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1.
Fragment D (Mr 100 000) prepared from a terminal plasmin digest of fibrinogen was isolated and used to study its effect on fibrin formation. Increasing amounts of fragment D added to a solution of fibrinogen and thrombin decrease the rigidity of the resultant gel (10% of control at 2 mol of fragment D/mol of fibrinogen). Half-maximal inhibition is achieved at 1 mol of fragment D/mol of fibrinogen for non-cross-linked clots and at 1/2 mol of fragment D/mol of fibrinogen for cross-linked clots. "Clottability' decreases concomitantly with the rigidity. Only small amounts of fragment D (less than 10% for non-cross-linked gels) are incorporated into the gel. Light-scattering shows an increase in the final fibre thickness at fragment D concentrations up to 2 mol of fragment D/mol of fibrinogen, from 60 molecules/cross-section for the control to 120 molecules/cross-section. Higher fragment D concentrations lead to a decrease in the final fibre thickness. The limit fibre thickness is 8 nm, with a length of 80 nm, which is equivalent to a fibrin trimer. On the basis of results of synthetic-substrate and fibrinopeptide-release assays, it is clear that thrombin inactivation is not responsible for this effect. These data suggest that fragment D may inhibit fibrin formation by blocking the bimolecular polymerization of activated fibrin monomer molecules to form protofibrils, although additional effects on subsequent assembly steps may also be involved.  相似文献   

2.
Steady-state kinetic parameters were compared for the action of alpha- and gamma-thrombin on the physiologically important thrombin substrates fibrinogen and factor XIII at 37 degrees C, pH 7.4, and 0.14 M NaCl. gamma-Thrombin, an alpha-thrombin derivative proteolytically cleaved at R-B73 and K-B154, was observed to catalyze the release of fibrinopeptide A (FPA) from fibrinogen with a specificity constant (kcat/Km) of 5 X 10(3) M-1 s-1. This value was approximately 2400-fold lower than the specificity constant for the corresponding alpha-thrombin-catalyzed reaction. The low specificity constant was attributed to an increase in Km and a decrease in kcat for gamma-thrombin-catalyzed release of FPA from fibrinogen. Conversion of alpha-thrombin to gamma-thrombin also resulted in an approximately 800-fold reduction in the specificity constant for thrombin-catalyzed release of fibrinopeptide B (FPB) from fibrin I, as well as a loss in discriminatory power. Whereas alpha-thrombin preferentially released FPA from intact fibrinogen, gamma-thrombin released FPA and FPB from intact fibrinogen at similar rates. In contrast to the large difference in specificity constants observed for alpha- and gamma-thrombin catalysis with fibrin(ogen) as substrate, the specificity constant (2.6 X 10(4) M-1 s-1) observed for gamma-thrombin-catalyzed release of activation peptide from factor XIII was only 5-fold lower than the corresponding value for the alpha-thrombin-catalyzed reaction. Additionally, the promotion of factor XIII activation by fibrin characteristic of the alpha-thrombin-catalyzed reaction did not occur in the gamma-thrombin-catalyzed reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The fibrin polymers formed in solution during the earliest phase of the fibrinogen–fibrin conversion are shown to be stable soluble molecules at pH7.4 and 0.15m- or 0.3m-NaCl. The various sequential soluble fibrin polymers produced from the fibrinogen–thrombin reaction can be observed by gel chromatography and can be isolated for characterization. The mechanism of fibrin polymerization proposed from the present studies suggests that the initial event is the thrombin activation at only one of the Aα-chains in fibrinogen. The resulting highly reactive intermediate is the true fibrin monomer and it rapidly, and irreversibly, self-associates to form the stable fibrin dimer (s20.w=12S). Fibrin dimer possesses the N-terminal pattern alanine/glycine/tyrosine (1:1:2) per 340000 molecular weight, and possesses the chain structure [(α)Aα)(Bβ)2(γ)2]2. The fibrin dimer is a soluble inert molecule, but additional thrombin activation of its remaining intact Aα-chains leads to new associations into larger inert soluble fibrin polymers. In this manner progressively larger fibrin oligomers are constructed with thrombin continually in control of the process because of the necessity to repeatedly re-activate the various fibrin polymers in solution. The inert character of the soluble fibrin polymers can be explained by the reciprocal alignment of the associating molecules, which mutually consumes their active surfaces and leaves an intact Aα-chain at either end of each fibrin oligomer. The soluble fibrin polymers will proceed to further association only if thrombin activates these remaining Aα-chains, otherwise the fibrin molecules are stable indefinitely. The intermolecular associations within the soluble fibrin polymers are essentially irreversible under these nearly physiological conditions. However, the bonding is not covalent. This mechanism accounts for the clinical observations of stable fibrinogen-derived polymers in the plasma from patients undergoing thrombotic processes. Since it is shown that the intermediate fibrin polymers, themselves, are stable soluble molecules, it is no longer necessary, nor warranted, to invoke hypothetical `fibrinogen–fibrin complexes' to explain observations of fibrin solubility.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of plasmin-derived fibrin(ogen) degradation products on alpha-thrombin cleavage of plasma Factor XIII was studied to identify the fibrin polymer structure that promotes Factor XIIIa formation. Fibrin polymers derived from fibrinogen and Fragment X enhanced the rate of thrombin cleavage of plasma Factor XIII in plasma or buffered solutions. The concentrations of fibrinogen and Fragment X that promoted half-maximal rates of Factor XIIIa formation were 5 and 40 micrograms/ml, respectively. Fragments Y, D, E, D-dimer, and photooxidized fibrinogen did not enhance thrombin cleavage of Factor XIII. Although purified Fragment D1 inhibited fibrin gelation, the soluble protofibrils promoted thrombin activation of Factor XIII. Noncrosslinked fibrin fibers failed to enhance thrombin cleavage of Factor XIII. In conclusion, soluble fibrin oligomers function to promote thrombin cleavage of plasma Factor XIII during blood clotting.  相似文献   

