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1.
Gel formation by fibrin oligomers without addition of monomers   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
P A Janmey  J D Ferry 《Biopolymers》1986,25(7):1337-1344
Soluble fibrin oligomers were formed by reacting fibrinogen with thrombin under fine clotting conditions where the action of thrombin is the rate-determining step for polymerization, and by inhibiting the reaction shortly before gelation. Oligomeric fibrin was separated from unreacted fibrinogen and small oligomers by gel permeation chromatography. Electron microscopy revealed that the largest soluble fibrin oligomers resemble the protofibrils present in fine clots, but are somewhat shorter and entirely lack the twisted, trifunctional junctions that contribute to the elastic properties of fine clots. When thrombin was added to the soluble fibrin oligomers, polymerization resumed and clots were formed at a more rapid rate than from fibrinogen at the same concentration and resulted in a less-opaque clot under coarse clotting conditions. The results confirm a prediction of a theory for the polymerization of fibrin and provide additional evidence that the final state of a coarse fibrin clot depends on the mobility of protofibrils during its formation.  相似文献   

2.
Low concentrations of actin filaments (F-actin) inhibit the rate and extent of turbidity developed during polymerization of purified fibrinogen by thrombin. Actin incorporates into the fibrin clot in a concentration-dependent manner that does not reach saturation, indicating nonspecific trapping of actin filaments in the fibrin network. Actin does not retard activation of fibrinogen by thrombin, but rather the alignment of fibrin protofibrils into bundles which constitute the coarse clot. In contrast, equivalent F-actin concentrations have little or no effect on the turbidity of plasma clots. The difference is attributed to the presence of a plasma protein, gelsolin, that severs actin filaments. Purified gelsolin greatly reduces the effect of F-actin on the turbidity of a pure fibrin clot and decreases the fraction of actin incorporated by the clot. A calculation of the extent to which the gelsolin concentrations used in these experiments reduce the fraction of actin filaments which are long enough to impede each other's rotational diffusion indicates that it is the overlapping actin filaments which retard the association of fibrin protofibrils. The findings suggest that one role for the F-actin depolymerizing and particularly actin severing activities in blood is to prevent actin filaments released by tissue injury from interfering with the formation of coarse fibrin clots.  相似文献   

3.
Incorporation of thrombospondin into fibrin clots   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Thrombospondin is a major platelet glycoprotein which is released from platelets during blood coagulation. We examined the interaction of thrombospondin with polymerizing fibrin. Thrombospondin, purified from human platelets and labeled with 125I, became incorporated into clots formed from both plasma and purified fibrinogen. Plasma clots contained somewhat less thrombospondin than clots formed from equivalent concentrations of fibrinogen. In plasma clots and fibrin clots formed in the presence of factor XIII, thrombospondin was cross-linked in the clot; thrombospondin in the supernatant remained largely monomeric. Cross-linking of thrombospondin by factor XIII, however, only slightly increased the amount of thrombospondin which was incorporated into the clot. In contrast, incorporation of 125I-fibronectin into clots was dependent upon cross-linking. Most of the incorporation of 125I-thrombospondin occurred during fibrin polymerization as judged by parallel studies of the incorporation of 125I-fibrinogen. The amount of thrombospondin incorporated into a clot was directly related to thrombospondin concentration and was only weakly dependent on fibrinogen concentration. Incorporation was not saturated at thrombospondin:fibrin (mol/mol) ratios as high as 2/1. Thrombospondin, however, modified the final structure of fibrin clots in a concentration-dependent manner as monitored by opacity. When tryptic digests of 125I-thrombospondin were studied, the 270-kilodalton core became incorporated into fibrin whereas the 30-kilodalton heparin binding fragment was excluded. These results indicate that thrombospondin specifically co-polymerizes with fibrin during blood coagulation and may be an important modulator of clot structure.  相似文献   

4.
Fibrin clot structure is highly dependent on factor XIII activity. Activated FXIII catalyzes the formation of the peptide bonds between the gamma and alpha chains in noncovalently bound fibrin polymers and incorporates various adhesive and antifibrinolytic proteins into the final fibrin clot. In the absence of activated FXIII, clots are unstable and susceptible to fibrinolysis. Several studies have examined the effects of FXIII polymorphisms on final fibrin clot structure and clinical thrombotic risk. The Val34Leu FXIII polymorphism is associated with increased activation by thrombin. In the presence of saturating thrombin concentrations, however, FXIIIa specific enzyme activity is not affected by genetic polymorphisms. Fibrin clots formed in the presence of the FXIII 34Leu polymorphisms do tend to be thinner and less porous, however. The effects of prothrombin concentrations on clot structure have suggested that thinner clots are more resistant to fibrinolysis and associated with increased thrombotic risk. Most clinical studies of 34Leu FXIII carriers, however, have demonstrated a lower incidence of both venous and arterial thrombosis in carriers of the mutant allele compared to Val/Val carriers. One recent study has suggested that the interactions between FXIII phenotype and plasma fibrinogen concentrations significantly influence clinical thrombotic risk.  相似文献   

