Summary
Hot water extracts of Mo-er (1 gm by 15 ml of water), an oriental food (Auricularia
auricula), inhibit strongly both human and rat platelet ADP-induced aggregation. HPLC
analysis of two varieties of Mo-er, A.auricula and A.polytricha (a black tree fungus),
shows that they contain adenosine (Ado), 133 and 154 micrograms per gram of dry fungus,
respectively. The inhibition of ADP-induced platelet aggregation by Mo-er extracts
and by Ado was compared. Mo-er extracts caused a more rapid onset and a longer duration
of inhibition than produced by equivalent amounts of Ado. Furthermore, Mo-er extract
treated with adenosine deaminase to degrade the Ado retained the capacity to inhibit
platelet aggregation. The inhibitory effects of Mo-er extracts on ADP-induced human
platelet aggregation are greatly potentiated by the inhibitors of cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase
such as oxagrelate (phthalazinol) and papaverine. The inhibition of platelet aggregation
is only partially blocked by 2’,5’-dideoxy-adenosine (DDA), an inhibitor of platelet
adenylate cyclase and 5’-deoxy, 5’-methylthioadenosine (MTA), an antagonist of Ado
receptors. ADP-induced rat platelet aggregation is strongly inhibited by Mo-er extracts,
but not by Ado. This inhibition is not reversed by either DDA or MTA. These findings
indicate that Mo-er extracts contain an agent (or agents) in addition to Ado, that
blocks platelet aggregation by a mechanism that does not involve the platelet cyclic
AMP system.
Keywords
Human - Rat - Platelets