| Literature DB >> 31974145 |
Hongyan Qiu1, Lan Jin1, Jian Chen2, Min Shi3, Feng Shi4, Mansen Wang5, Daoyuan Li1, Xiaohui Xu1, Xinhuan Su6, Xianlun Yin1, Wenhua Li1, Xiaoming Zhou6, Robert J Linhardt7, Zhe Wang6, Lianli Chi8, Qunye Zhang8.
Abstract
Long-term hyperglycemia in patients with diabetes leads to human serum albumin (HSA) glycation, which may impair HSA function as a transport protein and affect the therapeutic efficacy of anticoagulants in patients with diabetes. In this study, a novel mass spectrometry approach was developed to reveal the differences in the profiles of HSA glycation sites between patients with diabetes and healthy subjects. K199 was the glycation site most significantly changed in patients with diabetes, contributing to different interactions of glycated HSA and normal HSA with two types of anticoagulant drugs, heparin and warfarin. An in vitro experiment showed that the binding affinity to warfarin became stronger when HSA was glycated, while HSA binding to heparin was not significantly influenced by glycation. A pharmacokinetic study showed a decreased level of free warfarin in the plasma of diabetic rats. A preliminary retrospective clinical study also revealed that there was a statistically significant difference in the anticoagulant efficacy between patients with diabetes and patients without diabetes who had been treated with warfarin. Our work suggests that larger studies are needed to provide additional specific guidance for patients with diabetes when they are administered anticoagulant drugs or drugs for treating other chronic diseases.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31974145 DOI: 10.2337/db19-0738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461