Abstract
We describe an individual with abnormal platelet glycoprotein (GP) IIb of different molecular weight (mol wt), a defect that distinguishes this patient from previously reported thrombasthenics. The patient, a 21-year-old female, has a mild bleeding tendency; her platelets lack adenosine diphosphate (ADP) aggregation and have severely suppressed collagen aggregation but a normal response to ristocetin. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of her platelets indicates that they contain two types of GPIIb molecules: one with an abnormal mol wt (122 kd, unreduced; 128 kd, reduced) and one with a normal mol wt (128 kd, unreduced; 118 kd, reduced). Relative to the amount of GPIIb in normal platelets, her platelets contain approximately 35% abnormal GPIIb and 20% normal GPIIb. Fibrinogen binding assays on the patient's platelets indicated that they contained 25% of the normal amount of fibrinogen receptors. Crossed immunoelectrophoresis of the patient's platelets demonstrated the formation of a GPIIb/IIIa complex that was mainly composed of normal mol wt GPIIb and GPIIIa. The patient's father has decreased ADP aggregability, and his platelets also contained both abnormal and normal GPIIb (about 50% of the normal level and about 50% of the normal number of fibrinogen receptors); her mother has only normal GPIIb. These results indicate that the patient has heterozygous GPIIb molecules with an abnormality of GPIIb at the molecular level. Studies on this abnormal GPIIb should provide information about the function of GPIIb and the mechanism of its biosynthesis.
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