Signaling During Platelet Adhesion and Activation
University of Kentucky · University of Illinois Chicago · +1 more institution
Abstract
Upon vascular injury, platelets are activated by adhesion to adhesive proteins, such as von Willebrand factor and collagen, or by soluble platelet agonists, such as ADP, thrombin, and thromboxane A(2). These adhesive proteins and soluble agonists induce signal transduction via their respective receptors. The various receptor-specific platelet activation signaling pathways converge into common signaling events that stimulate platelet shape change and granule secretion and ultimately induce the "inside-out" signaling process leading to activation of the ligand-binding function of integrin α(IIb)β(3). Ligand binding to integrin α(IIb)β(3) mediates platelet adhesion and aggregation and triggers "outside-in"…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 121
Authors
4- ZLZhenyu LiCorresponding
University of Kentucky, University of Illinois Chicago, University of Chicago
- MKMichael Keegan Delaney
University of Kentucky, University of Illinois Chicago, University of Chicago
- KOKelly O’Brien
University of Kentucky, University of Illinois Chicago, University of Chicago
- XDXiaoping Du
University of Kentucky, University of Illinois Chicago, University of Chicago
Topics & keywords
- Platelet
- Platelet activation
- Integrin
- Cell biology
- Signal transduction
- Dense granule
- Chemistry
- Platelet adhesiveness