1. Academic Validation
  2. An antiplatelet peptide, gabonin, from Bitis gabonica snake venom

An antiplatelet peptide, gabonin, from Bitis gabonica snake venom

  • Arch Biochem Biophys. 1992 Oct;298(1):13-20. doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(92)90087-d.
T F Huang 1 H C Peng I S Peng C M Teng C Ouyang
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Pharmacological Institute, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei.
Abstract

Interaction of fibrinogen with its receptors (glycoprotein IIb/IIIa complex) on platelet membranes leads to platelet aggregation. By means of gel filtration, CM-Sephadex C-50, and reverse-phase HPLC, an antiplatelet peptide, gabonin, was purified from the venom of Bitis gabonica. The purified protein migrates as a 21,100-Da polypeptide on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions and as a 11,000-Da peptide in the presence of beta-mercaptoethanol, indicating that gabonin is a disulfide-linked dimer. It is a polypeptide consisting of about 84 amino acid residues, rich in Asp, Pro, and half-cystine. Gabonin dose-dependently inhibited human platelet aggregation stimulated by ADP, collagen, U46619, or Thrombin in preparations of platelet-rich plasma and platelet suspension (IC50 = 340-1600 nM). It also blocked platelet aggregation of whole blood. However, it apparently did not affect the initial shape change and only slightly reduced ATP release caused by aggregation agonists. Gabonin did not inhibit the rise of cytosolic calcium in Quin-2-loaded platelets stimulated by Thrombin. In addition, gabonin dose-dependently inhibited fibrinogen-induced aggregation of elastase-treated platelets. In conclusion, gabonin inhibits platelet aggregation mainly through the blockade of fibrinogen binding toward fibrinogen receptors of the activated platelets.

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