secretion from activated platelets and platelet-leukocyte interactions. We performed in vitro and ex vivo studies of platelet granule release and platelet-leukocyte interactions in the presence of PAR4 agonists including PAR4 activating peptide, thrombin, cathepsin G, and plasmin in combination with small-molecule PAR4 antagonists. Activation of human platelets with thrombin, cathepsin G, or plasmin potentiated platelet dense granule secretion that was specifically impaired by PAR4 inhibitors. Platelet-leukocyte interactions and platelet P-selectin exposure the following stimulation with PAR4 agonists were also impaired by activated PAR4 inhibition in either a purified system or in whole blood. These results indicate PAR4-specific promotion of platelet granule release and platelet-leukocyte aggregate formation and suggest that pharmacological control of PAR4 activity could potentially attenuate platelet granule release or platelet-leukocyte interaction-mediated pathological processes.

Funding

This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (R01HL101972 and R01GM116184 to O.J.T.M., R01HL133923 to H.E.H., R21HD16037 to T.K.M., and T32AI007472 to L.D.H.) and the American Heart Association (13EIA12630000 to O.J.T.M. and 17SDG33350075 to J.E.A.). R.A.R. is a Whitaker International Fellow. T.T. Chu was supported in part by the Johns Hopkins University Department of Biomedical Engineering. This project was supported in part by funds from Oregon Health & Science University and Oregon State University as part of the OHSU/OSU Cancer Prevention and Control Initiative.

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