Page last updated: 2024-12-08

melagatran

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Cross-References

ID SourceID
PubMed CID183797
CHEMBL ID266349
CHEBI ID43966
SCHEMBL ID27652
MeSH IDM0284314

Synonyms (40)

Synonym
chebi:43966 ,
CHEMBL266349
melagatran ,
h-319/68
melagatran astrazeneca
n-((r)-(((2s)-2-((-p-amidobenzyl)carbamoyl)-1-azetidinyl)carbonyl)cyclohexylmethyl)glycine
glycine, n-(2-(2-((((4-(aminoiminomethyl)phenyl)methyl)amino)carbonyl)-1-azetidinyl)-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl)-, (s-(r*,s*))-
n-((r)-(((2s)-2-((p-amidinobenzyl)carbamoyl)-1-azetidinyl)carbonyl)cyclohexylmethyl)glycine
glycine, n-((1r)-2-((2s)-2-((((4-(aminoiminomethyl)phenyl)methyl)amino)carbonyl)-1-azetidinyl)-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl)-
D07143
melagatran (inn)
159776-70-2
[((1r)-2-{(2s)-2-[({4-[amino(imino)methyl]benzyl}amino)carbonyl]azetidinyl}-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl)amino]acetic acid
melagatran (astra-zeneca)
1K22
bdbm29388
2-[[(1r)-2-[(2s)-2-[(4-carbamimidoylphenyl)methylcarbamoyl]azetidin-1-yl]-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl]amino]acetic acid
n-[(1r)-2-[(2s)-2-[[[[4-(aminoiminomethyl)phenyl]methyl]amino]carbonyl]-1-azetidinyl]-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl]glycine
melagatran [inn]
2a9qp32md4 ,
unii-2a9qp32md4
glycine, n-[(1r)-2-[(2s)-2-[[[[4-(aminoiminomethyl)phenyl]methyl]amino]carbonyl]-1-azetidinyl]-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl]-
melagatran [who-dd]
melagatran [mart.]
melagatran [mi]
gtpl6382
h-319-68
AKOS022181213
SCHEMBL27652
DTXSID30166724
n-[(1r)-2-{(2s)-2-[(4-carbamimidoylbenzyl)carbamoyl]azetidin-1-yl}-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl]glycine
C21551
J-009643
2-(((r)-2-((s)-2-((4-carbamimidoylbenzyl)carbamoyl)azetidin-1-yl)-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl)amino)acetic acid
DB13616
Q27084209
((r)-2-((s)-2-((4-carbamimidoylbenzyl)carbamoyl)azetidin-1-yl)-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxoethyl)glycine
159776-70-2 (free base)
CS-0103405
HY-129056

Research Excerpts

Overview

Ximelagatran is a novel, oral direct thrombin inhibitor that is currently being investigated for the prophylaxis and treatment of thromboembolic events. Melag atran is an effective agent in the prevention of stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF); there are no data about its actions in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Melagatran is a potent direct thrombin inhibitor and it is an effective agent in the prevention of stroke in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF); however, there are no data about its actions in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke. "( Treatment with melagatran alone or in combination with thrombolytic therapy reduced ischemic brain injury.
Ding, X; Shuaib, A; Wang, CX, 2008
)
2.14
"Ximelagatran is a novel, oral direct thrombin inhibitor that is currently being investigated for the prophylaxis and treatment of thromboembolic events. "( Pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and clinical effects of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran in acute treatment of patients with pulmonary embolism and deep vein thrombosis.
Eriksson, H; Eriksson, UG; Lapidus, L; Larson, G; Olsson, CG; Thuresson, A; Wåhlander, K, 2002
)
1.25
"Ximelagatran is a novel, oral direct thrombin inhibitor designed to overcome the low and variable oral absorption of melagatran, its active form. "( Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran, a novel oral direct thrombin inhibitor, in young healthy male subjects.
Ahnoff, M; Bredberg, U; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gislén, K; Gustafsson, D; Johansson, LC, 2003
)
1.3
"Ximelagatran is an oral direct thrombin inhibitor currently in clinical development as an anticoagulant for the prevention and treatment of thromboembolic disease. "( Influence of severe renal impairment on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of oral ximelagatran and subcutaneous melagatran.
Attman, PO; Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Frison, L; Johansson, S; Mulec, H; Samuelsson, O, 2003
)
1.26
"Ximelagatran is an oral direct thrombin inhibitor currently in clinical development for the prevention and treatment of thromboembolic disorders. "( Ximelagatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor, has a low potential for cytochrome P450-mediated drug-drug interactions.
Andersson, TB; Bredberg, E; Eriksson, UG; Eriksson-Lepkowska, M; Frison, L; Johansson, S; Larsson, M; Thuresson, A, 2003
)
1.76
"Melagatran is an active thrombin inhibitor showing oral and parenteral bioavailability for antithrombotic therapy. "( Determination of melagatran in rabbit plasma by high-performance liquid chromatography with automated column switching.
Choi, NH; Kim, BH; Ok, JH; Park, SY, 2003
)
2.1
"Melagatran is a direct inhibitor of thrombin and-like its oral prodrug ximelagatran-a newly developed dipetide with high antithrombotic efficacy. "( [Melagatran and ximelagatran. Pharmacologic characteristics and anesthesiological aspects].
Kleinschmidt, S; Pindur, G; Ziegeler, S, 2003
)
2.67
"Melagatran is a synthetic, small-peptide direct thrombin inhibitor with anticoagulant activity. "( The direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran/ximelagatran.
Brighton, TA, 2004
)
2.05
"2. Melagatran dipeptid is a specific, reversible direct thrombin inhibitor."( [New anticoagulants in clinical practice].
Boda, Z, 2004
)
0.84
"Ximelagatran is an oral direct thrombin inhibitor (DTI), the active form of which is melagatran. "( Ximelagatran--a promising new drug in thromboembolic disorders.
Petersen, P, 2005
)
1.77
"Ximelagatran is an oral direct thrombin inhibitor for the prevention of thromboembolic disease. "( Population pharmacokinetics of melagatran, the active form of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran, in atrial fibrillation patients receiving long-term anticoagulation therapy.
Bååthe, S; Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Wollbratt, M, 2006
)
1.34
"Ximelagatran is an oral pro-drug of melagatran, a synthetic small peptidomimetic with direct thrombin inhibitory actions and anticoagulant activity."( Ximelagatran: direct thrombin inhibitor.
Brighton, TA; Ho, SJ, 2006
)
1.61

Effects

Melagatran has been shown to be a potent, rapidly binding, competitive inhibitor of human alpha-thrombin that inhibits both thrombin activity and generation. Ximelag atran has the potential to meet this need.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Melagatran has a wide therapeutic interval that enables it to be administered safely across a wide range of doses with no increased risk of bleeding, in contrast with warfarin whose narrow therapeutic window necessitates monitoring of its pharmacodynamic effect."( The pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran and its active metabolite melagatran: a mini-review.
Elg, M; Gustafsson, D, 2003
)
1.27
"Melagatran has been shown to be a potent, rapidly binding, competitive inhibitor of human alpha-thrombin that inhibits both thrombin activity and generation."( The pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran and its active metabolite melagatran: a mini-review.
Elg, M; Gustafsson, D, 2003
)
1.27
"Ximelagatran has the potential to meet this need."( Orally active direct thrombin inhibitors.
Weitz, J, 2003
)
0.88
"Melagatran has rapid onset of action, fixed twice-daily dosing, stable absorption, apparent low potential for medication interactions, and no requirement for monitoring drug levels or dose adjustment."( The direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran/ximelagatran.
Brighton, TA, 2004
)
1.33

Actions

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Melagatran did not increase the risk of thromboembolism or bleeding."( Melagatran for thromboprophylaxis after mechanical valve implantation: results in a heterotopic porcine model.
Hamner, CE; Lewin, M; Potter, DD; Schaff, HV; Sundt, TM; Thompson, JL, 2007
)
2.5

