R. Apitz‐Castro, E. Ledezma, Javier Escalante
Nov 26, 1986
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63
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Journal
Biochemical and biophysical research communications
Abstract
Ajoene, the major antiplatelet compound derived from garlic inhibits the fibrinogen-supported aggregation of washed human platelets (ID50 = 13 microM) and, inhibits binding of 125I-fibrinogen to ADP-stimulated platelets (ID50 = 0.8 microM). In both cases, the inhibition is of the mixed non-competitive type. Furthermore, fibrinogen-induced aggregation of chymotrypsin-treated platelets is also inhibited by ajoene in a dose-dependent manner (ID50 = 2.3 microM). Other membrane receptors such as ADP or epinephrine receptors are not affected by ajoene. Ajoene strongly quenches the intrinsic fluorescence emission of purified glycoproteins IIb-IIIa (ID50 = 10 microM). These results indicate that the antiaggregatory effect of ajoene is causally related to its direct interaction with the putative fibrinogen receptor.