PMID: 7520909Sep 2, 1994Paper

Structurally distinct disintegrins contortrostatin and multisquamatin differentially regulate platelet tyrosine phosphorylation.

The Journal of Biological Chemistry
E A ClarkJ S Brugge

Abstract

Tyrosine phosphorylation of multiple platelet proteins is regulated by the integrin alpha IIb beta 3. In order to further examine integrin-regulated tyrosine phosphorylation, we have used small Arg-Gly-Asp-containing snake venom proteins (termed disintegrins) that inhibit platelet aggregation to competitively block the agonist-induced binding of fibrinogen to alpha IIb beta 3. One structurally unique disintegrin, contortrostatin (which appears to be a disulfide-linked dimer of 13.5 kDa with two Arg-Gly-Asp sites), was found to trigger signaling events typically mediated by fibrinogen cross-linking of alpha IIb beta 3, as demonstrated by tyrosine phosphorylation of the tyrosine kinase pp72syk and a 140-kDa protein. Contortrostatin and another disintegrin, multisquamatin (a monomer of 5.7 kDa with a single Arg-Gly-Asp site), did not affect thrombin-induced platelet shape change, secretion, or integrin-independent tyrosine phosphorylation; however, they inhibited aggregation and aggregation-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of numerous proteins, including the focal adhesion kinase pp125FAK. Our results suggest that structurally distinct disintegrins have varying effects on tyrosine phosphorylation; while monomeric multisquamatin ...Continue Reading

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