Treatment

Melagatran treatment prevented the decline in OMLDF observed in the LPS-Saline group. Treatment had no significant effects on any of the abnormalities in kidney morphology or function in rats subjected to renal IR.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Melagatran treatment also reduced perfusion deficits in the ischemic injured brain."( Treatment with melagatran alone or in combination with thrombolytic therapy reduced ischemic brain injury.
Ding, X; Shuaib, A; Wang, CX, 2008
)
1.42
"Melagatran significant treatment lowered the proinflammatory status of circulating immune cells."( Direct thrombin inhibitor prevents delayed graft function in a porcine model of renal transplantation.
Belliard, A; Giraud, S; Goujon, JM; Hauet, T; Hebrard, W; Macchi, L; Manguy, E; Mauco, G; Milin, S; Nadeau, C; Thuillier, R, 2009
)
1.07
"Melagatran treatment prevented the decline in OMLDF observed in the LPS-Saline group (P < 0.05, LPS-Melagatran vs."( Effects of thrombin inhibition with melagatran on renal hemodynamics and function and liver integrity during early endotoxemia.
Grimberg, E; Guron, G; Marcussen, N; Nitescu, N; Nordlinder, H; Ricksten, SE, 2007
)
1.34
"Melagatran treatment had no significant effects on any of the abnormalities in kidney morphology or function in rats subjected to renal IR."( Thrombin inhibition with melagatran does not attenuate renal ischaemia-reperfusion injury in rats.
Grimberg, E; Guron, G; Marcussen, N; Nitescu, N; Ricksten, SE, 2007
)
1.36

Pharmacokinetics

Melagatran has a wide therapeutic interval that enables it to be administered safely across a wide range of doses with no increased risk of bleeding. Dose individualisation was predicted to have a low impact on pharmacokinetic variability, supporting the use of a fixed-dose regimen.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" Pharmacokinetic studies in healthy volunteers: H 376/95 is converted to melagatran in man."( The direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran and its oral prodrug H 376/95: intestinal absorption properties, biochemical and pharmacodynamic effects.
Abrahamsson, A; Antonsson, T; Bredberg, U; Bylund, R; Carlsson, S; Elg, M; Eriksson, U; Gustafsson, D; Gyzander, E; Hoffmann, K; Någård, S; Nyström, J; Sörensen, H; Ungell, A, 2001
)
0.83
"By the use of the prodrug principle, H 376/95 endows the direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran with pharmacokinetic properties required for oral administration without compromising the promising pharmacodynamic properties of melagatran."( The direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran and its oral prodrug H 376/95: intestinal absorption properties, biochemical and pharmacodynamic effects.
Abrahamsson, A; Antonsson, T; Bredberg, U; Bylund, R; Carlsson, S; Elg, M; Eriksson, U; Gustafsson, D; Gyzander, E; Hoffmann, K; Någård, S; Nyström, J; Sörensen, H; Ungell, A, 2001
)
0.82
"To determine the influence of ethnic origin on the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of melagatran after oral administration of ximelagatran, a novel oral direct thrombin inhibitor."( No influence of ethnic origin on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of melagatran following oral administration of ximelagatran, a novel oral direct thrombin inhibitor, to healthy male volunteers.
Andersson, M; Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Gustafsson, D; Johansson, LC, 2003
)
0.76
" Blood and urine samples for pharmacokinetic evaluation were collected up to 12 and 24 hours after administration, respectively."( No influence of ethnic origin on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of melagatran following oral administration of ximelagatran, a novel oral direct thrombin inhibitor, to healthy male volunteers.
Andersson, M; Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Gustafsson, D; Johansson, LC, 2003
)
0.55
"After oral administration of ximelagatran, the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of melagatran are independent of ethnic origin."( No influence of ethnic origin on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of melagatran following oral administration of ximelagatran, a novel oral direct thrombin inhibitor, to healthy male volunteers.
Andersson, M; Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Gustafsson, D; Johansson, LC, 2003
)
0.83
"There were no statistically significant differences in the pharmacokinetic properties of melagatran between obese and non-obese subjects."( No influence of obesity on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of melagatran, the active form of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran.
Eriksson, UG; Homolka, R; Peters, GR; Sarich, TC; Svensson, M; Teng, R; Wollbratt, M, 2003
)
0.77
"After oral administration of ximelagatran to healthy male subjects, the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profile of melagatran is predictable and reproducible."( Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran, a novel oral direct thrombin inhibitor, in young healthy male subjects.
Ahnoff, M; Bredberg, U; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gislén, K; Gustafsson, D; Johansson, LC, 2003
)
0.87
" Melagatran has a wide therapeutic interval that enables it to be administered safely across a wide range of doses with no increased risk of bleeding, in contrast with warfarin whose narrow therapeutic window necessitates monitoring of its pharmacodynamic effect."( The pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran and its active metabolite melagatran: a mini-review.
Elg, M; Gustafsson, D, 2003
)
1.45
" Nonlinear mixed-effects modelling was used to evaluate rich data of melagatran pharmacokinetics (3326 observations) and the pharmacodynamic effect on APTT (2319 observations) in samples from 216 patients collected in the three dose-guiding trials."( Pharmacokinetics of melagatran and the effect on ex vivo coagulation time in orthopaedic surgery patients receiving subcutaneous melagatran and oral ximelagatran: a population model analysis.
Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gisleskog, PO; Gustafsson, D; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Mandema, JW; Wählby, U, 2003
)
0.88
"The relatively low impact of individualised dosage on the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic variability of melagatran supported the use of a fixed-dose regimen in the studied population of orthopaedic surgery patients, including those with mild to moderate renal impairment."( Pharmacokinetics of melagatran and the effect on ex vivo coagulation time in orthopaedic surgery patients receiving subcutaneous melagatran and oral ximelagatran: a population model analysis.
Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gisleskog, PO; Gustafsson, D; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Mandema, JW; Wählby, U, 2003
)
0.85
"For the volunteers with severe renal impairment, the area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) and the half-life of melagatran were significantly higher than in the control group with normal renal function."( Influence of severe renal impairment on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of oral ximelagatran and subcutaneous melagatran.
Attman, PO; Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Frison, L; Johansson, S; Mulec, H; Samuelsson, O, 2003
)
0.74
"After administration of subcutaneous melagatran and oral ximelagatran, subjects with severe renal impairment had significantly higher melagatran exposure and longer half-life because of lower CL(R) of melagatran compared with the control group with normal renal function, suggesting that a decrease in dose and/or an increase in the administration interval in patients with severe renal impairment would be appropriate."( Influence of severe renal impairment on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of oral ximelagatran and subcutaneous melagatran.
Attman, PO; Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Frison, L; Johansson, S; Mulec, H; Samuelsson, O, 2003
)
0.81
"To investigate the influence of mild-to-moderate hepatic impairment on the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of ximelagatran."( No influence of mild-to-moderate hepatic impairment on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor.
Eriksson, UG; Eriksson-Lepkowska, M; Fager, G; Frison, L; Wåhlander, K, 2003
)
0.74
" Plasma and urine samples were collected for pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analyses."( No influence of mild-to-moderate hepatic impairment on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor.
Eriksson, UG; Eriksson-Lepkowska, M; Fager, G; Frison, L; Wåhlander, K, 2003
)
0.53
"There were no differences in the pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic properties of melagatran following oral administration of ximelagatran between the hepatically impaired and control volunteers."( No influence of mild-to-moderate hepatic impairment on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor.
Eriksson, UG; Eriksson-Lepkowska, M; Fager, G; Frison, L; Wåhlander, K, 2003
)
0.76
"To investigate the influence of nonvalvular atrial fibrillation (NVAF) on the pharmacokinetic (PK) properties of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran and its active form, melagatran."( Consistent pharmacokinetics of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation and in healthy subjects.
Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Svensson, M; Wåhlander, K; Wollbratt, M; Wolzt, M, 2003
)
0.75
" There were no differences between NVAF patients and controls for the area under the plasma concentration versus time curve, Cmax, half-life (t1/2), or bioavailability (F) of melagatran after oral dosing with ximelagatran."( Consistent pharmacokinetics of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation and in healthy subjects.
Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Svensson, M; Wåhlander, K; Wollbratt, M; Wolzt, M, 2003
)
0.75
"The pharmacokinetic dose linearity and reproducibility, the effects on ex-vivo coagulation time assays and bleeding time, and tolerability of the direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran following subcutaneous (s."( Pharmacokinetics and anticoagulant effect of the direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran following subcutaneous administration to healthy young men.
Eriksson, UG; Johansson, S; Larson, G; Larsson, M; Ohlsson, L; Wåhlander, K, 2003
)
0.74
" In the 15 subjects completing the study, no pharmacokinetic interaction was detected between atorvastatin and ximelagatran for all parameters investigated, including melagatran (the active form of ximelagatran) area under the plasma concentration versus time curve (AUC) and maximum plasma concentration, atorvastatin acid AUC, and AUC of active 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl-coenzyme-A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitors."( No pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic interaction between atorvastatin and the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran.
Dorani, H; Eriksson, UG; Kalies, I; Ohlsson, L; Sarich, TC; Schützer, KM; Wall, U, 2004
)
0.75
" In conclusion, no pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic interaction between digoxin and ximelagatran was observed in this study."( No pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic interaction between digoxin and the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran in healthy volunteers.
Eriksson, UG; Kessler, E; Sarich, TC; Schützer, KM; Wall, U; Wollbratt, M, 2004
)
0.76
" Peak plasma melagatran concentrations are reached approximately 2 hours after oral dosing of ximelagatran to healthy volunteers, and melagatran is eliminated with a half-life of approximately 3 hours with clearance predominantly by renal excretion."( Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran.
Eriksson, UG; Sarich, TS; Wolzt, M, 2005
)
0.96
"A population pharmacokinetic model was developed based on data from three phase II studies (1177 plasma concentration observations in 167 patients, treated for up to 18 months) and confirmed by including data from two phase III studies (8702 plasma concentration observations in 3188 patients, treated for up to 24 months)."( Population pharmacokinetics of melagatran, the active form of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran, in atrial fibrillation patients receiving long-term anticoagulation therapy.
Bååthe, S; Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Wollbratt, M, 2006
)
0.62
" Simulations suggested that dose adjustment based on renal function or trough plasma concentration had a minor effect on overall pharmacokinetic variability and the number of patients with high melagatran exposure."( Population pharmacokinetics of melagatran, the active form of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran, in atrial fibrillation patients receiving long-term anticoagulation therapy.
Bååthe, S; Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Wollbratt, M, 2006
)
0.81
" Dose individualisation was predicted to have a low impact on pharmacokinetic variability, supporting the use of a fixed-dose regimen of ximelagatran for long-term anticoagulant therapy in the majority of NVAF patients."( Population pharmacokinetics of melagatran, the active form of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran, in atrial fibrillation patients receiving long-term anticoagulation therapy.
Bååthe, S; Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Wollbratt, M, 2006
)
0.82
" pharmacokinetic data on 670 drugs representing, to our knowledge, the largest publicly available set of human clinical pharmacokinetic data."( Trend analysis of a database of intravenous pharmacokinetic parameters in humans for 670 drug compounds.
Lombardo, F; Obach, RS; Waters, NJ, 2008
)
0.35

