Sociedad Americana de Hirudoterapia

Antistasin

Factor Xa inhibitor — prototype molecule that inspired the entire DOAC drug class (rivaroxaban, apixaban).

Preclínico / mecanísticoLast updated: 2026-05-26 · Reviewed by ASH Editorial Board
Molecular weight of Antistasin compared with other characterized leech-derived compoundsHementerin80 kDaHementin80 kDaHementin-Like Protein (HLP-1)80 kDaLeech Collagenase70 kDaHaemadipsa yanyuanensis Progr…70 kDaLeech Apyrase67 kDaCalin65 kDaHyaluronidase60 kDaAntithrombin III binding prot…58 kDaCollagenolytic Fibrinolysin55 kDaLeech Thrombospondin-Like Pro…50 kDaAntistasin15 kDa
Molecular weight (kilodaltons) of Antistasin (highlighted) alongside other characterized leech salivary compounds. Smaller proteins/peptides generally diffuse and act faster.

Mechanistic Evidence Box

Preclinical / mechanistic
Page type
Compound profile
Evidence type
Factor Xa inhibitor — prototype molecule that inspired the entire DOAC drug class (rivaroxaban, apixaban).
Evidence level
In vitro
Drug vs leech
Purified natural compound
Safety domains
Bleeding · Allergy / anaphylaxis

Clinical translation limit

Antistasin itself is NOT an FDA-approved drug. Its discovery inspired the chemically distinct synthetic DOACs (rivaroxaban, apixaban, edoxaban), which are separate small-molecule drugs with their own RCT evidence base. Antistasin's preclinical mechanism does NOT establish clinical efficacy of whole medicinal-leech therapy.

Molecular Profile

Category
Anticoagulant
Evidence tier
Tier A — FDA-approved derivative
Molecular weight
15,000 Da
Source species
Haementeria officinalis (Mexican leech)
Discovered
1988 · Tuszynski et al.
PDB structures
1SKZ
Derived FDA-approved drug
Conceptual ancestor: rivaroxaban (Xarelto), apixaban (Eliquis), edoxaban (Savaysa)
Antistasin molecular structure

Biological Targets

  • Factor Xa

Key Citations

  1. Tuszynski GP et al. (1987), J Biol Chem

External Resources

Related Anticoagulant Compounds

Este sitio web proporciona información educativa y no constituye consejo médico, diagnóstico ni recomendaciones de tratamiento. La terapia con sanguijuelas medicinales conlleva riesgos clínicamente significativos y debe ser realizada únicamente por profesionales calificados bajo protocolos aprobados institucionalmente. La autorización 510(k) de la FDA para sanguijuelas medicinales se limita a indicaciones específicas; las discusiones sobre uso investigativo y fuera de indicación se señalan correspondientemente. Para orientación médica específica, consulte a un profesional de salud calificado.