Mouse antithrombotic assay. Inhibition of platelet thromboembolism by disintegrins.

Thromb Res

Istituto di Ricerche Farmacologiche Mario Negri, Consorzio Mario Negri Sud, Santa Maria Imbaro (Chieti), Italy.

Published: August 1993

AI Article Synopsis

  • The mouse antithrombotic assay serves as an effective model for studying fatal pulmonary thromboembolism, triggered by collagen and epinephrine injections.
  • Low doses of disintegrins albolabrin and eristostatin were found to be protective against this condition, while high doses of other thrombin inhibitors were not.
  • Eristostatin demonstrated a significantly greater potency in both inhibiting platelet aggregation and preventing sudden death in mice compared to albolabrin, highlighting the assay's ability to evaluate potential antithrombotic agents.

Article Abstract

The mouse antithrombotic assay represents a model of fatal pulmonary thromboembolism induced by intravenous injection of collagen and epinephrine. Mice were protected by low doses of two disintegrins, albolabrin (10 micrograms/mouse) and eristostatin (0.6 micrograms/mouse), whereas high doses of a thrombin inhibitor and an inhibitor of von Willebrand Factor binding to glycoprotein Ib were not effective. Injection of collagen and epinephrine resulted in the drop of platelet count and accumulation of platelet aggregates in the lung that appears to be the immediate cause of death. Albolabrin or eristostatin administration did not prevent the decrease of platelet count. Injection of albolabrin resulted in the formation of smaller and reversible platelet aggregates in the lungs and decreased accumulation of 51Cr-labeled platelets in the lung suggesting that this disintegrin decreases formation of platelet aggregates in vivo. We compared the effects of albolabrin and erisostatin on platelet aggregation, tail bleeding time, and survival of challenged animals. Eristostatin was about 5 times more potent in inhibiting platelet aggregation in vitro than albolabrin and 38 times more potent than albolabrin in protecting animals from sudden death. Both disintegrins, at the same doses (0.6-5 micrograms/mouse), caused similar dose-dependent prolongation of the bleeding time; however, only eristostatin exerted a protective effect. In conclusion, a) the mouse antithrombotic assay is a suitable model to screen and to evaluate the potency of platelet fibrinogen receptor antagonists in vivo; b) the results of the antithrombotic assay correlate better with the inhibition of platelet aggregation in vitro than with the prolongation of bleeding time.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0049-3848(93)90199-xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

antithrombotic assay
16
mouse antithrombotic
12
platelet aggregates
12
platelet aggregation
12
bleeding time
12
platelet
10
inhibition platelet
8
injection collagen
8
collagen epinephrine
8
platelet count
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!