Compound-Compound Interactions

The ability of UH and melagatran to prolong the aPTT was significantly enhanced in combination with rhAPC. Together, the in vitro and in vivo studies indicate that metabolic drug-drug interactions involving the major human CYP enzymes should not be expected with ximelag atran.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" The plasma pharmacokinetics of melagatran, diclofenac, diazepam, N-desmethyl-diazepam and nifedipine were determined when administered alone and in combination with ximelagatran."( Ximelagatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor, has a low potential for cytochrome P450-mediated drug-drug interactions.
Andersson, TB; Bredberg, E; Eriksson, UG; Eriksson-Lepkowska, M; Frison, L; Johansson, S; Larsson, M; Thuresson, A, 2003
)
1.32
"No inhibition, or only minor inhibition, of CYP enzymes by ximelagatran, the intermediates or melagatran was shown in the in vitro studies, suggesting that ximelagatran would not cause CYP-mediated drug-drug interactions in vivo."( Ximelagatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor, has a low potential for cytochrome P450-mediated drug-drug interactions.
Andersson, TB; Bredberg, E; Eriksson, UG; Eriksson-Lepkowska, M; Frison, L; Johansson, S; Larsson, M; Thuresson, A, 2003
)
1.28
" Together, the in vitro and in vivo studies indicate that metabolic drug-drug interactions involving the major human CYP enzymes should not be expected with ximelagatran."( Ximelagatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor, has a low potential for cytochrome P450-mediated drug-drug interactions.
Andersson, TB; Bredberg, E; Eriksson, UG; Eriksson-Lepkowska, M; Frison, L; Johansson, S; Larsson, M; Thuresson, A, 2003
)
1.24
" The ability of UH and melagatran to prolong the aPTT was significantly enhanced in combination with rhAPC."( Drotrecogin alfa activated (recombinant human activated protein C) in combination with heparin or melagatran: effects on prothrombin time and activated partial thromboplastin time.
Cvirn, G; Gallistl, S; Koestenberger, M; Muntean, W, 2004
)
0.85
"The present in vitro study of human plasma investigated the anticoagulant effects of recombinant human activated protein C (rhAPC; drotrecogin alfa [activated, Xigris]), combined with either unfractionated heparin (UH) or the direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran."( Drotrecogin alfa (activated, Xigris) in combination with heparin or melagatran: an in vitro investigation.
Baier, K; Cvirn, G; Gallistl, S; Koestenberger, M; Leschnik, B; Muntean, W, 2004
)
0.74
"This study demonstrated the effects of rhAPC, alone and combined with either UH or melagatran, on clotting time and markers of thrombin generation in human plasma."( Drotrecogin alfa (activated, Xigris) in combination with heparin or melagatran: an in vitro investigation.
Baier, K; Cvirn, G; Gallistl, S; Koestenberger, M; Leschnik, B; Muntean, W, 2004
)
0.78
" The medication alone or in combination with tPA was well tolerated."( Treatment with melagatran alone or in combination with thrombolytic therapy reduced ischemic brain injury.
Ding, X; Shuaib, A; Wang, CX, 2008
)
0.7

