Journal of Lipid Research (May 2011)

The phospholipase A1 activity of lysophospholipase A-I links platelet activation to LPA production during blood coagulation[S]

  • Alyssa L. Bolen,
  • Anjaparavanda P. Naren,
  • Sunitha Yarlagadda,
  • Sarka Beranova-Giorgianni,
  • Li Chen,
  • Derek Norman,
  • Daniel L. Baker,
  • Meng M. Rowland,
  • Michael D. Best,
  • Takamitsu Sano,
  • Tamotsu Tsukahara,
  • Karoly Liliom,
  • Yasuyuki Igarashi,
  • Gabor Tigyi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52, no. 5
pp. 958 – 970

Abstract

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Platelet activation initiates an upsurge in polyun­saturated (18:2 and 20:4) lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) production. The biochemical pathway(s) responsible for LPA production during blood clotting are not yet fully understood. Here we describe the purification of a phospholipase A1 (PLA1) from thrombin-activated human platelets using sequential chromatographic steps followed by fluorophosphonate (FP)-biotin affinity labeling and proteomics characterization that identified acyl-protein thioesterase 1 (APT1), also known as lysophospholipase A-I (LYPLA-I; accession code O75608) as a novel PLA1. Addition of this recombinant PLA1 significantly increased the production of sn-2-esterified polyunsaturated LPCs and the corresponding LPAs in plasma. We examined the regioisomeric preference of lysophospholipase D/autotaxin (ATX), which is the subsequent step in LPA production. To prevent acyl migration, ether-linked regioisomers of oleyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (lyso-PAF) were synthesized. ATX preferred the sn-1 to the sn-2 regioisomer of lyso-PAF. We propose the following LPA production pathway in blood: 1) Activated platelets release PLA1; 2) PLA1 generates a pool of sn-2 lysophospholipids; 3) These newly generated sn-2 lysophospholipids undergo acyl migration to yield sn-1 lysophospholipids, which are the preferred substrates of ATX; and 4) ATX cleaves the sn-1 lysophospholipids to generate sn-1 LPA species containing predominantly 18:2 and 20:4 fatty acids.

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