5.
Multiple factors affect the thrombin-catalyzed conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin, including: fibrinopeptide (FPA and FPB) release leading to exposure of two types of polymerization domains ("A" and "B," respectively) in the central portion of the molecule, and exposure of a noncatalytic "secondary" thrombin-binding site in fibrin. Fibrinogen containing the FPA sequence but lacking the B beta 1-42 sequence ("des-(B beta 1-42)-fibrinogen"), was compared to native fibrinogen (containing both FPA and FPB) to investigate the role played by B beta 1-42 in the polymerization of alpha-fibrin (i.e. fibrin lacking FPA), to compare reptilase and thrombin cleavage of FPA from fibrinogen, and to explore the location and function of the secondary thrombin-binding site. Electron microscopy of evolving polymer structures (mu, 0.14; pH 7.4) plus turbidity measurements, showed that early thin fibril formation as well as subsequent lateral fibril associations were impaired in des-(B beta 1-42)-alpha-fibrin, thus indicating that the B beta 1-42 sequence contributes to the A polymerization site. Reptilase-activated des-(B beta 1-42)-alpha-fibrin polymerized even more slowly than thrombin-activated des-(B beta 1-42)-alpha-fibrin, differences that disappeared when repolymerization of preformed fibrin monomers was carried out. Since existing data indicate that thrombin releases FPA in a concerted manner, resulting in relatively rapid evolution of fully functional divalent alpha-fibrin monomers, it can be inferred that delayed fibrin assembly of reptilase fibrin is due to slower formation of divalent alpha-fibrin monomers. Thrombin-activated des-(B beta 1-42)-alpha-fibrin polymerized more rapidly at low ionic strength (mu, 0.04) than did native alpha,beta-fibrin, a reversal of their behavior at physiological ionic strength (mu, 0.14). Concomitant measurement of FPA release revealed modest slowing of release at low ionic strength from des-(B beta 1-42)-fibrinogen (t1/2, 36.5 versus 21.5 min) and marked slowing from native fibrinogen (t1/2, 138 versus 22.2 min). This behavior correlated with increased thrombin binding to native alpha,beta-fibrin at low ionic strength, coupled with weak thrombin binding to des-(B beta 1-42)-alpha-fibrin, and indicates that secondary thrombin binding plays an important role in regulating thrombin diffusion and catalytic activity. Des-(B beta 1-42)-fibrinogen lacks or has a markedly defective secondary thrombin-binding site, from which we conclude that the B beta 15-42 sequence in fibrin plays a major role in forming or providing this site.  相似文献   

