Abstract
It is known that the antibiotic ristocetin exposes the platelet membrane receptor for factor VIII/von Willebrand glycoprotein (FVIII/vWF). Recent reports suggest that low concentrations of thrombin also cause platelet membrane receptors to become available for FVIII/vWF. As a consequence, the suspicion has been raised that thrombin provides similar or equivalent activity in vivo to that observed for ristocetin under in vitro conditions. In this study, we quantitated the extent to which thrombin promotes the binding of FVII/vWF to platelets and determined whether or not this interaction initiates or complements platelet aggregation. With ristocetin present, the amount of 125I-FVIII/vWF that became platelet-bound correlated closely with the onset, rate, and extent of platelet aggregation. In contrast, at every thrombin concentration tested, the amount of 125I- FVIII/vWF that specifically bound to platelets was about 6% of that observed with ristocetin. Significantly, FVIII/vWF did not augment the rate of aggregation of platelets in response to thrombin or initiate platelet aggregation when subaggregating doses of thrombin were used. These observations indicate that the minimal association that occurs between FVIII/vWF and the platelet membrane in the presence of thrombin does not correlate with platelet aggregation and therefore is not analogous to the effects of ristocetin. Whether the low level of binding relates to another process, such as platelet-endothelial interactions, remains unknown.