In this issue of Blood, Gegenbauer and colleagues provide a new insight into the regulatory mechanisms that allow platelets to produce an optimal response to vascular injury.1 “Optimal responsiveness” in the context of hemostasis means preventing circulating platelets from activating needlessly, allowing them to respond quickly when necessary and limiting platelet activation to avoid excessive platelet accumulation. How all of this is achieved is still not fully understood, but the new study nicely pulls together older work on the classic restrainers of platelet activation (endothelium-derived PGI2 and NO) with emerging ideas about the role of RGS proteins (regulators of G protein signaling).
To put all of this in context, it is worth recalling that with the exception of collagen, most platelet agonists activate G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs). This includes thrombin, ADP, thromboxane A2 (TxA2), and epinephrine. GPCRs signal primarily by activating heterotrimeric (αβγ) GTP-binding proteins. G protein α subunits (Gα) bind GDP in their resting state. Receptor activation forces an exchange of GTP for GDP, partially dissociating the heterotrimer and allowing signaling downstream of both Gα and Gβγ. G protein–dependent signaling terminates when Gα hydrolyzes bound GTP back to GDP.
RGS proteins enter this story because of their ability to hasten the termination of G protein signaling by accelerating the hydrolysis of GTP bound to Gα. There are at least 37 RGS family members in the human genome. Although uncertainty exists about the number expressed in platelets, two (RGS10 and RGS18) are readily detectable on Western blots1,2 and by quantitative transcript analysis.3 They are relatively small proteins, consisting primarily of a core “RGS” domain with short N- and C-terminal extensions.
The best evidence that RGS proteins act as regulators in platelets comes from experiments with mice carrying a serine to glycine substitution at position 184 in the α subunit of Gi2, the G protein that couples to platelet P2Y12 receptors for ADP.4 P2Y12 receptors are best known in the clinical setting for being the target of antiplatelet agents such as clopidogrel and prasugrel. The Gi2α(G184S) substitution blocks interactions with RGS proteins as a class without affecting the ability of Gi2 to couple receptors to signaling pathways. Gi2α(+/G184S) platelets show increased responsiveness to agonists in vitro and increased accumulation after vascular injury in vivo. In other words, loss of Gi2α:RGS interactions produces a gain of function, suggesting that the normal role of RGS proteins is to limit platelet activation.
Conceptually, RGS proteins provide both a solution to questions about managing platelet responsiveness and the following conundrum. At a molecular level, how can RGS proteins limit platelet activation and still allow it to occur when needed? Part of the answer comes from combining the elegant work by Gegenbauer and colleagues with observations from our laboratory.2 Building on an earlier study by Garcia and colleagues,5 Gegenbauer et al show that RGS18 in platelets is phosphorylated on Serine 49 and Serine 218, and that phosphorylation of Ser49 (and possibly Ser218) increases with platelet activation. Neither serine is within the RGS18 RGS domain. However, phosphorylation allows RGS18 to bind to 14-3-3γ, one of a family of phosphoserine-binding scaffold proteins expressed in platelets. Serine phosphorylation of RGS proteins and the subsequent binding of 14-3-3 proteins inhibits their ability to turn off G protein–dependent signaling.6 Tying RGS18 phosphorylation to the inhibition of platelets by PGI2 and NO, Gegenbauer et al show that PGI2 (by raising cAMP levels and activating protein kinase A) and NO (by raising cGMP levels and activating protein kinase G) cause phosphorylation of Ser216 in RGS18, an event that displaces 14-3-3γ from RGS18 and increases its ability to terminate G protein–dependent signaling (see figure for PGI2 and Gq-dependent signaling).1,7 The kinase that phosphorylates RGS18 on Ser49 and Ser218 has yet to be identified, although one candidate is protein kinase C, which is activated in platelets downstream of thrombin, TxA2 and ADP receptors coupled to Gq.8
As it turns out, 14-3-3γ is not the only scaffold protein in platelets that can bind RGS proteins. Platelets express the neuronal protein spinophilin (SPL), which in resting platelets forms a complex with the tyrosine phosphatase, SHP-1, that can bind to either RGS18 or RGS10, forming a heterotrimer.2 Within this complex, SPL is constitutively phosphorylated on two tyrosine residues, one of which (Y398) supports the binding of SHP-1 (see figure). Platelet activation by thrombin or TxA2 (but not ADP) activates SHP-1 by causing phosphorylation of Y536, triggering dephosphorylation of SPL and dissociation of the SPL/RGS/SHP-1 complex. Knocking out the gene encoding spinophilin in mice (which should increase the amount of free RGS protein) causes a loss of function, while blocking activation of SHP-1 (thereby locking up RGS proteins in the SPL/RGS/SHP-1 complex) causes a gain of function. This suggests that binding to spinophilin inhibits RGS10 and RGS18 activity.2
Placed in the context of “optimal platelet activation,” the model shown in the figure proposes that, rather than competing for RGS proteins, spinophilin and 14-3-3γ engage in a handoff during platelet activation that restricts the amount of free RGS18. Specifically, the model suggests that in quiescent platelets circulating in an environment in which they are regularly exposed to PGI2 and NO, some of the RGS18 is bound to spinophilin at any given time and held in an essentially inactive state (box 1 in figure), while some is free and potentially phosphorylated on Ser216. Phosphorylation of RGS18 on Ser216 prevents binding to 14-3-3γ and preserves (or even promotes) RGS18 activity of the free protein (box 2 in figure). By being available to inactivate Gq or Gi, this provides a buffer against unwarranted platelet activation.
Once platelets encounter an agonist, gradual dissociation of the SPL/RGS/SHP-1 complex occurs, taking 30 to 45 seconds to reach completion.2 As the complex decays, additional RGS18 presumably becomes available for suppressing G protein–dependent signaling, but its ability to do so is limited by subsequent S49/S218 phosphorylation and binding to 14-3-3γ (box 3 in figure). If this model is correct, then the reports that we have summarized here (all of which have appeared in Blood) suggest that free RGS18 availability is closely controlled in both resting and activated platelets.
The model shown in the figure remains to be fully tested and may break in the process. Unanswered questions include (1) the applicability to RGS10 of some observations that are currently limited to RGS18, (2) the impact of Ser49, Ser216 and Ser218 phosphorylation on the binding of RGS18 to spinophilin, and (3) the determination of whether spinophilin and 14-3-3γ are segregated within the cells so that local concentrations of free RGS proteins vary spatially as well as temporally. What can be said at this point with some degree of assurance is that if RGS proteins are part of the braking system that limits platelet activation, then spinophilin and 14-3-3γ working in tandem keep the brakes from locking up.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests. ■
REFERENCES
National Institutes of Health
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