Abstract

Sulfated polysaccharides from marine algae have high potential as promising candidates for marine drug development. In this study, a homogeneous sulfated polysaccharide from the marine green alga Monostroma nitidum, designated MS-1, was isolated using water extraction and anion-exchange and size-exclusion chromatography. Results of chemical and spectroscopic analyses showed that MS-1 mainly consisted of →3)-α-l-Rhap-(1→ and →2)-α-l-Rhap-(1→ residues, with additional branches consisting of 4-linked β-d-xylose, 4-/6-linked d-glucose, terminal β-d-glucuronic acid, and 3-/2-linked α-l-rhamnose. Sulfate ester groups substituted mainly at C-2/C-4 of →3)-α-l-Rhap-(1→ and C-4 of →2)-α-l-Rhap-(1→ residues, slightly at C-2 of terminal β-d-glucuronic residues. MS-1 exhibited strong anticoagulant activity in vitro and in vivo as evaluated by the activated partial thromboplastin time and thrombin time assays, and significantly decreased platelet aggregation. The anticoagulant activity mechanism of MS-1 was mainly attributed to strong potentiation thrombin by heparin cofactor-II, and it also hastened thrombin and coagulation factor Xa inhibitions by potentiating antithrombin-III. MS-1 possessed markedly thrombolytic activity evaluated by plasminogen activator inhibitior-1, fibrin degradation products, and D-dimer levels using rats plasma, and recanalization rate by FeCl3-induced carotid artery thrombosis in mice. MS-1 exhibited strong antithrombotic activity in vitro and in vivo evaluated by the wet weighs and lengths of thrombus, and thrombus occlusion time by electrically-induced carotid artery thrombosis in rats. These results suggested that MS-1 could be a promising marine drug for prevention and therapy of thromboembolic disease.

Highlights

  • Thrombus usually occurs in vessels with severe atherosclerotic disease and may embolize to cause transient ischemic attacks and cerebral infarctions [1]

  • The molecular weight of MS-1 was ~79.8 kDa based on the calibration graph prepared with pullulan standards

  • MS-1 was a novel sulfated heterorhamnan with branches consisting of 4-linked β-d-xylose, 4-/6-linked d-glucose, terminal β-d-glucuronic acid, and 3-/2-linked α-l-rhamnose

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Summary

Introduction

Thrombus usually occurs in vessels with severe atherosclerotic disease and may embolize to cause transient ischemic attacks and cerebral infarctions [1]. The Global Burden of Disease Study 2010 reported that the ischemic heart disease and stroke collectively caused one in four deaths worldwide [3]. Mar. Drugs 2019, 17, 247; doi:10.3390/md17040247 www.mdpi.com/journal/marinedrugs. Mar. Drugs 2019, 17, 247 as an adjunct therapy in thrombotic diseases, and heparin is one of the agents more widely used in the therapy and prophylaxis of thrombosis. Heparin is mostly extracted from pig intestine or bovine lung and the tissues are rich in mast cells, presumably resulting from the high foreign parasite burden in the tissues. The incidence of prion-related diseases in mammals and the appearance of ‘mad cow disease’ have limited the use of animal heparin. New instead sources of heparin are urgently desired [6]

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