5.
《Biophysical journal》2023,122(4):697-712
During clotting under flow, thrombin rapidly generates fibrin, whereas fibrin potently sequesters thrombin. This co-regulation was studied using microfluidic whole blood clotting on collagen/tissue factor, followed by buffer wash, and a start/stop cycling flow assay using the thrombin fluorogenic substrate, Boc-Val-Pro-Arg-AMC. After 3 min of clotting (100 s?1) and 5 min of buffer wash, non-elutable thrombin activity was easily detected during cycles of flow cessation. Non-elutable thrombin was similarly detected in plasma clots or arterial whole blood clots (1000 s?1). This thrombin activity was ablated by Phe-Pro-Arg-chloromethylketone (PPACK), apixaban, or Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro to inhibit fibrin. Reaction-diffusion simulations predicted 108 nM thrombin within the clot. Heparin addition to the start/stop assay had little effect on fibrin-bound thrombin, whereas addition of heparin-antithrombin (AT) required over 6 min to inhibit the thrombin, indicating a substantial diffusion limitation. In contrast, heparin-AT rapidly inhibited thrombin within microfluidic plasma clots, indicating marked differences in fibrin structure and functionality between plasma clots and whole blood clots. Addition of GPVI-Fab to blood before venous or arterial clotting (200 or 1000 s?1) markedly reduced fibrin-bound thrombin, whereas GPVI-Fab addition after 90 s of clotting had no effect. Perfusion of AF647-fibrinogen over washed fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-fibrin clots resulted in an intense red layer around, but not within, the original FITC-fibrin. Similarly, introduction of plasma/AF647-fibrinogen generated substantial red fibrin masses that did not penetrate the original green clots, demonstrating that fibrin cannot be re-clotted with fibrinogen. Overall, thrombin within fibrin is non-elutable, easily accessed by peptides, slowly accessed by average-sized proteins (heparin/AT), and not accessible to fresh fibrinogen.  相似文献   

6.
Plasma fibronectin is a vital component of the fibrin clot; however its role on clot structure is not clearly understood. The goal of this study was to examine the influence of fibronectin on the kinetics of formation, structural characteristics and composition of reconstituted fibrin clots or fibrin matrices. Fibrin matrices were formed by adding thrombin to 1, 2 or 4 mg/ml fibrinogen supplemented with 0–0.4 mg/ml fibronectin. The rate of fibrin matrix formation was then monitored by measuring light absorbance properties at different time points. Confocal microscopy of fluorescein conjugated fibrinogen was used to visualize the structural characteristics of fibrin matrices. The amount of fibronectin in fibrin matrices was determined through electrophoresis and immunoblotting of solubilized matrices. Fibronectin concentration positively correlated with the initial rate of fibrin matrix formation and with steady state light absorbance values of fibrin matrices. An increase in fibronectin concentration resulted in thinner and denser fibers in the fibrin matrices. Electrophoresis and immunoblotting showed that fibronectin was covalently and non-covalently bound to fibrin matrices and in the form of high molecular weight multimers. The formation of fibronectin multimers was attributed to cross-linking of fibronectin by trace amounts Factor XIIIa. These findings are novel because they link results from light absorbance studies to microcopy analyses and demonstrate an influence of fibronectin on fibrin matrix structural characteristics. This data is important in developing therapies that destabilize fibrin clots.  相似文献   

