Anticoagulants of the coumarin type have long been reported to inhibit metastasis growth in experimental animals; however, the mechanisms of such effects has not been clarified. Systemic anticoagulation per se does not appear to account completely for such metastasis growth depression. More recent information gathered on a cell procoagulant activity, which is vitamin K-dependent, could probably supply a fresh insight into this problem. Indeed, vitamin K deficiency induced either dietarily or pharmacologically by warfarin, does inhibit the activity of a cysteine protease with direct factor-X-activating properties. This protease is only present in warfarin-sensitive tumors. The correlation of this activity with cancer cell invasiveness is supported by experimental data in metastatic variants and, lately, also by the observation of markedly higher cancer procoagulant activity in extracts from metastases than from primary human melanomas.

Donati, M., Roncaglioni, M., Falanga, A., Casali, B., Semeraro, N. (1986). Vitamin K-Dependent Procoagulant in Cancer Cells: A Potential Target for the Antimetastatic Effect of Warfarin?. HAEMOSTASIS, 16(3-4), 288-294 [10.1159/000215300].

Vitamin K-Dependent Procoagulant in Cancer Cells: A Potential Target for the Antimetastatic Effect of Warfarin?

Falanga, A;
1986

Abstract

Anticoagulants of the coumarin type have long been reported to inhibit metastasis growth in experimental animals; however, the mechanisms of such effects has not been clarified. Systemic anticoagulation per se does not appear to account completely for such metastasis growth depression. More recent information gathered on a cell procoagulant activity, which is vitamin K-dependent, could probably supply a fresh insight into this problem. Indeed, vitamin K deficiency induced either dietarily or pharmacologically by warfarin, does inhibit the activity of a cysteine protease with direct factor-X-activating properties. This protease is only present in warfarin-sensitive tumors. The correlation of this activity with cancer cell invasiveness is supported by experimental data in metastatic variants and, lately, also by the observation of markedly higher cancer procoagulant activity in extracts from metastases than from primary human melanomas.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Vitamin K,t procoagulant, cancer cells
English
1986
16
3-4
288
294
none
Donati, M., Roncaglioni, M., Falanga, A., Casali, B., Semeraro, N. (1986). Vitamin K-Dependent Procoagulant in Cancer Cells: A Potential Target for the Antimetastatic Effect of Warfarin?. HAEMOSTASIS, 16(3-4), 288-294 [10.1159/000215300].
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/259778
Citazioni
  • Scopus 9
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 14
Social impact