The relationship between thromboxane and cytosolic calcium modifiers in rat platelets.
Ključne riječi
Sažetak
Platelet activity is controlled, in part, by cytosolic free ionized calcium concentration ([Ca++]i). Regulation of platelet thromboxane (TXB2) synthesis may be by regulation of [Ca++]i. Dietary linoleate is a regulator of TXB2 synthesis, therefore, it may act by influencing [Ca++]i. Aspirin is a regulator of TXB2 synthesis by inhibition of cyclooxygenase; ouabain and nifedipine are regulators of [Ca++]i. This study was conducted to determine whether these affectors of TXB2 synthesis and [Ca++]i cause associated responses. Male nonobese Zucker rats were fed diets supplying 30% of energy (en%) as fat. Dietary fat was a mixture of corn oil and beef tallow to provide 3.0, 4.5, 6.0, or 7.5 en% linoleic acid, with cholesterol added to provide equal cholesterol in all diets. Rats were fed for 30 days with 6 rats/diet. Isolated rat platelets were assayed for FA composition; the percentage of linoleic acid in platelet FA rose linearly with increasing dietary linoleate (r = 0.76, P less than 0.0001). Resting and thrombin-stimulated platelet [Ca++]i and TXB2 synthesis were measured in the presence or absence of extracellular calcium and aspirin, ouabain, or nifedipine. Aspirin caused reductions in both parameters; nifedipine blocked [Ca++]i, but did not affect TXB2; ouabain increased both. Changes induced by those modifiers of TXB2 and platelet [Ca++]i caused changes that were in the same direction for both. CaCl2 caused an increase in both and the [Ca++]i was correlated with the square root of the TXB2; without CaCl2 the two were negatively correlated; aspirin, ouabain, and nifedipine treatments resulted in no significant correlations. The results suggest that there is a common modifier of [Ca++]i and TXB2 synthesis.