Paper
On the mechanism of the anticlotting action of vitamin E quinone.
Published Aug 29, 1995 · P. Dowd, Z. Zheng
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
133
Citations
1
Influential Citations
Abstract
Vitamin E in the reduced, alpha-tocopherol form shows very modest anticlotting activity. By contrast, vitamin E quinone is a potent anticoagulant. This observation may have significance for field trials in which vitamin E is observed to exhibit beneficial effects on ischemic heart disease and stroke. Vitamin E quinone is a potent inhibitor of the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase that controls blood clotting. A newly discovered mechanism for the inhibition requires attachment of the active site thiol groups of the carboxylase to one or more methyl groups on vitamin E quinone. The results from a series of model reactions support this interpretation of the anticlotting activity associated with vitamin E.
Vitamin E quinone, not alpha-tocopherol, shows potent anticoagulant activity, potentially benefiting ischemic heart disease and stroke.
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