7.
Phe-pro-arg-chloromethyl ketone-inhibited alpha-thrombin [FPR alpha-thr] retains its fibrinogen recognition site (exosite 1), augments fibrin/fibrinogen [fibrin(ogen)] polymerization, and increases the incorporation of fibrin into clots. There are two 'low-affinity' thrombin-binding sites in each central E domain of fibrin, plus a non-substrate 'high affinity' gamma' chain thrombin-binding site on heterodimeric 'fibrin(ogen) 2' molecules (gamma(A), gamma'). 'Fibrin(ogen) 1' (gamma(A), gamma(A)) containing only low-affinity thrombin-binding sites, showed concentration-dependent FPR alpha-thr enhancement of polymerization, thus indicating that low-affinity sites are sufficient for enhancing polymerization. FPR gamma-thr, whose exosite 1 is non-functional, did not enhance polymerization of either fibrin(ogen)s 1 or 2 and DNA aptamer HD-1, which binds specifically to exosite 1, blocked FPR alpha-thr enhanced polymerization of both types of fibrin(ogen) (1>2). These results showed that exosite 1 is the critical element in thrombin that mediates enhanced fibrin polymerization. Des B beta 1-42 fibrin(ogen) 1, containing defective 'low-affinity' binding sites, was subdued in its FPR alpha-thr-mediated reactivity, whereas des B beta 1-42 fibrin(ogen) 2 (gamma(A), gamma') was more reactive. Thus, the gamma' chain thrombin-binding site contributes to enhanced FPR alpha-thr mediated polymerization and acts through a site on thrombin that is different from exosite 1, possibly exosite 2. Overall, the results suggest that during fibrin clot formation, catalytically-inactivated FPR alpha-thr molecules form non-covalently linked thrombin dimers, which serve to enhance fibrin polymerization by bridging between fibrin(ogen) molecules, mainly through their low affinity sites.  相似文献   

8.
Fibrinogen is a 340 kDa glycoprotein found in the blood plasma of all vertebrates. It is transformed into a fibrin clot by the action of thrombin. Recent X-ray structures of core fragments of both fibrinogen and fibrin have revealed many details about this polymerization event. These include structures of a 30 kDa recombinant γC domain, an 86 kDa fragment D from human fibrinogen and a cross-linked double-D fragment from fibrin.  相似文献   

9.
Several proteins are known to bind to a fibrin network and to change clot properties or function. In this study we aimed to get an overview of fibrin clot-bound plasma proteins. A plasma clot was formed by adding thrombin, CaCl(2) and aprotinin to citrated platelet-poor plasma and unbound proteins were washed away with Tris-buffered saline. Non-covalently bound proteins were extracted, separated with 2D gel electrophoresis and visualized with Sypro Ruby. Excised protein spots were analyzed with mass spectrometry. The identity of the proteins was verified by checking the mass of the protein, and, if necessary, by Western blot analysis. Next to established fibrin-binding proteins we identified several novel fibrin clot-bound plasma proteins, including α(2)-macroglobulin, carboxypeptidase N, α(1)-antitrypsin, haptoglobin, serum amyloid P, and the apolipoproteins A-I, E, J, and A-IV. The latter six proteins are associated with high-density lipoprotein particles. In addition we showed that high-density lipoprotein associated proteins were also present in fibrinogen preparations purified from plasma. Most plasma proteins in a fibrin clot can be classified into three groups according to either blood coagulation, protease inhibition or high-density lipoprotein metabolism. The presence of high-density lipoprotein in clots might point to a role in hemostasis.  相似文献   

10.
Current clinically approved thrombolytic agents have significant drawbacks including reocclusion and bleeding complications. To address these problems, a staphylokinase-based thrombolytic agent equipped with antithrombotic activity from hirudin was engineered. Because the N termini for both staphylokinase and hirudin are required for their activities, a Y-shaped molecule is generated using engineered coiled-coil sequences as the heterodimerization domain. This agent, designated HE-SAKK, was produced and assembled from Bacillus subtilis via secretion using an optimized co-cultivation approach. After a simple in vitro treatment to reshuffle the disulfide bonds of hirudin, both staphylokinase and hirudin in HE-SAKK showed biological activities comparable with their parent molecules. This agent was capable of targeting thrombin-rich fibrin clots and inhibiting clot-bound thrombin activity. The time required for lysing 50% of fibrin clot in the absence or presence of fibrinogen was shortened 21 and 30%, respectively, with HE-SAKK in comparison with staphylokinase. In plasma clot studies, the HE-SAKK concentration required to achieve a comparable 50% clot lysis time was at least 12 times less than that of staphylokinase. Therefore, HE-SAKK is a promising thrombolytic agent with the capability to target thrombin-rich fibrin clots and to minimize clot reformation during fibrinolysis.  相似文献   