Bioavailability

Melagatran is an active thrombin inhibitor showing oral and parenteral bioavailability for antithrombotic therapy. Low oral bioavailability that is even further reduced by the concomitant intake of food precludes its development as an oral agent.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" Melagatran is well tolerated when administered in very high doses, and the oral bioavailability in the dog is relatively high."( Effects of melagatran, a new low-molecular-weight thrombin inhibitor, on thrombin and fibrinolytic enzymes.
Antonsson, T; Bylund, R; Deinum, J; Elg, M; Eriksson, U; Gustafsson, D; Gyzander, E; Karlsson, O; Mattsson, C; Nilsson, A; Nilsson, I; Pehrsson, S; Sörensen, H, 1998
)
1.6
" For some of them oral bioavailability is claimed and they are effective in in vitro coagulation assays."( Advances in the development of thrombin inhibitors.
Hauptmann, J; Steinmetzer, T; Sturzebecher, J, 2001
)
0.31
" The bioavailability in rats and dogs could be drastically altered depending on the overall charge distribution in the molecule."( Unique overlap in the prerequisites for thrombin inhibition and oral bioavailability resulting in potent oral antithrombotics.
Adang, AE; de Man, AP; Grootenhuis, PD; Kelder, J; Lucas, H; Meuleman, DG; Peters, CA; Rewinkel, JB; Smit, MJ; van Aelst, S; van Boeckel, CA; van Dinther, T; Visser, A; Vogel, GM, 2002
)
0.31
" The mean bioavailability of melagatran in young and older subjects was approximately 18 and 12% , respectively, following oral administration of ximalagratan, and 38 and 45%, respectively, following subcutaneous administration of ximelagatran."( Influence of age on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran, an oral direct thrombin inhibitor.
Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Frison, L; Gustafsson, D; Johansson, LC; Logren, U, 2003
)
0.85
" To increase the poor oral bioavailability due to its strong basic amidine functionality selected to fit the arginine side pocket of thrombin, the less basic N-hydroxylated amidine was used in addition to an ethyl ester-protecting residue."( Characterization of in vitro biotransformation of new, orally active, direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran, an amidoxime and ester prodrug.
Clement, B; Lopian, K, 2003
)
0.54
" The interindividual variability of melagatran AUC was low (coefficient of variation 19-26%), and the mean bioavailability of melagatran, estimated using a mean value for melagatran clearance obtained from Caucasian subjects in a previous study, was approximately 20% in all groups (range of mean values 19-23%)."( No influence of ethnic origin on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of melagatran following oral administration of ximelagatran, a novel oral direct thrombin inhibitor, to healthy male volunteers.
Andersson, M; Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Gustafsson, D; Johansson, LC, 2003
)
0.82
" The mean (+/- standard deviation) bioavailability of melagatran was 22."( Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran, a novel oral direct thrombin inhibitor, in young healthy male subjects.
Ahnoff, M; Bredberg, U; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gislén, K; Gustafsson, D; Johansson, LC, 2003
)
0.83
" Although melagatran has all the pharmacodynamic properties required of a new antithrombotic agent, low oral bioavailability that is even further reduced by the concomitant intake of food precludes its development as an oral agent."( The pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran and its active metabolite melagatran: a mini-review.
Elg, M; Gustafsson, D, 2003
)
0.95
" The bioavailability of melagatran after oral ximelagatran relative to subcutaneous melagatran was 23%."( Pharmacokinetics of melagatran and the effect on ex vivo coagulation time in orthopaedic surgery patients receiving subcutaneous melagatran and oral ximelagatran: a population model analysis.
Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gisleskog, PO; Gustafsson, D; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Mandema, JW; Wählby, U, 2003
)
0.95
" There were no differences between NVAF patients and controls for the area under the plasma concentration versus time curve, Cmax, half-life (t1/2), or bioavailability (F) of melagatran after oral dosing with ximelagatran."( Consistent pharmacokinetics of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation and in healthy subjects.
Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Svensson, M; Wåhlander, K; Wollbratt, M; Wolzt, M, 2003
)
0.75
"Melagatran is an active thrombin inhibitor showing oral and parenteral bioavailability for antithrombotic therapy."( Determination of melagatran in rabbit plasma by high-performance liquid chromatography with automated column switching.
Choi, NH; Kim, BH; Ok, JH; Park, SY, 2003
)
2.1
" The variability in pharmacokinetic parameters was low and the bioavailability of melagatran appeared to be complete."( Pharmacokinetics and anticoagulant effect of the direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran following subcutaneous administration to healthy young men.
Eriksson, UG; Johansson, S; Larson, G; Larsson, M; Ohlsson, L; Wåhlander, K, 2003
)
0.77
" The bioavailability of melagatran, the active form of ximelagatran, after oral administration of ximelagatran is approximately 20% with low inter- and intra-individual variability."( Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran.
Eriksson, UG; Sarich, TS; Wolzt, M, 2005
)
0.9
" The bioavailability of melagatran is not altered by co-administration with food or alcohol."( Low potential for interactions between melagatran/ximelagatran and other drugs, food, or alcohol.
Eriksson, UG; Sarich, TS; Wolzt, M, 2005
)
0.9
"Oral bioavailability (F) is a product of fraction absorbed (Fa), fraction escaping gut-wall elimination (Fg), and fraction escaping hepatic elimination (Fh)."( Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
Chang, G; El-Kattan, A; Miller, HR; Obach, RS; Rotter, C; Steyn, SJ; Troutman, MD; Varma, MV, 2010
)
0.36
" Its oral bioavailability in rats or dogs was not better than that of LB30870."( Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
Cho, KH; Kim, A; Kim, TH; Lee, SH; Park, HD, 2013
)
0.39

Dosage Studied

Argatroban and melagatran delivered biphasic dose-response curves. Simulations demonstrated that individualised dosage based on creatinine clearance or bodyweight had no clinically relevant impact. The best dosing regimen and optimal timing of first dose remain to be determined, as do the mechanism and impact of drug disturbance of hepatic function.

