4.6 Article

Phosphoproteomic Analysis of Platelets Activated by Pro-Thrombotic Oxidized Phospholipids and Thrombin

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0084488

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL077213, HL077213-05S1, 5P01HL073311-06]
  2. NCI/NIH [P01 CA168585, R21 CA169993]
  3. American Cancer Society [RSG-12-257-01-TBE]
  4. CalTech-UCLA Joint Center for Translational Medicine
  5. UCLA Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation
  6. UCLA Institute for Molecular Medicine
  7. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences UCLA CTSI [UL1TR000124]
  8. Concern Fondation CONquer CanCER Now Award

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Specific oxidized phospholipids (oxPC(CD36)) promote platelet hyper-reactivity and thrombosis in hyperlipidemia via the scavenger receptor CD36, however the signaling pathway(s) induced in platelets by oxPC(CD36) are not well defined. We have employed mass spectrometry-based tyrosine, serine, and threonine phosphoproteomics for the unbiased analysis of platelet signaling pathways induced by oxPC(CD36) as well as by the strong physiological agonist thrombin. oxPC(CD36) and thrombin induced differential phosphorylation of 115 proteins (162 phosphorylation sites) and 181 proteins (334 phosphorylation sites) respectively. Most of the phosphoproteome changes induced by either agonist have never been reported in platelets; thus they provide candidates in the study of platelet signaling. Bioinformatic analyses of protein phosphorylation dependent responses were used to categorize preferential motifs for (de) phosphorylation, predict pathways and kinase activity, and construct a phosphoproteome network regulating integrin activation. A putative signaling pathway involving Src-family kinases, SYK, and PLCc2 was identified in platelets activated by oxPC(CD36). Subsequent ex vivo studies in human platelets demonstrated that this pathway is downstream of the scavenger receptor CD36 and is critical for platelet activation by oxPC(CD36). Our results provide multiple insights into the mechanism of platelet activation and specifically in platelet regulation by oxPC(CD36).

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