Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : ADP (0.2-200 microM) stimulated the synthesis of prostacyclin (PGI2), as reflected by the release of 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha (6-K-PGF1 alpha), in endothelial cells cultured from bovine aorta. This effect of ADP was mimicked by ATP, whereas AMP and adenosine were completely inactive. The release of 6-K-PGF1 alpha triggered by ADP was rapid and onset (within 5 min), transient (10 min) and followed by a period of refractoriness to a new ADP challenge. Growing and confluent cells were equally responsive to ADP. ADP stimulated the release of free arachidonic acid from the endothelial cells. ADP could thus exert two opposite actions on platelet aggregation in vivo: a direct stimulation and an inhibition mediated by PGI2. This last action might contribute to limit thrombus formation to areas of endothelial cell damage.