Sociedad Americana de Hirudoterapia

Hyaluronidase

Enzyme that degrades hyaluronic acid in extracellular matrix — 'spreading factor' enhancing diffusion of other SGS compounds.

Preclínico / mecanísticoLast updated: 2026-05-26 · Reviewed by ASH Editorial Board
Molecular weight of Hyaluronidase 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 kDaLHyal (Leech Hyaluronidase)50 kDa
Molecular weight (kilodaltons) of Hyaluronidase (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
Enzyme that degrades hyaluronic acid in extracellular matrix — 'spreading factor' enhancing diffusion of other SGS compounds.
Evidence level
Mechanistic discussion
Drug vs leech
Leech-derived crude extract

Clinical translation limit

Leech hyaluronidase is mechanistically related to (but distinct from) the human recombinant hyaluronidase product Hylenex, which is an FDA-approved separate pharmaceutical with its own evidence base. Leech-derived hyaluronidase has no independent FDA approval and its 'spreading factor' role is preclinical/mechanistic only.

Molecular Profile

Category
ECM Enzyme
Evidence tier
Tier A — FDA-approved derivative
Molecular weight
60,000 Da
Source species
Hirudo medicinalis
Derived FDA-approved drug
Conceptual relative: human recombinant hyaluronidase (Hylenex)
Hyaluronidase molecular structure

Biological Targets

  • hyaluronic acid (extracellular matrix)

Key Citations

  1. Hovingh P, Linker A (1999), Comp Biochem Physiol

External Resources

    Related ECM Enzyme Compounds

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