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Title: Unbalanced effects of dermatan sulfates with different sulfation patterns on coagulation, thrombosis and bleeding. Author: Vicente CP, Zancan P, Peixoto LL, Alves-Sá R, Araújo FS, Mourão PA, Pavão MS. Journal: Thromb Haemost; 2001 Nov; 86(5):1215-20. PubMed ID: 11816710. Abstract: We compared the anticoagulant, antithrombotic and bleeding effects of highly sulfated dermatan sulfates from invertebrates and their mammalian counterpart. An invertebrate dermatan sulfate containing 2-O-sulfated alpha-L-iduronic acid and 4-O-sulfated N-acetyl-beta-D-galactosamine residues is a potent anticoagulant due to a high heparin cofactor II activity. It inhibits thrombin due to the formation of a covalent complex with heparin cofactor II, as in the case of mammalian dermatan sulfate, but the effect occurs at lower concentrations for the invertebrate polysaccharide. Surprisingly, the invertebrate dermatan sulfate has a lower potency to prevent thrombus formation on an experimental model and a lower bleeding effect in rats than the mammalian dermatan sulfate. In contrast, another invertebrate dermatan sulfate, also enriched in 2-O-sulfated alpha-L-iduronic acid, but in this case sulfated at O-6 position of the N-acetyl-beta-D-galactosamine units, has no in vitro or in vivo anticoagulant activity, does not prevent thrombus formation but shows a bleeding effect similar to the mammalian glycosaminoglycan. Overall, these results demonstrate unbalanced effects of dermatan sulfates with different sulfation patterns on coagulation, thrombosis and bleeding, and raise interesting questions concerning the relationship among these three biological actions of sulfated polysaccharides.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]