The overall aim of the proposal is to study the biochemical and physiological bases for the platelet abnormalities observed in patients with a wide variety of hemostatic defects. The project will study 1) In storage pool deficiency (SPD) (N=18) associated with heterogeneous defects in platelet Yield and dense granules, the nature of the granule defects (nucleotide and calcium transport, mepacrine and uranaffin studies) and their relation to the aggregation abnormalities, the pathogenesis of the secretion defect (role of ADP, abnormalities in prostaglandandin/TxA2 pathways), and contribution of platelet granules to platelet-subendothelial interaction. 2) In patients with primary secretion defects (N-15) who have been shown to have heterogeneous abnormalities in aggregation/secretion responses and TxA2 formation, the nature of these abnormalities through extensive studies on phospholipid and arachidonic acid (AA) metabolism (including stimulus-induced changes of phospholipid and 3H-AA metabolites (PA, TxB2, HHT, and HETE) and polyphosphoinositides, calcium mobilization, cAMP, energy metabolism, protein phosphorylation (including specific studies on possible abnormalities of 47K protein in granule extrusion), and possible cytoskeletal defects in resting and stimulated platelets. 3) In thrombasthenia (TSA) (N=5), possible defects in cytoskeletal proteins or assembly and the role of GPIIb-IIIa in mediating platelet adhesion. 4) In patients with new types of adhesion defects [different than the Bernard Soulier Syndrome (BSS)] the nature of the defect (contact vs spreading) utilizing appropriate flow conditions for maximizing defects in surface kinetics, and its possible basis, such as abnormalities in FVIII/VWF, glycoproteins and fibronectin. 5) Aspects of platelet procoagulant abnormalities, including possible defects of FVa binding in FXa-binding abnormality and the role of various platelet-related properties in coagulation by studying fibrin deposition and fibrinopeptide A release on subendothelium in patients with a variety of platelet disorders (FXa defect, TSA, BSS, SPD, and secretion defects) utilizing flow conditions in which differences between FVIII and FIX vs FXII and XI patients have been demonstrated. 6) In pseudo-von Willebrand's disease (and related disorders) possible defects in platelet glycoproteins, FVIII/VWF binding, platelet-subendothelial attachment, and possible therapy. 7) Utilizing a technique recently developed in our laboratory, primary hemostasis in a wide variety of patients with hemostatic defects by quantitative measurement of various bleeding time parameters and time-course studies on TxB2, 6-keto-PGF1alpha, PF4, and FPA.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL027346-11
Application #
3339122
Study Section
Hematology Subcommittee 2 (HEM)
Project Start
1975-01-01
Project End
1989-12-31
Budget Start
1989-01-01
Budget End
1989-12-31
Support Year
11
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
St. Luke's-Roosevelt Institute for Health Science
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10019
Stout, J G; Basse, F; Luhm, R A et al. (1997) Scott syndrome erythrocytes contain a membrane protein capable of mediating Ca2+-dependent transbilayer migration of membrane phospholipids. J Clin Invest 99:2232-8
Lages, B; Weiss, H J (1997) Enhanced increases in cytosolic Ca2+ in ADP-stimulated platelets from patients with delta-storage pool deficiency--a possible indicator of interactions between granule-bound ADP and the membrane ADP receptor. Thromb Haemost 77:376-82
Lages, B; Sussman, I I; Levine, S P et al. (1997) Platelet alpha granule deficiency associated with decreased P-selectin and selective impairment of thrombin-induced activation in a new patient with gray platelet syndrome (alpha-storage pool deficiency). J Lab Clin Med 129:364-75
Weiss, H J; Lages, B (1997) Platelet prothrombinase activity and intracellular calcium responses in patients with storage pool deficiency, glycoprotein IIb-IIIa deficiency, or impaired platelet coagulant activity--a comparison with Scott syndrome. Blood 89:1599-611
Weiss, H J; Lages, B; Hoffmann, T et al. (1996) Correction of the platelet adhesion defect in delta-storage pool deficiency at elevated hematocrit--possible role of adenosine diphosphate. Blood 87:4214-22
Weiss, H J (1995) Flow-related platelet deposition on subendothelium. Thromb Haemost 74:117-22
Lages, B; Weiss, H J (1994) Evidence for a role of glycoprotein IIb-IIIa, distinct from its ability to support aggregation, in platelet activation by ionophores in the presence of extracellular divalent cations. Blood 83:2549-59
Kojima, H; Newton-Nash, D; Weiss, H J et al. (1994) Production and characterization of transformed B-lymphocytes expressing the membrane defect of Scott syndrome. J Clin Invest 94:2237-44
Weiss, H J; Hoffmann, T; Turitto, V T et al. (1994) Further studies on the presence of functional tissue factor activity on the subendothelium of normal human and rabbit arteries. Thromb Res 73:313-26
Weiss, H J (1994) Scott syndrome: a disorder of platelet coagulant activity. Semin Hematol 31:312-9

Showing the most recent 10 out of 34 publications