Serine protease from Indian Cobra venom: its anticoagulant property and effect on human fibrinogen

Toxin Reviews ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
K. N. Neema ◽  
Vivek Hamse Kameshwar ◽  
Zohara Nafeesa ◽  
Divya Kumar ◽  
Priya Babu Shubha ◽  
...  
Peptides ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 1692-1699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying-Ying He ◽  
Shu-Bai Liu ◽  
Wen-Hui Lee ◽  
Jin-Qiao Qian ◽  
Yun Zhang

Parasitology ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 126 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. DOENHOFF ◽  
R. G. STANLEY ◽  
D. PRYCE ◽  
R. C. H. CURTIS ◽  
H. PARRY ◽  
...  

Aqueous extracts of Schistosoma mansoni eggs have been shown to have fibrinolytic activity inhibitable by a serine protease inhibitor. Fibrinolytic activity was not present in extracts of either adult worms or cercariae. A 27 kDa enzyme that was proteolytically active on fibrinogen in zymography and that degraded fibrinogen in a pattern similar to that of plasmin, is presumed to be responsible for the schistosome egg fibrinolytic activity. Anti-human fibrinogen antisera were shown to have antibodies that cross-reacted with mouse fibrinogen in Western immunoblots. Electroblotted sera from S. mansoni-infected and control uninfected mice displayed different antigenic profiles when probed with the cross-reactive anti-human fibrinogen antibodies, suggesting an alteration in mouse host fibrinogen metabolism as a result of the parasitic infection. We discuss the possibility that modulation of fibrinogen metabolism is a factor in a recently discovered anti-atherogenic effect exerted by schistosomes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 862-870 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaruwan Siritapetawee ◽  
Chutima Talabnin ◽  
Jarunee Vanichtanankul ◽  
Chomphunuch Songsiriritthigul ◽  
Kanjana Thumanu ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 477 (2) ◽  
pp. 459-459
Author(s):  
Lalith K. Chaganti ◽  
Shubhankar Dutta ◽  
Raja Reddy Kuppili ◽  
Mriganka Mandal ◽  
Kakoli Bose

Planta Medica ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 78 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Flemmig ◽  
A Domsalla ◽  
H Rawel ◽  
MF Melzig
Keyword(s):  

1994 ◽  
Vol 71 (01) ◽  
pp. 078-090 ◽  
Author(s):  
H L Goldsmith ◽  
M M Frojmovic ◽  
Susan Braovac ◽  
Fiona McIntosh ◽  
T Wong

SummaryThe effect of shear rate and fibrinogen concentration on adenosine diphosphate-induced aggregation of suspensions of washed human platelets in Poiseuille flow at 23°C was studied using a previously described double infusion technique and resistive particle counter size analysis (1). Using suspensions of multiple-centrifuged and -washed cells in Tyrodes-albumin [3 × 105 μl−1; (17)] with [fibrinogen] from 0 to 1.2μM, the, rate and extent of aggregation with 0.7 μM ADP in Tyrodes-albumin were measured over a range of mean transit times from 0.2 to 43 s, and at mean tube shear rates, Ḡ, = 41.9, 335 and 1,335 s−1. As measured by the decrease in singlet concentration, aggregation at 1.2 μM fibrinogen increased with increasing Ḡ up to 1,335 s1, in contrast to that previously reported in citratcd plasma, in which aggregation reached a maximum at Ḡ = 335 s−1. Without added fibrinogen, there was no aggregation at Ḡ = 41.9 s1; at Ḡ = 335 s1, there was significant aggregation but with an initial lag time, aggregation increasing further at Ḡ = 1,335 s−1. Without added fibrinogen, aggregation was abolished at all Ḡ upon incubation with the hexapeptide GRGDSP, but was almost unaffected by addition of an F(ab’)2 fragment of an antibody to human fibrinogen. Aggregation in the absence of added fibrinogen was also observed at 37°C. The activation of the multiple-washed platelets was tested using flow cytometry with the fluorescently labelled monoclonal antibodies FITC-PAC1 and FITC-9F9. It was shown that 57% of single cells in unactivated PRT expressed maximal GPIIb-IIIa fibrinogen receptors (MoAb PAC1) and 54% expressed pre-bound fibrinogen (MoAb 9F9), with further increases on ADP activation. However, incubation with GRGDSP and the F(ab’)2 fragment did not inhibit the prebound fibrinogen. Moreover, relatively unactivated cells (8% expressing receptor, 14% prebound fibrinogen), prepared from acidified cPRP by single centrifugation with 50 nM of the stable prostacyclin derivative, ZK 36 374, and resuspension in Tyrodes-albumin at 5 × 104 μl−1, aggregated with 2 and 5 μM ADP at Ḡ = 335 and 1,335 s−1 in the absence of added fibrinogen. We therefore postulate that a protein such as von Willebrand factor, secreted during platelet isolation or in flow at sufficiently high shear rates, may yield the observed shear-rate dependent aggregation without fibrinogen.


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