Thromb Haemost 1995; 74(05): 1316-1322
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1649933
Original Article
Platelets
Schattauer GmbH Stuttgart

A Comparison of the Effect of Decorsin and Two Disintegrins, Albolabrin and Eristostatin, on Platelet Function[*]

Mary Ann McLane
1   The Sol Sherry Center for Thrombosis Research, Dept, of Physiology and Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia PA
,
Jagadeesh Gabbeta
1   The Sol Sherry Center for Thrombosis Research, Dept, of Physiology and Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia PA
,
A Koneti Rao
1   The Sol Sherry Center for Thrombosis Research, Dept, of Physiology and Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia PA
,
Lucia Beviglia
1   The Sol Sherry Center for Thrombosis Research, Dept, of Physiology and Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia PA
,
Robert A Lazarus
2   The Department of Protein Engineering, Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, CA, USA
,
Stefan Niewiarowsk
1   The Sol Sherry Center for Thrombosis Research, Dept, of Physiology and Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia PA
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

Received 26 January 1995

Accepted after resubmission 10 August 1995

Publication Date:
10 July 2018 (online)

Summary

Naturally-occurring fibrinogen receptor antagonists and platelet aggregation inhibitors that are found in snake venom (disintegrins) and leeches share many common features, including an RGD sequence, high cysteine content, and low molecular weight. There are, however, significant selectivity and potency differences. We compared the effect of three proteins on platelet function: albolabrin, a 7.5 kDa disintegrin, eristostatin, a 5.4 kDa disintegrin in which part of the disintegrin domain is deleted, and decorsin, a 4.5 kDa non-disintegrin derived from the leech Macrobdella decora, which has very little sequence similarity with either disintegrin. Decorsin was about two times less potent than albolabrin and six times less potent than eristostatin in inhibiting ADP- induced human platelet aggregation. It had a different pattern of interaction with glycoprotein IIb/IIIa as compared to the two disintegrins. Decorsin bound with a low affinity to resting platelets (409 nM) and to ADP-activated platelets (270 nM), and with high affinity to thrombin- activated platelets (74 nM). At concentrations up to 685 nM, it did not cause expression of a ligand-induced binding site epitope on the (β3 subunit of the GPIIb/IIIa complex. It did not significantly inhibit isolated GPIIb/IIIa binding to immobilized von Willebrand Factor. At low doses (1.5-3.0 μg/mouse), decorsin protected mice against death from pulmonary thromboembolism, showing an effect similar to eristostatin. This suggested that decorsin is a much more potent inhibitor of platelet aggregation in vivo than in vitro, and it may have potential as an antiplatelet drug.

*This investigation was supported by NIH grants HL 45486 (SN), and K0702658 (AKR), a predoctoral fellowship (MAM) and Grant-in-Aid (AKR) from the American Heart Association, Southeastern Pennsylvania Chapter, a post-doctoral traineeship grant T32HL07777 (MAM), a fellowship from the European Economic Community, Regione Abruzzo (LB), and grants from the Italian Association for Cancer Research (LB) and the American-Italian Foundation for Cancer Research 94-102 (LB).


 
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