Increased Adhesion and Aggregation of Platelets Lacking Cyclic Guanosine 3′,5′-Monophosphate Kinase I

Steffen Maßberg(Technical University of Munich), Matthias Sausbier(Technical University of Munich), Peter Klatt(Technical University of Munich), Markus Bauer(Technical University of Munich), Alexander Pfeifer(Technical University of Munich), Wolfgang Siess(Technical University of Munich), Reinhard Fässler(Technical University of Munich), Peter Ruth(Technical University of Munich), Fritz Krombach(Technical University of Munich), Franz Hofmann(Technical University of Munich)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
April 19, 1999
Cited by 225Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Atherosclerotic vascular lesions are considered to be a major cause of ischemic diseases, including myocardial infarction and stroke. Platelet adhesion and aggregation during ischemia-reperfusion are thought to be the initial steps leading to remodeling and reocclusion of the postischemic vasculature. Nitric oxide (NO) inhibits platelet aggregation and smooth muscle proliferation. A major downstream target of NO is cyclic guanosine 3', 5'-monophosphate kinase I (cGKI). To test the intravascular significance of the NO/cGKI signaling pathway in vivo, we have studied platelet-endothelial cell and platelet-platelet interactions during ischemia/reperfusion using cGKI-deficient (cGKI-/-) mice. Platelet cGKI but not endothelial or smooth muscle cGKI is essential to prevent intravascular adhesion and aggregation of platelets after ischemia. The defect in platelet cGKI is not compensated by the cAMP/cAMP kinase pathway supporting the essential role of cGKI in prevention of ischemia-induced platelet adhesion and aggregation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis