| Literature DB >> 35990779 |
Peter Kubatka1, Alena Mazurakova2, Lenka Koklesova2, Marek Samec3, Juraj Sokol4, Samson Mathews Samuel5, Erik Kudela2, Kamil Biringer2, Ondrej Bugos6, Martin Pec1, Barbara Link7, Marian Adamkov8, Karel Smejkal9, Dietrich Büsselberg5, Olga Golubnitschaja10.
Abstract
Thromboembolism is the third leading vascular disease, with a high annual incidence of 1 to 2 cases per 1000 individuals within the general population. The broader term venous thromboembolism generally refers to deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, and/or a combination of both. Therefore, thromboembolism can affect both - the central and peripheral veins. Arterial thromboembolism causes systemic ischemia by disturbing blood flow and oxygen supply to organs, tissues, and cells causing, therefore, apoptosis and/or necrosis in the affected tissues. Currently applied antithrombotic drugs used, e.g. to protect affected individuals against ischemic stroke, demonstrate significant limitations. For example, platelet inhibitors possess only moderate efficacy. On the other hand, thrombolytics and anticoagulants significantly increase hemorrhage. Contextually, new approaches are extensively under consideration to develop next-generation antithrombotics with improved efficacy and more personalized and targeted application. To this end, phytochemicals show potent antithrombotic efficacy demonstrated in numerous in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo models as well as in clinical evaluations conducted on healthy individuals and persons at high risk of thrombotic events, such as pregnant women (primary care), cancer, and COVID-19-affected patients (secondary and tertiary care). Here, we hypothesized that specific antithrombotic and antiplatelet effects of plant-derived compounds might be of great clinical utility in primary, secondary, and tertiary care. To increase the efficacy, precise patient stratification based on predictive diagnostics is essential for targeted protection and treatments tailored to the person in the framework of 3P medicine. Contextually, this paper aims at critical review toward the involvement of specific classes of phytochemicals in antiplatelet and anticoagulation adapted to clinical needs. The paper exemplifies selected plant-derived drugs, plant extracts, and whole plant foods/herbs demonstrating their specific antithrombotic, antiplatelet, and fibrinolytic activities relevant for primary, secondary, and tertiary care. One of the examples considered is antithrombotic and antiplatelet protection specifically relevant for COVID-19-affected patient groups.Entities:
Keywords: Anticoagulation; Antiplatelet effects; COVID-19; Circulation; Comorbidities; Health policy; Individualized patient profile; Ischemic stroke; Molecular pathways; Natural drugs; Phytochemicals; Predictive preventive personalized medicine; Primary, secondary, tertiary care; Targets; Therapeutic modalities; Thrombosis; Treated cancers; Vascular disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 35990779 PMCID: PMC9376584 DOI: 10.1007/s13167-022-00293-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EPMA J ISSN: 1878-5077 Impact factor: 8.836
Fig. 1Signaling pathways associated with platelet activation. AA, arachidonic acid; COX1/2, cyclooxygenase 1/2; PGG2, prostaglandin G2; PGH2, prostaglandin H2; TX-synthase, thromboxane synthase; TXA2, thromboxane A2; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; PAR, protease-activated receptors; TP, thromboxane receptor; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; GPVI, glycoprotein VI; PDI, protein disulfide isomerase; SFK, Src family kinase; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinases; ERK; extracellular signal-regulated kinase; JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinase; PLCγ2, phospholipase C gamma 2; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinases; Akt, protein kinase B; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; SYK, spleen tyrosine kinase; PGI2, prostaglandin I2; IP, prostacyclin receptor; NO, nitric oxide; AC, adenylyl cyclase; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; PKA, cAMP-dependent protein kinase; sGC, soluble guanylyl cyclase; PKG, cGMP-dependent protein kinase; cGMP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate; PDE 2/3/5, phosphodiesterase 2/3/5; ROS, reactive oxygen species; eNOS, endothelial NOS; TF, tissue factor; AP-1, activator protein 1; Egr-1; early growth response 1
Antithrombotic effects of phytochemicals
| Phytochemical | Study design | Effects/results | Ref | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quercetin and its metabolites (tamarixetin and isorhamenetin) | In vitro and in vivo (C57/BL6 mice) models of thrombus formation | ↓ Platelet aggregation triggered by collagen, ADP-, U46619- (a stable TXA2 analog), and thrombin (GPCR-mediated pathway inhibition); ↓ activatory processes (granule secretion, integrin αIIbβ3 function, Ca2+ mobilization, and Syk/LAT phosphorylation downstream of GPVI); ↑ antiplatelet effects of acetylsalicylic acid | [ | |||
| Quercitrin | In vitro, in vivo (wild-type C57BL/6 mice) | ↓ Platelet aggregation and ATP secretion; ↓ CRP-induced αIIbβ3 integrin activation and P-selectin exposure; ↓ Ca2+ mobilization; ↓ CRP-induced intracellular ROS formation; ↓ platelet αIIbβ3 outside-in signaling; ↑ downregulation of GPVI signaling events; ↓ thrombus formation in vivo and in vitro (on collagen-coated surfaces under arteriolar shear) | [ | |||
| Quercetin 3,7,3′,4′-tetrasulphate | In vivo model of pulmonary thromboembolism (C57BL/6 mice) | Antithrombotic effects; ↑ blood loss; ↑ bleeding time | [ | |||
| Kaempferol | In vitro, ex vivo (ICR MICE), in vivo (male ICR mice, Sprague–Dawley rats) | ↓ Enzymatic activities of thrombin and FXa; ↓ fibrin polymer formation; ↓ fibrin clot formation; ↑ APTT (anticoagulant activity); ↓ platelet activation; ↓ thrombin-induced ERK1/2, p38, JNK1/2, and AKT activation; ↑ survival of thrombotic challenge with collagen and epinephrine (or thrombin) in mice; ↓ vascular occlusion of the carotid artery in FeCl3-induced carotid arterial thrombus model in rats | [ | |||
| Rutin | In vitro and in vivo (male ICR mice) | ↓ Fibrin clotting; ↓ thrombin activity; ↓ FXa (slight decrease); ↓ blood clot; ↑ APTT and PT prolongation (anticoagulant activity); ↓ platelet activation; ↑ survival of thrombotic challenge with collagen and epinephrine (or thrombin) in mice | [ | |||
| Rutin@AgNPs | In vitro and in vivo (ICR mice) | ↑ APTT and PT (anticoagulant activity); ↓ thrombus formation in carrageenan-induced venous thrombosis mouse model (↓ PDI → blockage of platelet accumulation and fibrin generation; anti-inflammatory effects → ↓ inflammation caused by carrageenan) | [ | |||
| Hesperidin, glucosyl hesperidin, and naringin | In vivo (stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats) | ↓ Thrombotic tendency; ↑ antioxidant effects (↓ 8-OHdG); ↑ NO metabolites; ↑ vascular relaxation | [ | |||
| Apigenin | In vitro | ↓ Platelet adhesion and thrombus formation; ↓ AA pathway in synergy with acetylsalicylic acid (TXA 2 receptors antagonism); ↓ thrombus formation (also by genistein and catechin) | [ | |||
| Wogonin | In vitro (ECs) | ↓ TF expression and activity (anticoagulant activity); ↓ ERK/Egr-1- and JNK/AP-1-mediated transactivation of TF promoter activity | [ | |||
| Wogonin and wogonoside | In vitro and in vivo (ICR mice) | ↑ APTT and PT prolongation (anticoagulant activity); ↓ fibrin polymerization; ↓ mouse platelet aggregation induced by thrombin; ↓ amidolytic activity of thrombin; ↓ FXa; ↓ thrombin production from prothrombin; ↑ prolongation of tail bleeding time | [ | |||
| GTC, EGCG | In vitro | Protection of paralysis and death due to pulmonary thrombosis; prolonged mouse tail bleeding time; ↓ platelet aggregation | [ | |||
| Epicatechin | Healthy volunteers’ plasma samples ( | ↓ Maximal platelet aggregation; ↓ ETP; ↑ fibrinolysis; | [ | |||
| Dark chocolate (flavan-3-ols) | Healthy volunteers ( | ↑ Collagen/ADP-induced closure time (and correlation with the increase of total SREMs); suggested a beneficial protective role for subjects at increased risk of thrombosis | [ | |||
| Flavonoid-rich dark chocolate | Healthy men receiving placebo ( | ↓ Acute prothrombotic response to psychosocial stress (↓ stress reactivity of D-dimer) | [ | |||
| Isoquercetin | Advanced cancer patients at high risk for thrombosis, receiving isoquercetin at 500 mg ( | ↓ D-dimer; ↑ PDI inhibitory activity; ↓ platelet-dependent thrombin generation | [ | |||
| Caffeic acid | Human platelets | ↓ Collagen-induced platelet aggregation; ↓ Ca2+ mobilization; ↓ adenosine 1,4,5-tri-phosphate release; ↓ expression of P-selectin; ↓ αIIbβ3 activation; ↓ phosphorylation of AKT and ERK; ↑ cAMP level | [ | |||
| Washed platelets from rats (Sprague–Dawley) | ↓ Collagen-induced platelet aggregation; ↓ Ca2+ and TXA2 levels; ↑ cAMP level | [ | ||||
| Curcumin | Healthy volunteers plasma samples; HUVEC cell lines | ↑ APTT and PT; ↓ thrombin and FXa generation | [ | |||
| Male ICR mice (6 weeks) and washed human platelets | ↓ Thrombin-stimulated platelet activation; ↓ αIIbβ3/FIB and Akt phosphorylation | [ | ||||
| p-Hydroxy-cinnamic acid | Healthy volunteers plasma samples | ↑ APTT | [ | |||
| Ferulic acid | Male ICR mice (6 weeks) and washed platelets from mice | ↓ Risk of death caused by pulmonary thrombosis; ↓ platelet aggregation; ↓ Ca2+ mobilization; ↓ TXB2 generation; ↑ levels of cAMP and cGMP; ↑ phosphorylation of vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP), ↓ phosphorylation of MAPK and PDE | [ | |||
| Venous blood of Japanese White Rabbits | ↑ Whole blood coagulation time | [ | ||||
| 5-(Hydroxymethyl)furfural | Whole blood samples were collected from individuals with sickle cell trait | ↓ The effects of hypoxia, ↓ risk for venous thromboembolism, ↓ blood rheology, restoration of near-normal flow velocities at very low oxygen | [ | |||
| Dan Zhi tablet | New Zealand white rabbits, ICR mice, Sprague–Dawley rats as a model of middle cerebral artery occlusion | ↑ Antiplatelet activity, ↓ prostaglandin G/H synthase 1 activity, ↓ platelet aggregation in vitro, ↓ ADP- or AA-induced ex vivo platelet aggregation, ↓ thromboxane A2, ↑ prevention against thrombus formation | [ | |||
| Resveratrol | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↑ Anticoagulant effect of warfarin; ↓ BCRP and CYP2C9 | [ | |||
| Male C57BL/6 J | ↑ Anticoagulant effect of warfarin | [ | ||||
| HUVEC cell line | ↓ IL-8, t-PA-1, and von Willebrand factor expression and secretion; ↓ factor VIII activity | [ | ||||
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats | ↓ Incidence of PVST after splenectomy; ↓ platelet aggregation and ROS production; ↑ NO generation and platelet apoptosis | [ | ||||
| Esculetin | Human platelets and male ICR mice | ↑ Prevention of thrombosis, ↓ PLCγ2-PKC-AKT activation, ↓ collagen- and arachidonic acid-induced platelet aggregation, ↓ ATP release, ↓ P-selectin expression, ↓ hydroxyl radical formation, ↓ mortality, ↑ occlusion time in thrombotic platelet plug formation | [ | |||
| 3-(5-Hydroxy-2,2-dimethyl-chroman-6-yl)-N-{2-[3-(5-hydroxy-2,2-dimethyl-chroman-6-yl)-propionylamino]-ethyl}-propionamide | Male Golden Syrian hamster (100–120 g), Male Sprague–Dawley rats (160–180 g), and male Swiss mice (18– 20 g) | ↑ Prevention of collagen- and epinephrine-induced pulmonary thromboembolism, ↑ prevention of arachidonic acid-induced death, ↓ thrombus weight, ↓ ADP and collagen-induced platelet aggregation, ↓ whole-blood aggregation | [ | |||