11.
Covalent cross-linking of fibrin chains is required for stable blood clot formation, which is catalyzed by coagulation factor XIII (FXIII), a proenzyme of plasma transglutaminase consisting of catalytic A (FXIII-A) and non-catalytic B subunits (FXIII-B). Herein, we demonstrate that FXIII-B accelerates fibrin cross-linking. Depletion of FXIII-B from normal plasma supplemented with a physiological level of recombinant FXIII-A resulted in delayed fibrin cross-linking, reduced incorporation of FXIII-A into fibrin clots, and impaired activation peptide cleavage by thrombin; the addition of recombinant FXIII-B restored normal fibrin cross-linking, FXIII-A incorporation into fibrin clots, and activation peptide cleavage by thrombin. Immunoprecipitation with an anti-fibrinogen antibody revealed an interaction between the FXIII heterotetramer and fibrinogen mediated by FXIII-B and not FXIII-A. FXIII-B probably binds the γ-chain of fibrinogen with its D-domain, which is near the fibrin polymerization pockets, and dissociates from fibrin during or after cross-linking between γ-chains. Thus, FXIII-B plays important roles in the formation of a ternary complex between proenzyme FXIII, prosubstrate fibrinogen, and activator thrombin. Accordingly, congenital or acquired FXIII-B deficiency may result in increased bleeding tendency through impaired fibrin stabilization due to decreased FXIII-A activation by thrombin and secondary FXIII-A deficiency arising from enhanced circulatory clearance.  相似文献   

12.
Interaction of fibrinogen and its derivatives with fibrin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The binding between complementary polymerization sites of fibrin monomers plays an essential role in the formation of the fibrin clot. One set of polymerization sites involved in the interaction of fibrin monomers is believed to pre-exist in fibrinogen, while the complementary set of binding sites is exposed after the cleavage of fibrinopeptides from fibrinogen. The polymerization sites present in fibrinogen and its derivatives mediate their binding to fibrin. Although the binding of fibrinogen and its derivatives to fibrin have been qualitatively studied, there has been no systematic, quantitative investigation of their interaction with forming or preformed clots. In the present study, the binding of fibrinogen and fragments DD, D1, and E1 was measured using a sonicated suspension of plasminogen- and thrombin-free human cross-linked fibrin as a model of a preformed clot. Dissociation constants of 0.056, 0.19, and 2.44 microM, and the number of binding sites corresponding to 0.10, 0.21, and 0.13/fibrin monomer unit of fibrin polymer were found for fibrinogen, fragment DD, and fragment D1, respectively. Fragment E1 did not bind to sonicated noncross-linked or cross-linked fibrin suspensions. However, it was bound to forming fibrin clots as well as to fibrin-Celite, suggesting that the binding sites on fibrin involved in the interaction with fragment E1 may have been altered upon sonication. Affinity chromatography of various fibrinogen derivatives on a fibrin-Celite column showed that only part of the bound fragment DD was displaced by arginine, whereas fragments D1 and E1 were completely eluted under the same conditions. The results indicate that interaction of fibrinogen with the preformed fibrin clots is characterized by affinity in the nanomolar range and that binding between fibrin monomers, in the process of clot formation, could be characterized by even a higher affinity.  相似文献   

13.
In order to study the multiple functions of fibrinogen and fibrin, we are investigating which proteins bind to the fibrin matrix of a plasma clot by using a proteomic approach. Extracts from washed plasma clots were analysed by 2-D gel electrophoresis. A relatively abundant spot was identified as hepatocyte-derived fibrinogen-related protein-1 (HFREP-1) by MALDI-TOF analysis, molecular mass (34 kDa), iso-electric point (pI 5.5) as well as by Western blot analysis. HFREP-1 in plasma almost completely bound to the fibrin matrix during clot formation. Several purified fibrinogen preparations proved to be contaminated with HFREP-1. It is concluded that HFREP-1 (also named hepassocin), a protein with liver cell growth regulatory properties, occurs in plasma and strongly associates with fibrin and possibly fibrinogen.  相似文献   

