Acta Scientiarum: Biological Sciences (Apr 2011)

<b>Anticoagulant properties of a crude sulfated polysaccharide from the red marine alga <em>Halymenia floresia</em> (Clemente) C. Agardh</b> - doi: 10.4025/actascibiolsci.v33i3.6402

  • Rodrigo César das Neves Amorim,
  • José Ariévilo Gurgel Rodrigues,
  • Márjory Lima Holanda,
  • Paulo Antônio de Souza Mourão,
  • Norma Maria Barros Benevides

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4025/actascibiolsci.v33i3.6402
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 3

Abstract

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Alternative sources of anticoagulants have arisen as a result of the increasing demand for safer anticoagulant clinical therapy, and the sulfated polysaccharides of seaweeds have gained attention in biomedicine. In this study, crude sulfated polysaccharide fractions (denominated Hf1, Hf2 and Hf3) were obtained from the red marine alga Halymenia floresia and the anticoagulant properties of a soluble crude polysaccharide fraction (Hf2s) were assayed. The three differential extractions yielded 38.6%. The polysaccharides are composed mainly of galactose, with small amounts of xylose and glucose. The anticoagulant properties of Hf2s containing 53.8% sulfate and 3% protein was also compared to those of heparin (193.0 IU mg-1) by assays of activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) and thrombin time (TT) using normal human plasma. Hf2s showed a higher anticoagulant activity (68.4 IU mg-1) than those of Hf1s and Hf3s, whose activities were 37.6 and 36.6 IU mg-1, respectively. The compound was less active than heparin, but its anticoagulant mechanism suggested that it is dependent on cofactor heparin II to inhibit thrombin activity, but not on cofactors VIII and IX. Therefore, the polysaccharide from H. floresia interfered on coagulation cascade.

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