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Low concentrations of wheat germ agglutinin (4 micrograms/ml) have been shown to act synergistically to induce platelet aggregation with epinephrine, collagen, arachidonate and ionophore A23187. Aggregation ceased on the addition of the haptenic sugar N-acetylglucosamine at any time following the onset of aggregation with these agonists and a small degree of disaggregation was observed during the reversible first wave with the biphasic aggregating agents epinephrine and ADP. Cyclooxygenase inhibitors such as indomethacin and aspirin blocked the second wave of aggregation with the biphasic aggregating agents epinephrine and ADP but a synergistic response continued to be shown with the first wave in the presence of these inhibitors. Release of [14C]serotonin and the mobilization of [3H]arachidonate by epinephrine and collagen were markedly stimulated in the presence of wheat germ agglutinin but there was no increase of either radiolabel in the case of ADP. Platelet shape change, but not aggregation, occurred with low levels of wheat germ agglutinin and the synergistic response with ADP, collagen or ionophore A23187 occurred without further shape change. Wheat germ agglutinin did not affect the basal or stimulated levels of cyclic AMP. The membrane fluidity of platelets was not affected by the lectin or by thrombin as shown by the lack of change in fluorescence polarization with diphenylhexatriene. It is suggested that the binding of wheat germ agglutinin to the platelet surface induces platelet activation by mechanisms similar to those of other agonists and that it may affect the distribution of membrane-bound Ca2+ by a reversible perturbation of the platelet membrane.
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