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Inhibition of Na<sup>+</sup>/H<sup>+</sup> exchange reduces Ca<sup>2+</sup> mobilization without affecting the initial cleavage of phosphatidylinositol 4,5‐bisphosphate in thrombin‐stimulated platelets

43

Citations

16

References

1987

Year

Abstract

Stimulation of human platelets increases cytoplasmic pH (pHi) via activation of Na+/H+ exchange. We have determined the effect of inhibiting Na+/H+ exchange on (i) thrombin-induced Ca2+ mobilization and (ii) turnover of 32P-labelled phospholipids. Blocking Na+/H+ exchange by removal of extracellular Na+ or by ethylisopropylamiloride (EIPA) inhibited Ca2+ mobilization induced by 0.2 U/ml thrombin, whereas increasing pHi by NH4Cl enhanced the thrombin-induced increase in cytosolic free Ca2+. The effect of EIPA was bypassed after increasing pHi by moneasin. The thrombin-induced cleavage of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) was unaffected by treatments that blocked Na+/H+ exchange or increased pHi. It is concluded that activation of Na+/H+ exchange is a prerequisite for Ca2+ mobilization in human platelets but not for the stimulus-induced hydrolysis of PIP2.

References

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