In Vitro | In vitro activity: Tirofiban (also known as L700462 or MK383) is a novel non-peptide antagonist of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (integrins alphaIIbbetaIII) that is used as an antiplatelet drug. Tirofiban is a small molecule inhibitor of the protein-protein interaction between fibrinogen and the platelet integrin receptor GP IIb/IIIa and is the first drug candidate whose origins can be traced to a pharmacophore-based virtual screening lead. Tirofiban Hydrochloride is the hydrochloride salt form of tirofiban, a selective platelet GPIIb/IIIa antagonist which inhibits platelet aggregation. It is more soluable than Tirofiban. Tirofiban inhibits platelet aggregation of gel-filtered platelets induced by 10 μM ADP with IC50 of 9 nM, but the IC50 for inhibition of human umbilical vein adhesion to vitronectin, which depends on ɑvβ3 vitronectin receptors, is 62 μmol/L. Tirofiban (MK-383, Aggrastat) inhibits platelet aggregation of gel-filtered platelets induced by 10 μM ADP with IC50 of 9 nM, but the IC50 for inhibition of human umbilical vein adhesion to vitronectin, which depends on ɑvβ3 vitronectin receptors, is 62 μmol/L.
Kinase Assay: Tirofiban hydrochloride monohydrate is a potent non-peptide, glycoprotein IIb/IIIa (integrins alphaIIbbetaIII) antagonist IC50 value: Target: integrin IIb/IIIa Tirofiban hydrochloride monohydrate blocks platelet aggregation and thrombus formation. Tirofiban is an antithrombotic used in the treatment of unstable angina. Tirofiban, in a concentration-dependent manner reduced platelet aggregation evoked by ADP (IC50 approximately 70 ng/ml), collagen (IC50 approximately 200 ng/ml), and thrombin (IC50 approximately 5,000 ng/ml). |
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