| Rutaecarpine | Male ICR mice (6 weeks) and washed human platelets | ↑ Antiplatelet activation, ↓ PLCγ2/PKC, PI3K/Akt/GSK3β, ↓ P-selectin expression, ↓ ATP release, ↓ [Ca2+] immobilization, ↓ hydroxyl radical formation | [ | |||
| Coffee (methylxanthines) | Patients with a first venous thrombosis ( | ↓ Risk of venous thrombosis, ↓ von Willebrand factor, ↓ factor (F) VIII | [ | |||
| Rhizoma of Corydalis yanhusuo | Rabbit platelets | ↓ Thrombin-induced platelet aggregation | [ | |||
| D39 | HUVEC cells and inferior vena cava ligation injury in mice | ↓ Procoagulant activities, ↓ tissue factor expression, ↓ thrombus weight, ↓ deep vein thrombosis, ↓ NMMHC IIA, ↓ NF-κB, ↑ Akt/GSK3β | [ | |||
| Diosgenyl b-D-galactopyranosyl-(1 → 4)-b-D-glucopyranoside | Male Balb/C mice (four weeks old, 18–22 g) and male Wistar rats (eight weeks old, 200–250 g) | ↓ Platelet aggregation, ↓ factor VIII activities, ↑ APTT, ↑ protection rate, ↑ antithrombotic activity | [ | |||
| Panaxatriol saponin and ginsenosides (Rg1, Re, and R1) | The human blood or rabbit (New Zealand albino rabbits) blood–platelet preparation | ↑ Antiplatelet activity, ↓ platelet aggregation, ↓ intracellular calcium mobilization, ↓ ERK2, and p38 phosphorylation | [ | |||
| Gardenia jasminoides | Rat model | ↑ Prolonged bleeding time, ↓ platelet aggregation, ↓ thrombosis | [ | |||
| Geniposide and genipin | Male ICR mice | ↑ Antithrombotic activity, ↓ collagen-induced platelets aggregation, ↑ the time required for thrombotic occlusion, ↓ phospholipase A(2) | [ | |||
| Zhizi (Gardeniae fructus) | Rat model of carotid artery thrombosis | ↑ Antithrombotic action, ↓ collagen-induced platelet aggregation, ↓ arterial thrombus, ↑ thrombin time | [ | |||
| Sesquiterpene glycoside and ferulic acid from the leaves of | Sprague–Dawley rats, a microsomal fraction of rat lung tissue as the tissue factor source | ↓ Tissue factor activity, ↑ prothrombin time in the presence of tissue factors in a dose-dependent manner | [ | |||
| Curdione | Human platelets | ↓ Human platelet aggregation, ↓ phosphorylated AMPK, ↓ P-integrin, ↓ vinculin/talin-mediated integrin αIIbβ3 signaling pathway | [ | |||
| Nootkatone | Platelet aggregation in whole blood (in vitro) and pial arterioles and venules (in vivo) | ↓ Prothrombotic effect, ↓ plasma concentration of fibrinogen, ↓ plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, ↓ IL-6, ↓ lipid peroxidation, ↑ activated partial thromboplastin time, ↑ prothrombin time, ↓ thrombogenicity, ↓ systemic and cardiac oxidative stress and DNA damage, ↑ nuclear factor erythroid-derived 2-like 2, ↑ heme oxygenase-1 | [ | |||
| Sulfated galactans ( | Animal models of experimental thrombosis | Serpin-independent anticoagulant activities, FXII-related procoagulant effects, ↓ arterial thrombus formation, ↑ venous thrombosis | [ | |||
| Sulfated D-galactans (Botryocladia occidentalis) | Platelet-depleted animals | Lower dose: anticoagulant activity, prevent thrombosis, ↑ thrombin, and factor Xa inhibition Higher dose (more than 0.5 mg/ kg body weight): ↑ platelet aggregation | [ | |||
| Sulfated pyranosic (1- > 3)-β-L-arabinan ( | Samples containing 1 μm human thrombin | ↑ anticoagulant activity, direct interaction with thrombin | [ | |||
| Fluorescence-based biochemical assay (screening and characterization of each constituent); inhibition kinetics (inhibitory effects on human thrombin); molecular docking (interaction between biflavones and thrombin); mass spectrometry-based lysine labeling reactivity assay (identification of ligand-binding sites) | Thrombin-inhibitory activity of Ginkgo biflavones (ginkgetin, isoginkgetin, bilobetin, and amentoflavone) and flavonoids (luteolin, apigenin, quercetin, kaempferol, and isorhamnetin); Ginkgo biflavones → occupation of the active cavity with strong interactions of salt bridges and hydrogen bonds and binding on human thrombin at exosite I rather than exosite II | [ | ||||