14.
Localization of a fibrin polymerization site   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The formation of a fibrin clot is initiated after the proteolytic cleavage of fibrinogen by thrombin. The enzyme removes fibrinopeptides A and B and generates fibrin monomer which spontaneously polymerizes. Polymerization appears to occur though the interaction of complementary binding sites on the NH2-terminal and COOH-terminal (Fragment D) regions of the molecule. A peptide has been isolated from the gamma chain remnant of fibrinogen Fragment D1 which has the ability to bind to the NH2-terminal region of fibrinogen as well as to inhibit fibrin monomer polymerization. The peptide reduces the maximum rate and extent of the polymerization of thrombin or batroxobin fibrin monomer and increases the lag time. The D1 peptide does not interact with disulfide knot, fibrinogen, or Fragment D1, but it binds to thrombin-treated disulfide knot with a Kd of 1.45 X 10(-6) M at approximately two binding sites per molecule of disulfide knot. Fibrin monomer formed either by thrombin or batroxobin binds approximately two molecules of D1 peptide per molecule of fibrin monomer, indicating that the complementary site is revealed by the loss of fibrinopeptide A. The NH2-terminal sequence (Thr-Arg-Trp) and COOH-terminal sequence (Ala-Gly-Asp-Val) of the D1 peptide were determined. Therefore the gamma 373-410 region of fibrinogen contains a polymerization site which is complementary to the thrombin-activated site on the NH2-terminal region of fibrinogen.  相似文献   

15.
Molecular basis of fibrin clot elasticity   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Blood clots must be stiff to stop hemorrhage yet elastic to buffer blood's shear forces. Upsetting this balance results in clot rupture and life-threatening thromboembolism. Fibrin, the main component of a blood clot, is formed from molecules of fibrinogen activated by thrombin. Although it is well known that fibrin possesses considerable elasticity, the molecular basis of this elasticity is unknown. Here, we use atomic force microscopy (AFM) and steered molecular dynamics (SMD) to probe the mechanical properties of single fibrinogen molecules and fibrin protofibrils, showing that the mechanical unfolding of their coiled-coil alpha helices is characterized by a distinctive intermediate force plateau in the systems' force-extension curve. We relate this plateau force to a stepwise unfolding of fibrinogen's coiled alpha helices and of its central domain. AFM data show that varying pH and calcium ion concentrations alters the mechanical resilience of fibrinogen. This study provides direct evidence for the coiled alpha helices of fibrinogen to bring about fibrin elasticity.  相似文献   

16.
Platelet factor-4 (PF4/CXCL4) is an orphan chemokine released in large quantities in the vicinity of growing blood clots. Coagulation of plasma supplemented with a matching amount of PF4 results in a translucent jelly-like clot. Saturating amounts of PF4 reduce the porosity of the fibrin network 4.4-fold and decrease the values of the elastic and loss moduli by 31- and 59-fold, respectively. PF4 alters neither the cleavage of fibrinogen by thrombin nor the cross-linking of protofibrils by activated factor XIII but binds to fibrin and dramatically transforms the structure of the ensuing network. Scanning electron microscopy showed that PF4 gives rise to a previously unreported pattern of polymerization where fibrin assembles to form a sealed network. The subunits constituting PF4 form a tetrahedron having at its corners a RPRH motif that mimics (in reverse orientation) the Gly-His-Arg-Pro-amide peptides that co-crystallize with fibrin. Molecular modeling showed that PF4 could be docked to fibrin with remarkable complementarities and absence of steric clashes, allowing the assembly of irregular polymers. Consistent with this hypothesis, as little as 50 microm the QVRPRHIT peptide derived from PF4 affects the polymerization of fibrin.  相似文献   

17.
Effects of thrombospondin on fibrin polymerization and structure   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Thrombospondin (TSP) is a trace protein in plasma but is released in high concentrations from alpha-granules of activated platelets during hemostasis. It binds to the platelet membrane and becomes incorporated into fibrin clots. A variety of approaches were taken to learn the effects of TSP on fibrin polymerization and structure. 125I-TSP and 125I-fibrinogen were used to study the effect of TSP concentration on the extent of TSP and fibrin incorporation. Turbidity at 600 nm was used to monitor the time course of polymerization. Wavelength dependence of the turbidity was used to calculate the mass to length ratio, fiber diameter, and fiber density of fibrin formed in the presence and absence of TSP. Morphologies of control and TSP-containing clots were examined by electron microscopy following critical point drying. The initial TSP concentration influenced the amount of TSP incorporated but did not alter the extent of fibrin polymerization. TSP, in a concentration-dependent manner, reduced the lag time to turbidity rise and caused formation of more numerous but thinner fibers. Except for their diameter, these fibers were identical to fibers of control fibrin in terms of density and morphology. It is proposed that TSP interacts with fibrin intermediates to accelerate fiber growth, perhaps by serving as a trifunctional branching unit during network formation. The properties of fibrin around aggregating platelets, therefore, may be influenced considerably by secreted TSP.  相似文献   

