Angélica Quintana-Pimentel’s research while affiliated with Metropolitan Autonomous University and other places

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Publications (1)


Figure 1. Localities of collection: 1. La Mancha (Veracruz), 2. Costa de Oro (Veracruz), 3. Champoton (Campeche), 4. Tenabo (Campeche) 5, Celestun (Yucatán)., 6. Chelem (Yucatán), 7. Puerto Morelos Reef (Quintana Roo).  
Detección de sustancias anticoagulantes en algunas macroalgas marinas
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January 2006

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1 Citation

Graciela De Lara-Isassi

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Angélica Quintana-Pimentel

The coagulation disorders have increased in the last decades and no new substances had been discovered that could regulate this illness. This fact makes the discovery of new anticoagulant substances a priority issue in research. Forty nine seaweed species collected off shore of several localities of Gulf of Mexico and Mexican Caribbean sea were screened in order to detect anticoagulant activity in both intrinsic and extrinsic pathways of clot formation. Standardized plasma coagulation tests (thrombin and prothrombin time) were used. Heparin, a sulphated glycosaminoglycan wide used in oral anticoagulant therapy, was used as reference in both proofs. The results showed that four species presented potent anticoagulant activity same as heparin in the two pathways: Anadyomene stellata, Caulerpa cupressoides (Chlorophyta), Lobophora variegata (Phaeophyta) and Liagora farinosa (Rhodophyta). Caulerpa paspaloides (Chlorophyta) was active only in the thrombin time test. Other seven species presented a slightly anticoagulant activity. We considered that algal extracts have substances capable of inhibit clot formation in the last steps of the coagulation cascade. The extracts could act preventing the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin, also they could act stopping the transformation of fibrinogen to convert it to fibrin o even in the polymerization of this last molecule. This is the first report of anticoagulant activity in Anadyomene stellata, Lobophora variegata and Liagora farinosa. We can concluded that these species can be considered as potentially alternative source of anticoagulant molecules. Palabras clave: Anticoagulant activity, marine algae, Gulf of Mexico, heparin RESUMEN

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Citations (1)


... De Lara-Isassi et al. 2004;Medeiros et al. 2008;Castro et al. 2014b), antioxidant(Zubia et al. 2007;Paiva et al. 2011;Castro et al. 2014b;Sathyaseelan et al. 2015), anti-inflammatory(Paiva et al. 2011;Siqueira et al. 2011;Medeiros et al. 2008;Castro et al. 2014b), hemagglutinating (Lima Ainouz et al. 1992) as well as anti-angiogenic(Castro et al. 2014a) activities. Lobophora aqueous extract demonstrated low cytotoxic properties on human breast carcinoma MCF-7 cell lines, at a concentration of 200 lg ml -1(Wang et al. 2008b), and against the human nasopharyngeal carcinoma (KB) cell line (Moo-Puc et al. ...

Reference:

Biological activities associated to the chemodiversity of the brown algae belonging to genus Lobophora (Dictyotales, Phaeophyceae)
Detección de sustancias anticoagulantes en algunas macroalgas marinas