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A Novel Regulatory Epitope Defined by a Murine Monoclonal Antibody to the Platelet GPIIb-IIIa Complex (αIIbβ3 Integrin)
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1996
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Immune RegulationImmunologyAntigen ProcessingComplex FormationImmunotherapyPlatelet AggregationThrombosisHematologyAutoantibodiesAntibody EngineeringCell SignalingMurine Monoclonal AntibodyAutoimmune DiseasePlatelet Gpiib-iiia ComplexFibrinolysisAutoimmunityCell BiologyPlatelet ActivationThrombopoiesisMolecular ImmunologySignal TransductionBlood PlateletImmunoglobulin EMedicineNovel Regulatory Epitope
We characterized a murine monoclonal antibody, PT25-2 (IgG1), raised against washed human platelets. The antibody and its Fab fragments were both capable of inducing platelet aggregation in a fibrinogen-dependent manner and induced 125I-fibrinogen binding to unstimulated platelets (120,000 molecules/platelet at a 100 nM IgG concentration). The antibody immunoprecipitated the alpha IIb beta 3 complex from lysates of iodinated platelets but did not react with the respective subunits when complex formation was disrupted by treatment with 5 mM EDTA at 37 degrees C for 30 min. However, simply removing the extracellular divalent cation with EDTA had no effect on antibody binding indicating that the antibody's epitope depends upon a conformational structure maintained by alpha beta subunit association. Antibody binding to unstimulated, washed platelets yielded binding parameters (Kd = 40 nM, Bmax = 100,000 molecules/platelet), which were found to be virtually unchanged when binding was performed using thrombin or RGDS-peptide-stimulated platelets. Thus, the PT25-2 antibody defines a novel regulatory epitope expressed by the alpha IIb beta 3 integrin on unstimulated, quiescent platelets.