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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1985-04-01
    Description: The blood platelet is the only human cell known to have a circumferential band of microtubules. However, the mechanisms involved in assembly of the multi-looped coil, its interaction with the cell membrane to support discoid shape, and constriction into tight rings around centrally concentrated organelles in activated platelets are unknown. Separation of the microtubule rings from intact platelets would permit new approaches to solution of these questions. The present study has used simultaneous detergent extraction and fixation to isolate intact microtubule coils in significant numbers from suspended platelets for the first time. Isolated coils closely resembled the circumferential band observed in thin sections of plastic embedded platelets and in platelets prepared by the negative-stain whole-mount method. Enough microtubule coils could be recovered from suspensions of concentrated platelets to permit counting and quantitation on microscope grids. Results of this study will permit new approaches to clarification of the structural physiology of platelet microtubule coils.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1986-04-01
    Description: Circumferential bands of microtubules (MT) support the discoid shape of resting platelets and participate with the contractile apparatus in shape change and internal contraction following activation. Elucidation of interactions between the circumferential coils and proteins of the stable and contractile cytoskeleton is essential for understanding MT function in platelet physiology. A previous investigation demonstrated that the circumferential rings can be isolated intact from resting platelets following simultaneous exposure to glutaraldehyde and Triton X-100. However, the use of fixation prevented the characterization of protein interactions. The present study has circumvented this problem by developing a procedure for isolating intact microtubule coils from detergent-treated platelets without the use of fixative agents. Incubation of the platelets for intervals of 30 to 60 minutes with the microtubule-stabilizing agent taxol preserved the circumferential bundle after extraction with Triton X-100 even after washing five times. The procedure has made it possible to carry out protein studies on isolated microtubule rings and associated proteins.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 1987-04-01
    Description: The pathway followed by secretory products stored in platelet alpha granules during the release reaction remains controversial. Tannic acid has been used in the present study as an electron-dense stain to follow the secretory process in thrombin-stimulated platelets. Preliminary experiments demonstrated that tannic acid precipitates fibrinogen, and binds osmium tetroxide to fibrinogen and fibrin strands. Examination of platelets fixed at short intervals after exposure to thrombin and incubated in solutions containing tannic acid revealed electron-dense deposits of osmium not apparent in resting platelets. Granules and lumina of channels making up the open canalicular system (OCS) were unstained in discoid cells. However, exposure to thrombin at concentrations of 1 to 5 U/mL for thirty seconds or more resulted in intense staining of alpha granules by osmium. Some granules communicated directly with dilated channels of the OCS, and several were frequently connected to the same canaliculus. The electron-dense substance in swollen granules and channels appeared to be in the process of extrusion through narrow or dilated openings of the OCS onto the platelet surface. Granule-to-granule fusion and formation of sealed vacuoles of fused granule products unstained by tannic acid-osmium were not observed. The findings support the concept that secretion by stimulated human platelets results from development of direct communications between granules and channels of the OCS and subsequent extrusion of products through channel pores to the surrounding medium.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 1985-04-01
    Description: The blood platelet is the only human cell known to have a circumferential band of microtubules. However, the mechanisms involved in assembly of the multi-looped coil, its interaction with the cell membrane to support discoid shape, and constriction into tight rings around centrally concentrated organelles in activated platelets are unknown. Separation of the microtubule rings from intact platelets would permit new approaches to solution of these questions. The present study has used simultaneous detergent extraction and fixation to isolate intact microtubule coils in significant numbers from suspended platelets for the first time. Isolated coils closely resembled the circumferential band observed in thin sections of plastic embedded platelets and in platelets prepared by the negative-stain whole-mount method. Enough microtubule coils could be recovered from suspensions of concentrated platelets to permit counting and quantitation on microscope grids. Results of this study will permit new approaches to clarification of the structural physiology of platelet microtubule coils.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 1987-04-01
    Description: The pathway followed by secretory products stored in platelet alpha granules during the release reaction remains controversial. Tannic acid has been used in the present study as an electron-dense stain to follow the secretory process in thrombin-stimulated platelets. Preliminary experiments demonstrated that tannic acid precipitates fibrinogen, and binds osmium tetroxide to fibrinogen and fibrin strands. Examination of platelets fixed at short intervals after exposure to thrombin and incubated in solutions containing tannic acid revealed electron-dense deposits of osmium not apparent in resting platelets. Granules and lumina of channels making up the open canalicular system (OCS) were unstained in discoid cells. However, exposure to thrombin at concentrations of 1 to 5 U/mL for thirty seconds or more resulted in intense staining of alpha granules by osmium. Some granules communicated directly with dilated channels of the OCS, and several were frequently connected to the same canaliculus. The electron-dense substance in swollen granules and channels appeared to be in the process of extrusion through narrow or dilated openings of the OCS onto the platelet surface. Granule-to-granule fusion and formation of sealed vacuoles of fused granule products unstained by tannic acid-osmium were not observed. The findings support the concept that secretion by stimulated human platelets results from development of direct communications between granules and channels of the OCS and subsequent extrusion of products through channel pores to the surrounding medium.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 1986-04-01
    Description: Circumferential bands of microtubules (MT) support the discoid shape of resting platelets and participate with the contractile apparatus in shape change and internal contraction following activation. Elucidation of interactions between the circumferential coils and proteins of the stable and contractile cytoskeleton is essential for understanding MT function in platelet physiology. A previous investigation demonstrated that the circumferential rings can be isolated intact from resting platelets following simultaneous exposure to glutaraldehyde and Triton X-100. However, the use of fixation prevented the characterization of protein interactions. The present study has circumvented this problem by developing a procedure for isolating intact microtubule coils from detergent-treated platelets without the use of fixative agents. Incubation of the platelets for intervals of 30 to 60 minutes with the microtubule-stabilizing agent taxol preserved the circumferential bundle after extraction with Triton X-100 even after washing five times. The procedure has made it possible to carry out protein studies on isolated microtubule rings and associated proteins.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 1985-06-01
    Description: It is generally accepted that a circumferential microtubule supports the discoid shape of resting platelets. The fate of the many-coiled polymer following platelet activation, however, has been a subject of considerable debate. Morphological investigations have suggested that the circumferential coils are constricted into tight rings around centrally concentrated organelles during platelet shape change. Biochemical studies employing colchicine-binding assays, on the other hand, have indicated that the bundle of microtubules dissolves almost completely within seconds after activation and reassembles in a new location one to four minutes later. The present study has accepted the latter hypothesis in order to examine the second part of the disassembly-reassembly theory proposed in biochemical studies. Platelets exposed to low temperatures sufficient to remove all microtubules were placed on glass slides and microscope grids to cause surface activation during rewarming. The combined stimuli of rewarming and surface activation might have been expected to cause more rapid assembly than warming alone or activation alone. This was not the case. Reassembly of microtubules during rewarming and simultaneous surface activation was not accelerated. In contrast to the constriction of microtubule rings observed during activation in control platelets, the diameters of coils that developed in chilled platelets one to two hours after rewarming and surface activation were twice those of control cells.
    Print ISSN: 0006-4971
    Electronic ISSN: 1528-0020
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
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