An inhibitor selective for collagen-stimulated platelet aggregation from the salivary glands of hard tickHaemaphysalis longicornis and its mechanism of action

Sci China C Life Sci. 1999 Oct;42(5):457-64. doi: 10.1007/BF02881768.

Abstract

Soluble materials of salivary glands fromHaemaphysalis longicornis were found to inhibit collagen, ADP, and thrombin-stimulated platelet aggregation. One inhibitory component was purified to salivary gland homogeneity by a combination of gel filtration, ion-exchange, and C(8) reverse phase HPLC. The purified activity, named longicomin, is a protein of molecular weight 16 000 on SDS-PAGE under both reduced and nonreduced conditions. Collagen-mediated aggegation of platelets in plasma and of washed platelets (IC(50) was approximately 60 nmol/L) was inhibited with the same efficacy. No inhibition of aggregation stimulated by other effectors, including ADP, arachidonic acid, thrombin, ristocetin, calcium ionophore A23187, thromboxane A2 mimetic U46619 and 12-O-phorbol-13-myristate acetate, was observed. Longiconin had no effect on platelet adhension to collagen. Not only platelet aggregation but also release reaction, and increase of intracellar ca(2+) level of platelets in response to collagen were completely eliminated by longicomin. Increasing amounts of collagen are able to overcome the inhibition of aggregation by longicomin, indicating that longicomin probably shares with collagen a common receptor. In addition, collagen fibers did not emit fluorescence after incubation with isothocyanate-conjugated longicornin, indicating that longicomin did not bind directly to collagen fibers. The identification and isolation of longicomin demonstrates the existence of a new type of platelet inhibitor that should be useful to better undentand the mechanism of collagen stimulation of platelets.