CATIONIC ANTIBIOTICS AND PHOSPHOLIPASE C AS TOOLS IN THE STUDY OF PHOSPHOLIPID STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION: I. INHIBITION OF THE IN VITRO CLOTTING SYSTEM BY CATIONIC ANTIBIOTICS
- 1 February 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 45 (2) , 239-244
- https://doi.org/10.1139/o67-026
Abstract
The one-stage prothrombin time of human plasma was prolonged by the addition to the thromboplastic mixture of either colistin sulfate or polymyxin B. Colistimethate sodium, a derivative of colistin in which the amino groups of the cyclic polypeptide antibiotic are substituted, did not show this effect. The inhibition was greater if the antibiotics were incubated with thromboplastin in the absence of Ca++. In the Hicks–Pitney modification of the thromboplastin generation time test, the two polyamine antibiotics reduced the amount of thromboplastic activity generated. Generation, however, appeared to be initiated sooner. It is postulated that these actions by the antibiotics are the results of modifications in the zeta potentials of the thromboplastic micelles.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- PHOSPHOLIPIDS: II. A CORRELATION OF CHEMICAL STRUCTURE WITH THROMBOPLASTIC ACTIVITYCanadian Journal of Biochemistry, 1965
- PHOSPHOLIPIDS: I. STUDIES ON THE THROMBOPLASTIC AND ANTICLOTTING ACTIVITY OF PHOSPHOLIPIDSCanadian Journal of Biochemistry, 1965
- Activity of Synthetic Phospholipids in Blood CoagulationThrombosis and Haemostasis, 1965
- The interaction of polymyxin E with bacterial and other lipidsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1955
- A NEW BLOOD CLOTTING INHIBITORPublished by Elsevier ,1948
- A NEW BLOOD CLOTTING INHIBITOR1948