18.
Type 1 plasminogen activator inhibitor binds to fibrin via vitronectin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Type 1 plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1), the primary inhibitor of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), circulates as a complex with the abundant plasma glycoprotein, vitronectin. This interaction stabilizes the inhibitor in its active conformation In this report, the effects of vitronectin on the interactions of PAI-1 with fibrin clots were studied. Confocal microscopic imaging of platelet-poor plasma clots reveals that essentially all fibrin-associated PAI-1 colocalizes with fibrin-bound vitronectin. Moreover, formation of platelet-poor plasma clots in the presence of polyclonal antibodies specific for vitronectin attenuated the inhibitory effects of PAI-1 on t-PA-mediated fibrinolysis. Addition of vitronectin during clot formation markedly potentiates PAI-1-mediated inhibition of lysis of (125)I-labeled fibrin clots by t-PA. This effect is dependent on direct binding interactions of vitronectin with fibrin. There is no significant effect of fibrin-associated vitronectin on fibrinolysis in the absence of PAI-1. The binding of PAI-1 to fibrin clots formed in the absence of vitronectin was characterized by a low affinity (K(d) approximately 3.5 micrometer) and rapid loss of PAI-1 inhibitory activity over time. In contrast, a high affinity and stabilization of PAI-1 activity characterized the cooperative binding of PAI-1 to fibrin formed in the presence of vitronectin. These findings indicate that plasma PAI-1.vitronectin complexes can be localized to the surface of fibrin clots; by this localization, they may modulate fibrinolysis and clot reorganization.  相似文献   

19.
During blood clot formation in vivo, plasma fibronectin (pFN) is cross-linked to fibrin by coagulation factor XIIIa. Cellular FN (cFN), which localizes to connective tissue, is distinguished from pFN by the inclusion of alternatively spliced segments. To determine if these two FNs are functionally equivalent in blood clotting, the cross-linking of rat pFN and cFN to fibrin was compared in an in vitro clotting assay. Fibrinogen and FN were incubated at physiological ratios in the presence of thrombin and factor XIIIa. Cross-linking of FN to fibrin was monitored by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. Over 24 h, cFN was incorporated at a significantly slower rate than pFN and was not completely cross-linked to fibrin at a temperature that favors this interaction (0 degrees C). This difference was observed with purified fibrinogens from human, rat, and bovine and with rat plasma and was maintained even after incubation of pFN with rat fibroblasts for several days. Using the same assay, purified recombinant V(+)-V0 and V(+)-V+ FN dimers resembling pFN and cFN, respectively, showed a similar difference in cross-linking kinetics. These results suggest that the asymmetric distribution of the V region among pFN dimers plays a role in regulating its incorporation into blood clots. In fibrin clots, cFN was converted into a set of cross-linked intermediates distinct from those of pFN. For example, while pFN was initially cross-linked into a pFN-fibrin alpha heterodimer, this product was not a major intermediate in clots formed with cFN. This finding, in conjunction with evidence for the formation of factor XIIIa-catalyzed cFN-cFN cross-links, indicated that cFN molecules interact with each other, and with fibrin, differently from pFN. Together, these results show an important functional distinction between pFN and cFN.  相似文献   

20.
The storage and loss shear moduli (G', G″) of human fibrin clots have been measured in small oscillating deformations over a frequency range of 0.01 to 160 Hz with the modified Birnboim transducer apparatus. Most clots were prepared by the action of thrombin on purified fibrinogen, under various conditions of pH and ionic strength to produce networks ranging from coarse to fine structure; some were liaated by fibrinoligase. The fine, unligated clot showed very little mechanical loss or frequency dependence of G' over the experimental frequency range, though loss mechanisms evidently appear at higher frequencies; G' was proportional to the 1.5 power of fibrin concentration. The coarse, unligated clot showed a slight increase of G' with frequency, reflecting some relaxation mechanisms with time constants whose reciprocals lie in the experimental frequency range. Ligation did not greatly affect the magnitude of G'. However, clots prepared by dilution of solutions of fibrin monomer in 1 M sodium bromide had smaller moduli by a factor of ten than corresponding clots prepared by the action of thrombin of fibrinogen. Oscillatory measurements in the Birnboim apparatus with closed-end (annular pumping) geometry revealed a low-frequency anomaly which was shown to be due to permeation of fluid through the clot structure, and from these measurements the Darcy constants for coarse clots were calculated. From the Darcy constants, the average thicknesses of the fibrous elements of the structures were estimated to be from 300 to 700 A.  相似文献   

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