| GBE50 combined with aspirin | In vitro | ↑ Antiplatelet effects (synergistic and additive effects in restraining platelet aggregation | [ | |||
| Ginkgo biloba extract | HUVECs cell model | ↑ Antithrombotic effects (increased thrombomodulin expression and tissue-type plasminogen activator secretion); KLF2 suggested a key factor of these mechanisms | [ | |||
| Chamomilla aqueous extract | Blood from healthy volunteers | ↑ Antiplatelet effects (inhibition of ADP-induced and collagen-induced platelet aggregation) | [ | |||
| Polysaccharide-polyphenolic conjugates isolated from MC | Platelet-rich plasma from healthy donors and donors with cardiovascular disorders; in vitro (cytotoxicity) | ↓ Platelet aggregation (healthy donors); ↓ platelet aggregation (donors with cardiovascular disorders); no cytotoxicity effects on human blood platelets, mouse fibroblast cultures L929 and human lung cells A549 | [ | |||
| A. ursinum and A. sativum extracts | Blood from healthy volunteers | ↓ Platelet aggregation via inhibition ADP pathway | [ | |||
| A. atroviolaceum extract | Blood from healthy volunteers | ↓ Platelet aggregation after induction by platelet aggregation inducers (arachidonic acid and ADP) | [ | |||
| Garlic tablets | Randomized controlled clinical trial ( | No association between the consumption of garlic tablets and platelet aggregation | [ | |||
| Flavonolignans isolated from Silybum marianum L | Blood from healthy volunteers | ↓ Platelet aggregation, ↓ P-selection expression, ↓ activation of αIIbβ3 | [ | |||
| Flavonolignans isolated from Silybum marianum L | Blood from healthy volunteers | ↓ Platelet aggregation, ↓ COX activity, ↓ malondialdehyde, and thromboxane A2 levels | [ | |||
| Silybum marianum L flavonolignans and their sulfated conjugates | Blood from healthy volunteers; isolated rat aortas | ↑ Vasorelaxant effect ex vivo in rat aortas; ↓ platelet activity | [ | |||
Explanatory notes: ↓, inhibition, suppression, reduction; ↑, promotion, enhancement; → leading to, resulting in
8-OHdG, 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine; AA, arachidonic acid; ADP, adenosine diphosphate; AKT, protein kinase B; APTT, activated partial thromboplastin time; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; BCRP, breast cancer resistance protein; Ca, calcium; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; cGMP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate; CYP2C9, cytochrome P450 family 2 subfamily C member 9; ECs, endothelial cells; EGCG, (-)-epigallocatechin gallate; ERK2, extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2; ETP, endogenous thrombin potential; FXa, activated factor X; GBE50, Ginkgo biloba extract 50; GPCR, G-protein coupled receptor; GPVI, glycoprotein VI; GSK3β, glycogen synthase kinase-3 beta; GTC, green tea catechins; HUVECs, human umbilical vein endothelial cells; IL-8, interleukin 8; KLF2, Krüppel-like factor 2; LAT, linker for activation of T cells; MC, Matricaria chamomilla L.; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; NMMHC IIA, non-muscular myosin heavy chain IIA; NO, nitric oxide; p38, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase; PDI, protein disulfide isomerase; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase; PKC, protein kinase C; PLCγ2, phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase Cγ2; PT, prothrombin time; PVST, portal vein system thrombosis; Rutin@AgNPs, rutin-loaded silver nanoparticles; SREMs, structurally related (epi)catechin metabolite; Syk, spleen tyrosine kinase; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; t-PA-1, tissue plasminogen activator-1; TXA2, thromboxane A2; TXB2, thromboxane B2; VASP, vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein