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1.
Since the introduction of antivenom administration 120 years ago to treat venomous snake bit, it has been the gold standard for saving life and limb. However, this therapeutic approach is not always effective and not without potential life-threatening side effects. We tested a new paradigm to abrogate the plasmatic anticoagulant effects of fibrinogenolytic snake venom metalloproteinases by modification of fibrinogen with iron and carbon monoxide and by inhibiting these Zn2+ dependent metalloproteinases directly with carbon monoxide exposure. Assessment of the fibrinogenolytic effects of venoms collected from Puff adder, Gaboon viper and Indian cobra snakes on plasmatic coagulation kinetics was performed with thrombelastography. Pretreatment of plasma with iron and carbon monoxide exposure markedly attenuated the effects of all three venoms, and direct pretreatment of each venom with carbon monoxide also significantly decreased the ability to compromise coagulation. These results demonstrated that the introduction of a transition metal (e.g., modulation of the α-chain of fibrinogen with iron), modulation of transition metal in heme (e.g., carbon monoxide modulation of fibrinogen-bound heme iron), and direct inhibition of transition metal containing venom enzymes (e.g., CO binding to Zn2+ or displacing Zn2+ from the catalytic site) significantly decreased fibrinogenolytic activity. This biometal modulation strategy to attenuate the anticoagulant effects of snake venom metalloproteinases could potentially diminish hemostatic injury in envenomed patients until antivenom can be administered.  相似文献   

2.
Factor XIII zymogen activation is a complex series of events that involve fibrinogen acting in several different roles. This report focuses on the role of fibrinogen as a cofactor in factor XIII activation by thrombin. We demonstrate that fibrinogen has two distinct activities that lead to an increased rate of factor XIII activation. First, the thrombin proteolytic activity is increased by fibrin. The cleavage rates of both a small chromogenic substrate and the factor XIII activation peptide are increased in the presence of either the major fibrin isoform, gammaA/gammaA fibrin, or a minor variant form, gammaA/gamma' fibrin. This enhancement of thrombin activity by fibrin is independent of fibrin polymerization and requires only cleavage of the fibrinopeptides. Subsequently, gammaA/gamma' fibrinogen accelerates plasma factor XIII activation by a non-proteolytic mechanism. This increased rate of activation results in a slightly more rapid cross-linking of fibrin gammaA and gamma' chains and a significantly more rapid cross-linking of fibrin alpha chain multimers. Together, these results show that although both forms of fibrin increase the rate of activation peptide cleavage by thrombin, gammaA/gamma' fibrinogen also increases the rate of factor XIII activation in a non-proteolytic manner. A revised model of factor XIII activation is presented below.  相似文献   

3.
Thrombomodulin acts as a linear competitive inhibitor of thrombin with respect to the substrate fibrinogen. In the present study the effect of thrombomodulin on the activity of thrombin with fragments of the A alpha and B beta chain of fibrinogen has been examined. The cleavage of fibrinopeptide A from the N-terminal disulphide knot, fragment 1-44 and fragment 1-51 of the A alpha chain was inhibited by thrombomodulin. The average value for the inhibition constant obtained with these substrates was 0.83 +/- 0.09 nM, which was in good agreement with the values obtained previously for the inhibition of thrombin by thrombomodulin with native fibrinogen as the substrate [Hofsteenge, J., Taguchi, H. & Stone, S. R. (1986) Biochem. J. 237, 243-251]. In contrast, the cleavage of fibrinopeptide A from fragment 1-23 and fragment 1-29 of the A alpha chain was not affected by thrombomodulin. Although the cleavage of the B beta chain in the intact fibrinogen molecule was inhibited by thrombomodulin [Hofsteenge, J., Taguchi, H. & Stone, S. R. (1986) Biochem. J. 237, 243-251], the release of fibrinopeptide B from the N-terminal disulphide knot and the N-terminal 118-residue fragment of the B beta chain was not inhibited by thrombomodulin. In addition, we determined the second-order rate constants of cleavage of these substrates using human thrombin. Fragments of the A alpha chain whose cleavage was inhibited by thrombomodulin were found to have values for kcat/Km that were within one order of magnitude of that for the native fibrinogen, whereas those for A alpha chain fragments whose cleavage was not inhibited by thrombomodulin were found to be more than two orders of magnitudes lower. From these results we conclude that only a relatively small portion of the A alpha chain of the fibrinogen molecule is responsible for the specific binding to thrombin that is affected by thrombomodulin. Moreover, residues 30-44 of the A alpha chain play an important role in this thrombin-fibrinogen interaction.  相似文献   

4.
In order to study thrombin interaction with fibrinogen, thrombin binding to fragments D and E (prepared by plasmin digestion of fibrinogen) and to intact S-carboxymethylated chains of fibrinogen (A alpha, B beta, and gamma) was analyzed by autoradiography, immunoblotting, and affinity chromatography. Complex formation was observed between late fragment E and thrombin but not with fragment D. The three reduced chain remnants of fragment E all formed complexes with thrombin. Also, thrombin bound to the intact, separated A alpha, B beta, and gamma chains of fibrinogen as well as to the alpha and beta chains of fibrin. In these experiments the extended substrate-binding site, but not the catalytic-binding site, was being examined because fragment E had as its amino-terminal amino acids Val20 in the alpha chain, Lys54 in the beta chain, and Tyr1 in the gamma chain. Also, thrombin inhibited in its active center by D-phenyl-alanyl-L-prolyl-L-arginine-chloromethyl ketone bound to fragment E and to the separated chains in the same manner as unmodified thrombin. A lysine residue to thrombin was essential for its binding to fibrinogen. Thrombin attached to CNBr-activated Sepharose through its amino groups did not bind to fragment E, but when thrombin was attached through its carboxyl groups, it bound fragment E.  相似文献   

5.
Hemorrhagic proteinase, HTb, isolated from Crotalus atrox (western diamondback rattlesnake) venom was studied for its specificity. HTb showed fibrinogenase activity, hydrolyzing the A alpha chain of fibrinogen first, followed by the cleavage of the B beta chain. HTb is different from thrombin and did not produce a fibrin clot. The degradation products of fibrinogen were found to be different, indicating that the cleavage sites in the A alpha and B beta chains are different from those of thrombin. N-Benzoyl-Phe-Val-Arg-p-nitroanilide was not hydrolyzed by HTb, although this substrate was hydrolyzed by thrombin and reptilase.  相似文献   

6.
Three dimensional scaffolds are becoming increasingly popular in the treatment of cartilage defects. Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and fibrinogen can be used potentially as a three dimensional cell delivery vehicle. PRP is a fraction of plasma containing high levels of growth factors such as PDGF, IGF-I and TGF-I, which stimulate chondrocyte to synthesize extracellular matrix. The aim of this study was to prepare grafts based on fibrinogen, and PRP with fibrinogen as a chondrocyte carrier. Another goal was to estimate tranexamic acid as an antifibrynolytic agent in chondrocyte grafts and in monolayer culture for about 3 weeks. 450 ml blood was collected to produce fibrinogen and PRP from a Regional Blood Center voluntary donor. To prepare gel grafts, chondrocytes were mixed with PRP and, fibrinogen and then with thrombin in calcium chloride. Different doses of tranexamic acid or aprotinin were used to stabilize the constructs. Grafts were cultivated for 4 weeks in vitro to evaluate and compare their disintegration. Grafts were stable for the entire observation period and revealed no shrinkage. During graft storage, cells appeared to be viable, and cell migration from the graft to the culture plate was observed. Chondrocyte graft preparation based on PRP and fibrinogen is a promising method. PRP-fibrinogen carrier in combination with cells constitutes highly plastic and adhesive grafts. Tranexamic acid can be used as an anti-fibrinolytic agent in chondrocyte graft preparation instead of aprotinin.  相似文献   

7.
Crotalus atrox venom contains agents that render human fibrinogen and plasma incoagulable by thrombin. To elucidate the mechanism of alteration of fibrinogen clotting function by the venom, four immunochemically different proteases, I, II, III, and IV, were purified from the venom by anion-exchange chromatography and column gel filtration. All four proteases had anticoagulant activity rendering purified fibrinogen incoagulable. Proteases I and IV do not affect fibrinogen in plasma but in purified fibrinogen cleave the A alpha chain first and then the B beta and gamma chains. Both enzymes are metalloproteases containing a single polypeptide chain with 1 mol of zinc, are inhibited by (ethylenedinitrilo)tetraacetate and human alpha 2-macroglobulin, and have an optimal temperature of 37 degrees C and an optimal pH of 7. Protease I has a molecular weight (Mr) of 20 000 and is the most cationic. Protease IV has an Mr of 46 000 and is the most anionic glycoprotein with one free sulfhydryl group. Proteases II and III degrade both purified fibrinogen and fibrinogen in plasma, cleaving only the B beta chain and leaving the A alpha and gamma chains intact. Both enzymes are alkaline serine proteases, cleave chromogenic substrates at the COOH terminal of arginine or lysine, are inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate and phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride, and have an optimal temperature of 50-65 degrees C. Protease II is a single polypeptide chain glycoprotein with an Mr of 31 000. Protease III is a two polypeptide chain protein with an Mr of 24 000, each of the two chains having an Mr of 13 000; its activity is not affected by major protease inhibitors of human plasma. Proteases II and III are enzymes with unique and limited substrate specificity by cleaving only the B beta chain, releasing a peptide of Mr 5000 and generating a fibrinogen derivative of Mr 325 000, with intact A alpha and gamma chains and poor coagulability. Since the two enzymes are active in human plasma and serum, it is postulated that proteases II and III can mediate anticoagulant effects in vivo after envenomation.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Activated protein C (APC) exerts its physiologic anticoagulant role by proteolytic inactivation of the blood coagulation cofactors Va and VIIIa. The synthetic peptide-(311-325) (KRNRTFVLNFIKIPV), derived from the heavy chain sequence of APC, potently inhibited APC anticoagulant activity in activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) and Xa-1-stage coagulation assays in normal and in protein S-depleted plasma with 50% inhibition at 13 microM peptide. In a system using purified clotting factors, peptide-(311-325) inhibited APC-catalyzed inactivation of factor Va in the presence or absence of phospholipids with 50% inhibition at 6 microM peptide. However, peptide-(311-325) had no effect on APC amidolytic activity or on the reaction of APC with the serpin, recombinant [Arg358]alpha 1-antitrypsin. Peptide-(311-325) surprisingly inhibited factor Xa clotting activity in normal plasma, and in a purified system it inhibited prothrombinase activity in the presence but not in the absence of factor Va with 50% inhibition at 8 microM peptide. The peptide had no significant effect on factor Xa or thrombin amidolytic activity and no effect on the clotting of purified fibrinogen by thrombin, suggesting it does not directly inhibit these enzymes. Factor Va bound in a dose-dependent manner to immobilized peptide-(311-325). Peptide-(311-315) inhibited the binding of factor Va to immobilized APC or factor Xa.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
The kinetics of inhibition of alpha-thrombin in human plasma   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Methods have been developed for kinetic studies of the inhibition of exogenous unmodified thrombin in human plasma containing normal levels of fibrinogen and calcium ion. To prevent interference by other proteases, factor VIII-deficient plasma was used and contained 50 nM Phe-Phe-Arg-chloromethyl ketone and 1 kallikrein-inactivating unit/ml aprotinin; neither inhibited thrombin at these levels. Two independent assays were used. The first was the discontinuous amidolytic assay of thrombin activity, which measures both free thrombin and thrombin-alpha 2-macroglobulin complex, and was used to estimate the rates of inhibition both by "inactivating" inhibitors, such as anti-thrombin and alpha 1-protease inhibitor, and by alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M). The contribution of alpha 2M was confirmed by a second method, which measured with time the generation of amidolytic activity due to the thrombin-alpha 2M complex. The total rate of thrombin inhibition in plasma containing 4 mM free Ca2+ was of the order of 1.9 min-1, of which 0.4 min-1 was due to alpha 2M and 0.9 min-1 was due to inhibitors that were removed when plasma was passed through heparin-agarose. Thrombin inhibition was also measured in varying dilutions of plasma and confirmed that total inhibition rate is approximately linearly related to plasma (and thus inhibitor) concentration. Negatively charged phospholipid micelles had very little effect on thrombin inhibition rate, but platelets accelerated inhibition to more than 2.5 min-1.  相似文献   

11.
Fibrinogen is essential in the intrinsic and extrinsic blood coagulation process. Inhibition of fibrinogen aggregation could lead to anticoagulation effects. The availability of methods for easy quantitative evaluation of the coagulation process is critical to studying coagulation and its inhibition. A commonly used method is UV–Vis absorbance (405 nm) detection by a micro-plate reader. However, because of the heterogeneous nature of the resulting mixture in a coagulation process, transmission-based optical measurements give large variations. Herein, a very simple and easy method is developed for the quantitative measurements of the coagulation process. The method was validated using three known thrombin inhibitors: 4-(2-aminoethyl) benzenesulfonyl fluoride (IC50: 0.01 mM), p-amidinophenyl methanesulfonyl fluoride (IC50: 0.18 mM) and PMSF (IC50: 0.23 mM).  相似文献   

12.
Cross-linking site in fibrinogen for alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
A plasma proteinase inhibitor, alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor (alpha 2PI), is cross-linked with alpha chain of fibrin(ogen) by activated coagulation Factor XIII (plasma transglutaminase). alpha 2PI serves only as a glutamine substrate (amine acceptor) for activated Factor XIII in the cross-linking reaction, and the cross-linking occurs between Gln-2 of the alpha 2PI molecule and a lysine residue (amine donor) of fibrin(ogen) alpha chain, whose position was investigated. alpha 2PI and fibrinogen were reacted by activated Factor XIII. The resulting alpha 2PI fibrinogen A alpha chain complex was separated and subjected to two cycles of Edman degradation using phenyl isothiocyanate for the first cycle and dimethylaminoazobenzene-isothiocyanate for the second cycle. The aqueous phase after the cleavage stage of the second cycle, containing dimethylaminoazobenzene-thiohydantoin-Gln cross-linked with A alpha chain, was subjected to CNBr fragmentation and tryptic digestion. Only one of the peptides was found to have the peak of absorbance at 420 nm, indicating the presence of dimethylaminoazobenzene-thiohydantoin-Gln in that peptide. The peptide was identified as corresponding to residues Asn-290-Arg-348 of A alpha chain by analyses of the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence and amino acid composition. The peptide contains a single lysine at position 303, indicating that Lys-303 of fibrinogen A alpha chain is the lysine residue that forms a cross-link with Gln-2 of alpha 2PI.  相似文献   

13.
Human blood coagulation factor XI was activated by either autoactivation or thrombin. These reactions occurred only in the presence of negatively charged materials, such as dextran sulfate (approximately Mr 500,000), sulfatide, and heparin. During the activation, factor XI was cleaved at a single Arg-Ile bond by thrombin or factor XIa to produce an amino-terminal 50-kDa heavy chain and a carboxyl-terminal 35-kDa light chain. This activation pattern is identical to that produced by factor XIIa. The addition of a small amount of thrombin and sulfatide to factor XII-deficient plasma produced shorter clotting times than when these agents were added to factor XI/factor XII combined-deficient plasma. These results suggest that the activation of factor XI by thrombin and possibly the autoactivation of factor XI proceed in plasma to lead fibrin clot formation. These reactions may have a role on an appropriate negatively charged surface in normal hemostasis.  相似文献   

14.
Soluble fibrinogen binding to the glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex (integrin alpha IIb beta 3) requires platelet activation. The intracellular mediator(s) that convert glycoprotein IIb-IIIa into an active fibrinogen receptor have not been identified. Because the lipid composition of the platelet plasma membrane undergoes changes during activation, we investigated the effects of lipids on the fibrinogen binding properties of purified glycoprotein IIb-IIIa. Anion exchange chromatography of lipids extracted from platelets exposed to thrombin or other platelet agonists resolved an activity that increased fibrinogen binding to glycoprotein IIb-IIIa. A monoester phosphate was important for activity, and phosphatidic acid coeluted with the peak of activity. Purified phosphatidic acid dose-dependently promoted a specific interaction between glycoprotein IIb-IIIa and fibrinogen which possessed many but not all of the properties of fibrinogen binding to activated platelets. Phosphatidic acid appeared to increase the proportion of fibrinogen binding-competent glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complexes without altering their affinity for fibrinogen. The effects of phosphatidic acid were a result of specific structural properties of the lipid and were not mimicked by other phospholipids. Lysophosphatidic acid, however, was a potent inducer of fibrinogen binding to glycoprotein IIb-IIIa. These results demonstrate that specific lipids can affect fibrinogen binding to purified glycoprotein IIb-IIIa and suggest that the lipid environment has the potential to influence fibrinogen binding to its receptor.  相似文献   

15.
The first-attempt study deciphered metal-interacting effects on dye-decolorizing capabilities of indigenous bioelectricity-generating strains, Acinetobacter guillouiae Ax-9 and Rahnella aquatilis DX2b. Most of the metallic ions were inhibitory to color removal capabilities of these strains. However, with supplementation of 5 mM ferric chloride, specific decolorization rate (SDR) of Ax-9 increased by 55.48 % compared to Fe3+-free conditions. In contrast, SDR of DX2b decreased 75.35 % due to the inhibition of ferric chloride. On the other hand, ferric citrate could stimulate SDR of DX2b for 21.5 % at same dosage. Enzymatic assay indicated that Fe reductase activity was consistent with synergistic effects of ferric chloride on Ax-9, and ferric citrate on DX2b. Protein analysis via SDS-PAGE and identification of Tandem MS/MS afterwards showed that outer membrane protein (Omp) primarily deals with decolorization as a channeling regulation. Moreover, molecular modeling and bioinformatics data also provided detailed evidences to confirm the biological significance of Omp.  相似文献   

16.
The present study identifies proteins modified by nitration in the plasma of patients with ongoing acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). The proteins modified by nitration in ARDS were revealed by microsequencing and specific antibody detection to be ceruloplasmin, transferrin, alpha(1)-protease inhibitor, alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin, and beta-chain fibrinogen. Exposure to nitrating agents did not deter the chymotrypsin-inhibiting activity of alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin. However, the ferroxidase activity of ceruloplasmin and the elastase-inhibiting activity of alpha(1)-protease inhibitor were reduced to 50.3 +/- 1.6 and 60.3 +/- 5.3% of control after exposure to the nitrating agent. In contrast, the rate of interaction of fibrinogen with thrombin was increased to 193.4 +/- 8.5% of the control value after exposure of fibrinogen to nitration. Ferroxidase activity of ceruloplasmin and elastase-inhibiting activity of the alpha(1)-protease inhibitor in the ARDS patients were significantly reduced (by 81 and 44%, respectively), whereas alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin activity was not significantly altered. Posttranslational modifications of plasma proteins mediated by nitrating agents may offer a biochemical explanation for the reported diminished ferroxidase activity, elevated levels of elastase, and fibrin deposits detected in patients with ongoing ARDS.  相似文献   

17.
When the extent of plasminogen activation by staphylokinase (SAK) or streptokinase (SK) was measured in human plasma, SAK barely induced plasminogen activation, whereas SK activated plasminogen significantly. When the plasma was clotted with thrombin, the plasminogen activation by SAK was markedly enhanced, but that of SK was little enhanced. Similarly, in a purified system composed of plasminogen, fibrinogen and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor (alpha 2-PI, alpha 2-antiplasmin), such a fibrin clot increased the activity of SAK significantly. However, when alpha 2-PI was removed from the reaction system, enhancement of the SAK reaction was not observed. In addition, SAK as distinct from SK, showed very little interference with the action of alpha 2-PI. Plasminogen activation by SAK is thus essentially inhibited by alpha 2-PI, but this reaction is not inhibited in fibrin clots. These results suggest that SAK forms a complex with plasminogen, which binds to fibrin and induces fibrinolysis.  相似文献   

18.
Prothrombin is the precursor of thrombin, a central enzyme in coagulation. Autoantibodies to prothrombin are associated with thromboembolism, but the mechanisms by which the antibodies modulate the coagulation processes are not understood. We screened a panel of 34 monoclonal antibody light chains isolated from patients with multiple myeloma for prothrombinase activity by an electrophoresis method. Two light chains with the activity were identified, and one of the light chains was characterized further. The prothrombinase activity eluted from a gel-filtration column run in denaturing solvent (6 M guanidine hydrochloride) at the characteristic positions of the light chain dimer and monomer. A constant level of catalytic activity was observed across the width of the light chain monomer peak, assessed as the cleavage of IEGR-methylcoumarinamide, a peptide substrate corresponding to residues 268-271 of prothrombin. Hydrolysis of this peptide by the light chain was saturable and consistent with Michaelis-Menten-Henri kinetics (K(m) 103 microM; k(cat) of 2.62 x 10(-)(2)/min). Four cleavage sites in prothrombin were identified by N-terminal sequencing of the fragments: Arg(155)-Ser(156), Arg(271)-Thr(272), Arg(284)-Thr(285), and Arg(393)-Ser(394). The light chain did not cleave radiolabeled albumin, thyroglobulin, and annexin V under conditions that readily permitted detectable prothrombin cleavage. Two prothrombin fragments (M(r) 55 000 and 38 000), were isolated by anion-exchange chromatography and were observed to cleave a thrombin substrate, tosyl-GPR-nitroanilide. Conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin was accelerated by the prothrombin fragments generated by the light chain. These finding suggest a novel mechanism whereby antibodies can induce a procoagulant state, i.e., prothrombin activation via cleavage of the molecule.  相似文献   

19.
Factor VIII, a human blood plasma protein, plays an important role during the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation cascade after its activation by thrombin. The activated form of FVIII acts as cofactor to the serine protease Factor IXa, in the conversion of the zymogen Factor X to the active enzyme Factor Xa. The Ser558–Gln565 region of the A2 subunit of Factor VIII has been shown to be crucial for FVIIIa–FIXa interaction. Based on this, a series of linear peptides, analogs of the 558–565 loop of the A2 subunit of the heavy chain of Factor VIII were synthesized using the acid labile 2-chlorotrityl chloride resin and biologically evaluated in vitro by measuring the chronic delay of activated partial thromboplastin time and the inhibition of Factor VIII activity, as potential anticoagulants.  相似文献   

20.
Human fibrinogen exposed to protease III from Crotalus atrox venom is cleaved near the NH2 terminus of the B beta chain yielding a species of Mr 325,000 (Fg325) with impaired thrombin clottability. The derivative was compared with intact fibrinogen in a number of ways to determine whether the functional defect resulted from a conformational change or from the loss of a polymerization site. NH2-terminal amino acid sequencing of isolated A alpha, B beta, and gamma chains showed that Fg325 contained intact A alpha and gamma chains, but differed from fibrinogen by the absence of the first 42 residues of the B beta chain. Fibrinopeptide A was present and was cleaved at the same rate in both fibrinogen and Fg325. The rate and extent of A alpha and gamma cross-linking by factor XIIIa was also indistinguishable. In contrast, the thrombin-catalyzed coagulation of Fg325 was 46% less in extent and 180-fold slower than observed for intact fibrinogen. A conformational comparison of Fg325 and fibrinogen was made using immunochemical and spectroscopic approaches. Antisera specific for different regions of the fibrinogen molecule were used to characterize the epitopes in Fg325. The only significant differences were found in the NH2-terminal region of the B beta chain, probed with antiserum to B beta 1-118. The conformational similarity of Fg325 and fibrinogen was confirmed by the identity of both near and far UV CD spectra of the two proteins. Structural, functional, and immunochemical results imply that cleavage of 42 NH2-terminal residues from the B beta chain is not accompanied by a measurable conformational change. The residues of this B beta chain segment, which are evidently located on the surface of the molecule, in conjunction with the NH2-terminal part of the A alpha chain appear to play an important role in the expression of a fibrin polymerization site.  相似文献   

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