ExcerptRelevanceReference
" The thrombin inhibitors were given intravenously, and complete concentration- and/or dose-response curves were constructed."( The importance of enzyme inhibition kinetics for the effect of thrombin inhibitors in a rat model of arterial thrombosis.
Deinum, J; Elg, M; Gustafsson, D, 1997
)
0.3
" However, for use in prophylaxis of thrombotic diseases such inhibitors should be orally available, must be safe to avoid bleeding complications and should have an appropriate half-life, allowing once or twice daily dosing to maintain adequate antithrombotically effective blood levels."( Advances in the development of thrombin inhibitors.
Hauptmann, J; Steinmetzer, T; Sturzebecher, J, 2001
)
0.31
" The concentration of melagatran that produced an International Normalized Ratio (INR) of 2 was calculated from dose-response curves for each assay, and these results revealed that reagents with a high ISI value gave an INR of 2 at much lower concentrations of melagatran (0."( Effect of melagatran on prothrombin time assays depends on the sensitivity of the thromboplastin and the final dilution of the plasma sample.
Lindahl, TL; Mattsson, C; Menschiek-Lundin, A; Wåhlander, K, 2001
)
1.03
" The study did not evaluate a dose-response for efficacy, and no differences between the three dose levels of melagatran and ximelagatran were shown."( A dose-ranging study of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor, ximelagatran, and its subcutaneous form, melagatran, compared with dalteparin in the prophylaxis of thromboembolism after hip or knee replacement: METHRO I. MElagatran for THRombin inhibition in
Arfwidsson, AC; Bylock, A; Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Fager, G; Frison, L; Gustafsson, D; Kälebo, P, 2002
)
0.77
" We did a multicentre, randomised, double-blind study to examine the dose-response relation of subcutaneous melagatran, a direct thrombin inhibitor, followed by oral ximelagatran as thromboprophylaxis after total hip or knee replacement."( Ximelagatran and melagatran compared with dalteparin for prevention of venous thromboembolism after total hip or knee replacement: the METHRO II randomised trial.
Bergqvist, D; Bylock, A; Dahl, OE; Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gustafsson, D; Kälebo, P; Lindbratt, S; Welin, L, 2002
)
1.25
" The present study indicates that clinically relevant concentrations of the tested thrombin inhibitors interfere with endothelial-mediated APC generation, which may offer an explanation for the lack of a dose-response effect in clinical trials with thrombin inhibitors."( Inhibition of endothelial cell-mediated generation of activated protein C by direct and antithrombin-dependent thrombin inhibitors.
Frebelius, S; Jansson, K; Linder, R; Swedenborg, J, 2003
)
0.32
" Compared with placebo, platelet deposition and relative fibrin content were reduced after both heparin and melagatran, in the latter case with a dose-response relationship."( Melagatran attenuates fibrin and platelet deposition in a porcine coronary artery over-stretch injury model.
Björnheden, T; Carlsson, S; Grip, L; Mattsson, C; Scherstén, F; Wahlund, G, 2003
)
1.97
" Furthermore, with no need for dosage adjustment or therapeutic drug monitoring there is emerging evidence that ximelagatran may replace warfarin as the anticoagulant of choice."( The METHRO trials.
Hamaad, A; Lip, GY; Tayebjee, MH, 2003
)
0.53
" To support the design of a pivotal dose-finding study, the impact of individualised dosage based on bodyweight and calculated creatinine clearance was examined."( Pharmacokinetics of melagatran and the effect on ex vivo coagulation time in orthopaedic surgery patients receiving subcutaneous melagatran and oral ximelagatran: a population model analysis.
Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gisleskog, PO; Gustafsson, D; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Mandema, JW; Wählby, U, 2003
)
0.64
" The impact of individualised dosage on pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic variability was evaluated by simulations of the pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model."( Pharmacokinetics of melagatran and the effect on ex vivo coagulation time in orthopaedic surgery patients receiving subcutaneous melagatran and oral ximelagatran: a population model analysis.
Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gisleskog, PO; Gustafsson, D; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Mandema, JW; Wählby, U, 2003
)
0.64
" Simulations demonstrated that individualised dosage based on creatinine clearance or bodyweight had no clinically relevant impact on the variability in melagatran pharmacokinetics or on the effect on APTT."( Pharmacokinetics of melagatran and the effect on ex vivo coagulation time in orthopaedic surgery patients receiving subcutaneous melagatran and oral ximelagatran: a population model analysis.
Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gisleskog, PO; Gustafsson, D; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Mandema, JW; Wählby, U, 2003
)
0.84
"The relatively low impact of individualised dosage on the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic variability of melagatran supported the use of a fixed-dose regimen in the studied population of orthopaedic surgery patients, including those with mild to moderate renal impairment."( Pharmacokinetics of melagatran and the effect on ex vivo coagulation time in orthopaedic surgery patients receiving subcutaneous melagatran and oral ximelagatran: a population model analysis.
Eriksson, BI; Eriksson, UG; Frison, L; Gisleskog, PO; Gustafsson, D; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Mandema, JW; Wählby, U, 2003
)
0.85
" There were no differences between NVAF patients and controls for the area under the plasma concentration versus time curve, Cmax, half-life (t1/2), or bioavailability (F) of melagatran after oral dosing with ximelagatran."( Consistent pharmacokinetics of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran in patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation and in healthy subjects.
Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Svensson, M; Wåhlander, K; Wollbratt, M; Wolzt, M, 2003
)
0.75
" In experimental models of thrombosis, melagatran has been shown to have a shallower dose-response curve than warfarin and, therefore, a better separation between efficacy and bleeding."( Oral direct thrombin inhibitors in clinical development.
Gustafsson, D, 2003
)
0.59
") dosing were investigated in two open-label studies in healthy males: (i)."( Pharmacokinetics and anticoagulant effect of the direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran following subcutaneous administration to healthy young men.
Eriksson, UG; Johansson, S; Larson, G; Larsson, M; Ohlsson, L; Wåhlander, K, 2003
)
0.55
" Argatroban and melagatran delivered biphasic dose-response curves."( Effects of lepirudin, argatroban and melagatran and additional influence of phenprocoumon on ecarin clotting time.
Fenyvesi, T; Harenberg, J; Jörg, I; Weiss, C, 2003
)
0.94
" Furthermore, vitamin K antagonists have a narrow therapeutic window that necessitates careful anticoagulation monitoring, and dosing is problematic because of multiple food and drug interactions."( Orally active direct thrombin inhibitors.
Weitz, J, 2003
)
0.32
" The best dosing regimen and optimal timing of first dose for melagatran and ximelagatran remain to be determined, as do the mechanism and impact of drug disturbance of hepatic function."( Advances in anticoagulation therapy: the role of selective inhibitors of factor Xa and thrombin in thromboprophylaxis after major orthopedic surgery.
Andersen, JC, 2004
)
0.56
" The elimination half-life of pentasaccharide is about 17 h, which allows a convenient once-daily dosing regime."( [New anticoagulants in clinical practice].
Boda, Z, 2004
)
0.32
" Oral ximelagatran dosing not only inhibits thrombin activity rapidly, competitively, and potently, but also delays and suppresses thrombin generation."( Ximelagatran--a promising new drug in thromboembolic disorders.
Petersen, P, 2005
)
1.48
" Peak plasma melagatran concentrations are reached approximately 2 hours after oral dosing of ximelagatran to healthy volunteers, and melagatran is eliminated with a half-life of approximately 3 hours with clearance predominantly by renal excretion."( Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of ximelagatran.
Eriksson, UG; Sarich, TS; Wolzt, M, 2005
)
0.96
" Changes in total thrombus area (TTA) under low shear rate (LSR; 212 s(-1)) and high shear rate (HSR; 1690 s(-1)) conditions were measured, using the ex vivo Badimon perfusion chamber model pre-dose and 2 and 5 hours after dosing on Day 6, and capillary bleeding times (CBT) were determined."( Antithrombotic effects of ximelagatran plus acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) and clopidogrel plus ASA in a human ex vivo arterial thrombosis model.
Badimon, JJ; Bylock, A; Elg, M; Eriksson, UG; Eriksson-Lepkowska, M; Kalies, I; Nyström, P; Sarich, TC; Wåhlander, K, 2006
)
0.63
" The impact of individualised dosing on pharmacokinetic variability was evaluated by simulations of melagatran concentrations based on the pharmacokinetic model."( Population pharmacokinetics of melagatran, the active form of the oral direct thrombin inhibitor ximelagatran, in atrial fibrillation patients receiving long-term anticoagulation therapy.
Bååthe, S; Eriksson, UG; Grind, M; Hamrén, B; Karlsson, MO; Wollbratt, M, 2006
)
0.84
" Dosing is difficult and requires frequent monitoring."( Ximelagatran: direct thrombin inhibitor.
Brighton, TA; Ho, SJ, 2006
)
1.06
" These effects were significantly reduced by melagatran at both dosage levels."( The direct thrombin inhibitor melagatran counteracts endotoxin-induced endothelial leukocyte adherence and microvascular leakage in the rat mesentery. Rationale for the treatment of inflammatory disorders beyond sepsis?
Eichner, G; Eickhoff, M; Elg, M; Fassbender, M; Leithäuser, B; Matthias, FR, 2007
)
0.89
" Melagatran reduced ischemic brain injury in a dose-response manner, and also in a time dependent manner."( Treatment with melagatran alone or in combination with thrombolytic therapy reduced ischemic brain injury.
Ding, X; Shuaib, A; Wang, CX, 2008
)
1.61
"Anticoagulation by a standard dosage of an inhibitor of thrombin generation presupposes predictable pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the anticoagulant."( Large inter-individual variation of the pharmacodynamic effect of anticoagulant drugs on thrombin generation.
Al Dieri, R; Bloemen, S; Hemker, HC, 2013
)
0.39
" While efficacious, they are difficult to use due to interpatient dose-response variability and the risks of bleeding."( Design of Small-Molecule Active-Site Inhibitors of the S1A Family Proteases as Procoagulant and Anticoagulant Drugs.
Fischer, PM, 2018
)
0.48
[information is derived through text-mining from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Roles (3)

RoleDescription
anticoagulantAn agent that prevents blood clotting.
EC 3.4.21.5 (thrombin) inhibitorAn EC 3.4.21.* (serine endopeptidase) inhibitor that interferes with the action of thrombin (EC 3.4.21.5).
serine protease inhibitorAny protease inhibitor that restricts the action of a serine protease.
[role information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Drug Classes (5)

ClassDescription
secondary amino compoundA compound formally derived from ammonia by replacing two hydrogen atoms by organyl groups.
azetidines
carboxamidineCompounds having the structure RC(=NR)NR2. The term is used as a suffix in systematic nomenclature to denote the -C(=NH)NH2 group including its carbon atom.
dicarboxylic acid monoamide
non-proteinogenic alpha-amino acidAny alpha-amino acid which is not a member of the group of 23 proteinogenic amino acids.
[compound class information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Protein Targets (15)

Inhibition Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Chain H, ProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.00400.00400.00410.0042AID977610
Chain H, ProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.00400.00400.00410.0042AID977610
ProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.52390.00000.710710.0000AID1069325; AID210671; AID210674; AID210821; AID264683; AID264693; AID766517; AID766518
ProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.00160.00000.78469.0000AID1558638; AID211014; AID211022; AID766529
Coagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)18.53330.00030.593710.0000AID1069323; AID264689
Coagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)Ki3.68000.00000.47089.0000AID766528
PlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)3.06000.02503.628010.0000AID264688
PlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)Ki1.25000.01701.15604.4000AID1558637; AID766525
Urokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)Ki6.30000.01702.62687.0000AID1558636
Tissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)Ki1.20500.01703.71968.6000AID1558635; AID766526
Cationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)IC50 (µMol)0.01120.00003.479210.0000AID214870
Coagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)20.00000.00282.639110.0000AID1069322
Vitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)1.30000.03000.68512.6900AID1069326
Trypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.01190.00351.532110.0000AID264686
Trypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)Ki0.00430.00001.76768.9000AID766527
Trypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.01190.00351.58464.4000AID264686
Trypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)Ki0.00430.00430.94873.2900AID766527
Coagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)3.30000.00020.83363.3000AID1069317
Trypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.01190.00351.58464.4000AID264686
Trypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)Ki0.00430.00430.94873.2900AID766527
Disintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)17.30000.00021.014010.0000AID264689
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Activation Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
ProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)Kd0.00130.00000.01010.0387AID766520
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Biological Processes (129)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
positive regulation of protein phosphorylationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
acute-phase responseProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathwayProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
blood coagulationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell population proliferationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell shapeProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
response to woundingProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of platelet activationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
platelet activationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of blood coagulationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of blood coagulationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell growthProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of insulin secretionProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of collagen biosynthetic processProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
fibrinolysisProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of proteolysisProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of astrocyte differentiationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of release of sequestered calcium ion into cytosolProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of cytosolic calcium ion concentrationProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
cytolysis by host of symbiont cellsProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase B signal transductionProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of fibrinolysisProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
antimicrobial humoral immune response mediated by antimicrobial peptideProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
neutrophil-mediated killing of gram-negative bacteriumProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of lipid kinase activityProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cytokine production involved in inflammatory responseProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of protein localization to nucleusProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of phospholipase C-activating G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
ligand-gated ion channel signaling pathwayProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolic processProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
blood coagulationCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell migrationCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of TOR signalingCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
blood coagulationPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell population proliferationPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell-substrate adhesionPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix disassemblyPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
tissue regenerationPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
fibrinolysisPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of blood vessel endothelial cell migrationPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
myoblast differentiationPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
muscle cell cellular homeostasisPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
tissue remodelingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
biological process involved in interaction with symbiontPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of fibrinolysisPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of fibrinolysisPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
trophoblast giant cell differentiationPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
labyrinthine layer blood vessel developmentPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
mononuclear cell migrationPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
trans-synaptic signaling by BDNF, modulating synaptic transmissionPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell-cell adhesion mediated by cadherinPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell migrationUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
response to hypoxiaUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
chemotaxisUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
signal transductionUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
blood coagulationUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of signaling receptor activityUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of plasminogen activationUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of plasminogen activationUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
smooth muscle cell migrationUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of smooth muscle cell migrationUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell adhesionUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
plasminogen activationUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell adhesion mediated by integrinUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
urokinase plasminogen activator signaling pathwayUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell population proliferationUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
fibrinolysisUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of fibrinolysisUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of fibrinolysisUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of wound healingUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of smooth muscle cell-matrix adhesionUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
response to hypoxiaTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
blood coagulationTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of plasminogen activationTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
plasminogen activationTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
protein modification processTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
fibrinolysisTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of proteolysisTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of fibrinolysisTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
prevention of polyspermyTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
trans-synaptic signaling by BDNF, modulating synaptic transmissionTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
platelet-derived growth factor receptor signaling pathwayTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
smooth muscle cell migrationTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisCationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)
digestionCationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)
blood coagulationCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
plasminogen activationCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of fibrinolysisCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
blood coagulationVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of blood coagulationVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of apoptotic processVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of inflammatory responseVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of coagulationVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of establishment of endothelial barrierVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
digestionTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix disassemblyTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
proteolysisTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
proteolysisTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
digestionTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
antimicrobial humoral responseTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix disassemblyTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell growthTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
collagen catabolic processTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell adhesionTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
response to hypoxiaCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of leukocyte chemotaxisCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
blood coagulationCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
circadian rhythmCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to carbon dioxideCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of platelet-derived growth factor receptor signaling pathwayCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
protein processingCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of blood coagulationCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell migrationCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
animal organ regenerationCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of TOR signalingCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to estradiolCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to vitamin KCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to genisteinCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to estrogenCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of positive chemotaxisCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to growth hormoneCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to cholesterolCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to thyroxineCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to Thyroid stimulating hormoneCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzodioxineCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to astaxanthinCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
response to thyrotropin-releasing hormoneCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
digestionTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
antimicrobial humoral responseTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
zymogen activationTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
endothelial cell migrationTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of epidermal growth factor receptor signaling pathwayDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
response to hypoxiaDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
neutrophil mediated immunityDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
germinal center formationDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of leukocyte chemotaxisDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
proteolysisDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
membrane protein ectodomain proteolysisDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
cell adhesionDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
Notch receptor processingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell population proliferationDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulusDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of T cell chemotaxisDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
protein processingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
signal releaseDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
B cell differentiationDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell growthDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell migrationDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathwayDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
response to lipopolysaccharideDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of chemokine productionDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of tumor necrosis factor productionDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of mast cell apoptotic processDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
T cell differentiation in thymusDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
cell adhesion mediated by integrinDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
wound healing, spreading of epidermal cellsDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
amyloid precursor protein catabolic processDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of blood vessel endothelial cell migrationDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cyclin-dependent protein serine/threonine kinase activityDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of epidermal growth factor-activated receptor activityDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of epidermal growth factor receptor signaling pathwayDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
spleen developmentDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
cell motilityDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
defense response to Gram-positive bacteriumDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to high density lipoprotein particle stimulusDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
commissural neuron axon guidanceDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cold-induced thermogenesisDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of G1/S transition of mitotic cell cycleDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of tumor necrosis factor-mediated signaling pathwayDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of vascular endothelial cell proliferationDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
Notch signaling pathwayDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Molecular Functions (33)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
lipopolysaccharide bindingProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor bindingProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
calcium ion bindingProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
growth factor activityProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
heparin bindingProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
thrombospondin receptor activityProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
calcium ion bindingCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipid bindingCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
protease bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
endopeptidase activityPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type peptidase activityPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
enzyme bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
kinase bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
protein domain specific bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
apolipoprotein bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
protein-folding chaperone bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
protein antigen bindingPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor bindingTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
phosphoprotein bindingTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
endopeptidase activityCationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)
serine-type endopeptidase activityCationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)
protein bindingCationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)
metal ion bindingCationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)
serpin family protein bindingCationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)
serine-type endopeptidase activityCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
heparin bindingCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type aminopeptidase activityCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
calcium ion bindingVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
metal ion bindingTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
metalloendopeptidase activityTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
calcium ion bindingTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
serine-type peptidase activityTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor bindingCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
calcium ion bindingCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type peptidase activityCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
calcium ion bindingTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
serine-type peptidase activityTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
endopeptidase activityDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
metalloendopeptidase activityDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
Notch bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
interleukin-6 receptor bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
integrin bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
peptidase activityDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
metallopeptidase activityDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
SH3 domain bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
cytokine bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
PDZ domain bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
tumor necrosis factor bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
metal ion bindingDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
metalloendopeptidase activity involved in amyloid precursor protein catabolic processDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Ceullar Components (37)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
external side of plasma membraneProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrixProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum lumenProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi lumenProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
blood microparticleProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrixProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceProthrombinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum lumenCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi lumenCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceCoagulation factor XHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spacePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membranePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membranePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
cell surfacePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
platelet alpha granule lumenPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrixPlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
blood microparticlePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
Schaffer collateral - CA1 synapsePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
glutamatergic synapsePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spacePlasminogenHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
focal adhesionUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
specific granule membraneUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
tertiary granule membraneUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
serine protease inhibitor complexUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
protein complex involved in cell-matrix adhesionUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase complexUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceUrokinase-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrixTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
secretory granuleTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
apical part of cellTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
serine protease inhibitor complexTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
Schaffer collateral - CA1 synapseTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
glutamatergic synapseTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceTissue-type plasminogen activatorHomo sapiens (human)
serine protease inhibitor complexCationic trypsinBos taurus (cattle)
extracellular regionCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
membraneCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeCoagulation factor XIHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum lumenVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi apparatusVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi lumenVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceVitamin K-dependent protein CHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrixTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
blood microparticleTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceTrypsin-1Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrixTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
azurophil granule lumenTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceTrypsin-2Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum lumenCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi lumenCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
vesicleCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrixCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type peptidase complexCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceCoagulation factor VIIHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
tertiary granule lumenTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceTrypsin-3Homo sapiens (human)
cell-cell junctionDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
focal adhesionDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
ruffle membraneDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
Golgi membraneDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum lumenDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
actin cytoskeletonDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
membraneDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
apical plasma membraneDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
membrane raftDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneDisintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 17Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Bioassays (105)

Assay IDTitleYearJournalArticle
AID540211Fraction unbound in human after iv administration2008Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 36, Issue:7
Trend analysis of a database of intravenous pharmacokinetic parameters in humans for 670 drug compounds.
AID766483Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as prothrombin time change at 0.25 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 10 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID264696Area under ECT-time curve (0-24h) in dog at 4.64 mg/kg, po2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264696Area under ECT-time curve (0-24h) in dog at 4.64 mg/kg, po2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID766467Anticoagulant activity in rat assessed as time to first arrest of bleeding at 2 x ED50 measured after 45 mins (Rvb = 267 +/- 43.4 seconds)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID1558636Inhibition of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (unknown origin)2020Journal of medicinal chemistry, 02-27, Volume: 63, Issue:4
Fibrinolysis Inhibitors: Potential Drugs for the Treatment and Prevention of Bleeding.
AID766518Inhibition of free thrombin (unknown origin) using S2238 as substrate2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766494Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as activated partial thromboplastin time change at 0.025 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 1 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766477Plasma protein binding in rat at 1 ug/ml by ultra-filtration method2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID1558637Inhibition of plasmin (unknown origin)2020Journal of medicinal chemistry, 02-27, Volume: 63, Issue:4
Fibrinolysis Inhibitors: Potential Drugs for the Treatment and Prevention of Bleeding.
AID1069326Inhibition of human APC using S-2366 as substrate preincubated for 300 seconds followed by substrate addition measured after 40 mins by spectrophotometric analysis2014Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Feb-01, Volume: 24, Issue:3
Design, synthesis, and SAR of a series of activated protein C (APC) inhibitors with selectivity against thrombin for the treatment of haemophilia.
AID719826Displacement of 2-((R)-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxo-2-((S)-2-(4-(N-((S)-6,9,25-trioxo-29-((3aS,4S,6aR)-2-oxohexahydro-1H-thieno[3,4-d]imidazol-4-yl)-8-(4-(3-(trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl)benzamido)-14,17,20-trioxa-5,10,24-triazanonacosyl)carbamimidoyl)benzylca2012Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-26, Volume: 55, Issue:8
Dabigatran and dabigatran ethyl ester: potent inhibitors of ribosyldihydronicotinamide dehydrogenase (NQO2).
AID349794Inhibition of human alpha thrombin by surface plasmon resonance assay2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, May-14, Volume: 52, Issue:9
Compounds binding to the S2-S3 pockets of thrombin.
AID766521Selectivity ratio of Ki for human t-PA to Ki for human thrombin2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID540213Half life in human after iv administration2008Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 36, Issue:7
Trend analysis of a database of intravenous pharmacokinetic parameters in humans for 670 drug compounds.
AID211748Binding affinity against Thrombin.2000Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-10, Volume: 43, Issue:3
Protease inhibitors: current status and future prospects.
AID1069323Inhibition of human coagulation factor 10a using S-2765 as substrate preincubated for 300 seconds followed by substrate addition measured after 40 mins by spectrophotometric analysis2014Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Feb-01, Volume: 24, Issue:3
Design, synthesis, and SAR of a series of activated protein C (APC) inhibitors with selectivity against thrombin for the treatment of haemophilia.
AID211022Binding affinity against human thrombin2002Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Apr-08, Volume: 12, Issue:7
Noncovalent tripeptidic thrombin inhibitors incorporating amidrazone, amine and amidine functions at P1.
AID766496Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as wet clot weight at 0.125 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 5 ug/kg/min administered as infusion (Rvb = 83 +/- 5.1 mg)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766490Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as activated partial thromboplastin time change at 0.044 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 1.75 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766529Inhibition of human thrombin2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID386623Inhibition of 4-(4-(dimethylamino)styryl)-N-methylpyridinium uptake at human OCT1 expressed in HEK293 cells at 100 uM by confocal microscopy2008Journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-09, Volume: 51, Issue:19
Structural requirements for drug inhibition of the liver specific human organic cation transport protein 1.
AID444052Hepatic clearance in human2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID766479Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as reduction in wet clot weight administered as iv bolus followed by infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766523Selectivity ratio of Ki for human plasmin to Ki for human thrombin2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766489Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as activated partial thromboplastin time change at 0.63 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 2.5 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766522Selectivity ratio of Ki for human trypsin to Ki for human thrombin2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID444056Fraction escaping gut-wall elimination in human2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID210671In vitro inhibitory activity against thrombin2003Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Jun-16, Volume: 13, Issue:12
D-Phe-Pro-Arg type thrombin inhibitors: unexpected selectivity by modification of the P1 moiety.
AID264685Antithrombin activity in rat at 1 mg/kg, iv after 60 mins measured as ecarin clotting time prolongation2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264685Antithrombin activity in rat at 1 mg/kg, iv after 60 mins measured as ecarin clotting time prolongation2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID264688Inhibition of plasmin2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264688Inhibition of plasmin2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID766495Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as activated partial thromboplastin time change at 0.25 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 10 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID540212Mean residence time in human after iv administration2008Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 36, Issue:7
Trend analysis of a database of intravenous pharmacokinetic parameters in humans for 670 drug compounds.
AID540210Clearance in human after iv administration2008Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 36, Issue:7
Trend analysis of a database of intravenous pharmacokinetic parameters in humans for 670 drug compounds.
AID766503Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as wet clot weight at 0.025 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 1 ug/kg/min administered as infusion (Rvb = 83 +/- 5.1 mg)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID1069322Inhibition of human coagulation factor 11a using S-2366 as substrate preincubated for 300 seconds followed by substrate addition measured after 40 mins by spectrophotometric analysis2014Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Feb-01, Volume: 24, Issue:3
Design, synthesis, and SAR of a series of activated protein C (APC) inhibitors with selectivity against thrombin for the treatment of haemophilia.
AID264689Inhibition of F10a2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264689Inhibition of F10a2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID26945Oral bioavailability2002Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-26, Volume: 45, Issue:20
Unique overlap in the prerequisites for thrombin inhibition and oral bioavailability resulting in potent oral antithrombotics.
AID425652Total body clearance in human2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-13, Volume: 52, Issue:15
Physicochemical determinants of human renal clearance.
AID444054Oral bioavailability in human2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID766468Anticoagulant activity in rat assessed as time to first arrest of bleeding at ED80 measured after 45 mins (Rvb = 267 +/- 43.4 seconds)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766480Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as prothrombin time change at 0.125 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 5 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID1558635Inhibition of tissue-type plasminogen activator (unknown origin)2020Journal of medicinal chemistry, 02-27, Volume: 63, Issue:4
Fibrinolysis Inhibitors: Potential Drugs for the Treatment and Prevention of Bleeding.
AID264687Inhibition of tPA2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264687Inhibition of tPA2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID1393311Apparent permeability across human Caco2 cells measured every 30 mins for 2 hrs2018Journal of medicinal chemistry, 05-10, Volume: 61, Issue:9
Design of Small-Molecule Active-Site Inhibitors of the S1A Family Proteases as Procoagulant and Anticoagulant Drugs.
AID211014Inhibitory activity against thrombin.2002Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep-26, Volume: 45, Issue:20
Unique overlap in the prerequisites for thrombin inhibition and oral bioavailability resulting in potent oral antithrombotics.
AID766487Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as prothrombin time change at 0.025 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 1 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID444053Renal clearance in human2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID766469Anticoagulant activity in rat assessed as time to first arrest of bleeding at ED50 measured after 45 mins (Rvb = 267 +/- 43.4 seconds)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766466Anticoagulant activity in rat assessed as blood loss at ED50 measured as hemoglobin level after 60 mins (Rvb = 0.37 +/- 0.19 mg/ml)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766520Binding affinity to thrombin (unknown origin) by surface plasmon resonance analysis2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID264686Inhibition of trypsin2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264686Inhibition of trypsin2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID766519Inhibition of plasma clot-bound thrombin (unknown origin) using S2238 as substrate2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766526Inhibition of human t-PA2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID1069325Inhibition of human thrombin using S-2366 as substrate preincubated for 300 seconds followed by substrate addition measured after 40 mins by spectrophotometric analysis2014Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Feb-01, Volume: 24, Issue:3
Design, synthesis, and SAR of a series of activated protein C (APC) inhibitors with selectivity against thrombin for the treatment of haemophilia.
AID1558638Inhibition of thrombin (unknown origin)2020Journal of medicinal chemistry, 02-27, Volume: 63, Issue:4
Fibrinolysis Inhibitors: Potential Drugs for the Treatment and Prevention of Bleeding.
AID444057Fraction escaping hepatic elimination in human2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID1069317Inhibition of human coagulation factor 7a using spectrozyme as substrate preincubated for 300 seconds followed by substrate addition measured after 40 mins by spectrophotometric analysis in presence of tissue factor2014Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Feb-01, Volume: 24, Issue:3
Design, synthesis, and SAR of a series of activated protein C (APC) inhibitors with selectivity against thrombin for the treatment of haemophilia.
AID766525Inhibition of human plasmin2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766528Inhibition of human factor 10a2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766463Anticoagulant activity in rat assessed as blood loss at 2 X ED50 measured as hemoglobin level after 60 mins (Rvb = 0.37 +/- 0.19 mg/ml)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766433Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as reduction in wet clot weight at 35 ug/kg, iv administered as infusion2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID264697Oral bioavailability in dog at 4.64 mg/kg, po and 1 mg/kg, iv2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264697Oral bioavailability in dog at 4.64 mg/kg, po and 1 mg/kg, iv2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID444050Fraction unbound in human plasma2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID766465Anticoagulant activity in rat assessed as blood loss at ED80 measured as hemoglobin level after 60 mins (Rvb = 0.37 +/- 0.19 mg/ml)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID210674In vitro inhibitory concentration of compound against human thrombin2003Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar-27, Volume: 46, Issue:7
Synthesis of novel thrombin inhibitors. Use of ring-closing metathesis reactions for synthesis of P2 cyclopentene- and cyclohexenedicarboxylic acid derivatives.
AID264695Antithrombin activity in rat at 1 mg/kg, iv after 60 mins measured as ecarin clotting time prolongation2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264695Antithrombin activity in rat at 1 mg/kg, iv after 60 mins measured as ecarin clotting time prolongation2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID264694Antithrombin activity in rat at 21.5 mg/kg, po after 60 mins measured as ecarin clotting time prolongation2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264694Antithrombin activity in rat at 21.5 mg/kg, po after 60 mins measured as ecarin clotting time prolongation2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID766488Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as activated partial thromboplastin time change at 0.125 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 5 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766499Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as wet clot weight at 0.25 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 10 ug/kg/min administered as infusion (Rvb = 83 +/- 5.1 mg)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766524Selectivity ratio of Ki for human factor 10a to Ki for human thrombin2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766481Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as prothrombin time change at 0.63 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 2.5 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766476Plasma protein binding in human at 1 ug/ml by ultra-filtration method2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID444058Volume of distribution at steady state in human2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID1393313Oral bioavailability in human at 57 to 200 mg2018Journal of medicinal chemistry, 05-10, Volume: 61, Issue:9
Design of Small-Molecule Active-Site Inhibitors of the S1A Family Proteases as Procoagulant and Anticoagulant Drugs.
AID719825Displacement of 2-((R)-1-cyclohexyl-2-oxo-2-((S)-2-(4-(N-((S)-6,9,25-trioxo-29-((3aS,4S,6aR)-2-oxohexahydro-1H-thieno[3,4-d]imidazol-4-yl)-8-(4-(3-(trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl)benzamido)-14,17,20-trioxa-5,10,24-triazanonacosyl)carbamimidoyl)benzylca2012Journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-26, Volume: 55, Issue:8
Dabigatran and dabigatran ethyl ester: potent inhibitors of ribosyldihydronicotinamide dehydrogenase (NQO2).
AID766497Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as wet clot weight at 0.63 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 2.5 ug/kg/min administered as infusion (Rvb = 83 +/- 5.1 mg)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID210821In vitro for the inhibition of thrombin2000Journal of medicinal chemistry, May-04, Volume: 43, Issue:9
New proline mimetics: synthesis of thrombin inhibitors incorporating cyclopentane- and cyclopentenedicarboxylic acid templates in the P2 position. Binding conformation investigated by X-ray crystallography.
AID264684Antithrombin activity in rat at 21.5 mg/kg, po after 60 mins measured as ecarin clotting time prolongation2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264684Antithrombin activity in rat at 21.5 mg/kg, po after 60 mins measured as ecarin clotting time prolongation2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID766482Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as prothrombin time change at 0.044 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 1.75 ug/kg/min administered as infusion relative to control2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766498Anticoagulant activity in Sprague-Dawley rat deep vein thrombosis model assessed as wet clot weight at 0.044 mg/kg, iv administered as bolus and 1.75 ug/kg/min administered as infusion (Rvb = 83 +/- 5.1 mg)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID264693Inhibition of thrombin by chromogenic assay2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264693Inhibition of thrombin by chromogenic assay2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID214870In vitro inhibitory activity against trypsin2003Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Jun-16, Volume: 13, Issue:12
D-Phe-Pro-Arg type thrombin inhibitors: unexpected selectivity by modification of the P1 moiety.
AID540209Volume of distribution at steady state in human after iv administration2008Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 36, Issue:7
Trend analysis of a database of intravenous pharmacokinetic parameters in humans for 670 drug compounds.
AID264683Inhibition of thrombin2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 2: optimization of the P2-moiety.
AID264683Inhibition of thrombin2006Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, May-15, Volume: 16, Issue:10
Orally active thrombin inhibitors. Part 1: optimization of the P1-moiety.
AID766517Inhibition of thrombin (unknown origin) assessed as fibrin clot formation2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID444055Fraction absorbed in human2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID425653Renal clearance in human2009Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-13, Volume: 52, Issue:15
Physicochemical determinants of human renal clearance.
AID444051Total clearance in human2010Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-11, Volume: 53, Issue:3
Physicochemical space for optimum oral bioavailability: contribution of human intestinal absorption and first-pass elimination.
AID766515Ratio of IC50 for plasma clot-bound thrombin (unknown origin) to IC50 for free thrombin (unknown origin)2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID766527Inhibition of human trypsin2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Sep-01, Volume: 23, Issue:17
Antithrombotic effects of LB30870, a potent, orally active, selective and direct thrombin inhibitor, and pharmacokinetics of its prodrug.
AID1345816Human coagulation factor II, thrombin (S1: Chymotrypsin)1998Thrombosis and haemostasis, Jan, Volume: 79, Issue:1
Effects of melagatran, a new low-molecular-weight thrombin inhibitor, on thrombin and fibrinolytic enzymes.
AID1811Experimentally measured binding affinity data derived from PDB2001Journal of molecular biology, Oct-26, Volume: 313, Issue:3
Factorising ligand affinity: a combined thermodynamic and crystallographic study of trypsin and thrombin inhibition.
AID977610Experimentally measured binding affinity data (Ki) for protein-ligand complexes derived from PDB2001Journal of molecular biology, Oct-26, Volume: 313, Issue:3
Factorising ligand affinity: a combined thermodynamic and crystallographic study of trypsin and thrombin inhibition.
[information is prepared from bioassay data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Research

Studies (181)

TimeframeStudies, This Drug (%)All Drugs %
pre-19900 (0.00)18.7374
1990's7 (3.87)18.2507
2000's149 (82.32)29.6817
2010's23 (12.71)24.3611
2020's2 (1.10)2.80
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Market Indicators

Research Demand Index: 29.87

According to the monthly volume, diversity, and competition of internet searches for this compound, as well the volume and growth of publications, there is estimated to be moderate demand-to-supply ratio for research on this compound.

MetricThis Compound (vs All)
Research Demand Index29.87 (24.57)
Research Supply Index5.38 (2.92)
Research Growth Index5.59 (4.65)
Search Engine Demand Index39.34 (26.88)
Search Engine Supply Index2.00 (0.95)

This Compound (29.87)

All Compounds (24.57)

Study Types

Publication TypeThis drug (%)All Drugs (%)
Trials32 (17.30%)5.53%
Reviews37 (20.00%)6.00%
Case Studies0 (0.00%)4.05%
Observational0 (0.00%)0.25%
Other116 (62.70%)84.16%
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Clinical Trials (1)

Trial Overview

TrialPhaseEnrollmentStudy TypeStart DateStatus
"The EXTEND Study: A Randomized, Double-blind, Parallel-group, Phase III b, Multi-centre Study Evaluating Extended Prophylactic Treatment With Melagatran/Ximelagatran Versus Enoxaparin for the Prevention of Venous Thromboembolic Events in Patients Undergo [NCT00206089]Phase 33,300 participants Interventional2005-09-30Terminated(stopped due to Melagatran/ximelagatran was withdrawn from the market and clinical development in February 2006 in the interest of patient safety.)
[information is prepared from clinicaltrials.gov, extracted Sep-2024]