Quantitative immunofluorescence mapping reveals little functional coclustering of proteins within platelet α-granules

J Kamykowski, P Carlton, S Sehgal… - Blood, The Journal of …, 2011 - ashpublications.org
J Kamykowski, P Carlton, S Sehgal, B Storrie
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2011ashpublications.org
Platelets are small anucleate blood cells that aggregate to seal leaks at sites of vascular
injury and are important in the pathology of atherosclerosis, acute coronary syndromes,
rheumatoid arthritis, cancer, and the regulation of angiogenesis. In all cases, platelet
aggregation requires release of stored proteins from α-granules. However, how proteins with
potentially antagonistic functions are packaged within α-granules is controversial. One
possibility is the packaging of functional agonists and antagonists into different α-granule …
Abstract
Platelets are small anucleate blood cells that aggregate to seal leaks at sites of vascular injury and are important in the pathology of atherosclerosis, acute coronary syndromes, rheumatoid arthritis, cancer, and the regulation of angiogenesis. In all cases, platelet aggregation requires release of stored proteins from α-granules. However, how proteins with potentially antagonistic functions are packaged within α-granules is controversial. One possibility is the packaging of functional agonists and antagonists into different α-granule populations. By quantitative immunofluorescence colocalization, we found that pair-wise comparisons of 15 angiogenic-relevant α-granule proteins displayed little, if any, pattern of functional coclustering. Rather, the data suggested a Gaussian distribution indicative of stochastic protein delivery to individual granules. The apparent physiologic paradox raised by these data may be explained through alternate mechanisms, such as differential content release through incomplete granule fusion or dampened and balanced regulatory networks brought about by the corelease of antagonistic factors.
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