6.
125I-labelled fibrinogen was clotted by thrombin in the presence of activated Factor XIII and the rates of formation of γ dimers and α polymers were measured. These changes in fibrin subunits were correlated with the solubility of fibrin in 1% monochloroacetic acid. In the presence of the factor XIIIa inhibitor, glycine methyl ester, fibrin solubility was found to depend on the level of α polymers formed. A preferential inhibition of α polymer formation rather than γ dimer was observed in the presence of glycine methyl ester.  相似文献   

7.
Fibrin formation depends on the release of the two N-terminal fibrinopeptides A (FPA) from fibrinogen, and its formation is accompanied by an intermediate, alpha-profibrin, which lacks only one of the FPA. In this study, we confirm that the maximal levels of alpha-profibrin found over the course of thrombin reactions with human fibrinogen are only half of what would be expected if the first and second FPA were being released independently with equal rate constants. The rapidity of release of the fibrinopeptides by thrombin had been shown to depend on an allosteric transformation that is induced when Na(+) binds to a site defined by the 215-227 residues of thrombin, a transformation that results in the exposure of its fibrinogen-binding exosites transforming the thrombin from a slow to a fast acting form toward fibrinogen. When choline was substituted for sodium to transform thrombin to its slow form, the maximal levels of alpha-profibrin rose to those expected for independent release of the two FPA. Thus, it is only the fast thrombin that releases the second FPA fast, and that fast release only occurs when both FPA are present because of a partial coupling of its release with that of the first FPA. The release of the FPA from purified alpha-profibrin with the first FPA already missing is no faster than the release of any FPA. Surprisingly, we also found that slow thrombin became increasingly transformed to a fast form in the absence of sodium when the fibrinogen was elevated to high concentrations. This potentiation by concentrated fibrinogen also occurs with the recombinant mutant thrombin (Y225P), which is otherwise slow in both the presence and absence of Na(+). The potentiation of thrombin by fibrinogen must be short-lived so that the thrombin reverts to its slow acting form in the interim among encounters with other fibrinogen molecules in dilute fibrinogen solutions lacking Na(+), whereas at high fibrinogen concentrations the thrombin encounters other molecules before it reverts back to the slow form.  相似文献   

8.
Kinetic and thermodynamic studies are presented showing that the cofactor activity of fibrin I (polymerized des-A fibrinogen) in the alpha-thrombin-catalyzed proteolysis of activation peptide (AP) from plasma factor XIII can be attributed to formation of a fibrin I-plasma factor XIII complex (Kd = 65 nM), which is processed by alpha-thrombin more efficiently (kcat/Km = 1.2 x 10(7) M-1 s-1) than free, uncomplexed plasma factor XIII (kcat/Km = 1.4 x 10(5) M-1 s-1). The increase in the specificity constant (kcat/Km) is shown to be largely due to an increase in the apparent affinity of alpha-thrombin for the complex of plasma factor XIII and fibrin I, as reflected by the 30-fold decrease in the Michaelis constant observed for fibrin I bound plasma factor XIII relative to that for uncomplexed plasma factor XIII. Analysis of the initial rates of alpha-thrombin-catalyzed hydrolysis of fibrinopeptide B (FPB) from fibrin I polymer in the presence of plasma factor XIII indicated that alpha-thrombin bound to fibrin I in the ternary complex of alpha-thrombin, plasma factor XIII, and fibrin I polymer is competent to catalyze cleavage of both FPB from fibrin I and AP from plasma factor XIII. This observation is consistent with the view that alpha-thrombin within the ternary complex is anchored to fibrin I polymer through a binding site distinct from the active site (an exosite) and that the active site is alternatively complexed with the AP moiety of plasma factor XIII or the FPB moiety of fibrin I. This conclusion is supported by the observation that a 12-residue peptide, which binds to an exosite of alpha-thrombin and blocks the interaction of alpha-thrombin with fibrinogen and fibrin, competitively inhibits alpha-thrombin-catalyzed release of both FPB and AP from the fibrin I-plasma factor XIII complex.  相似文献   

9.
The time dependence of the release of fibrinopeptides from fibrinogen was studied as a function of the concentration of fibrinogen, thrombin, and Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro, an inhibitor of fibrin polymerization. The release of fibrinopeptides during fibrin assembly was shown to be a highly ordered process. Rate constants for individual steps in the formation of fibrin were evaluated at pH 7.4, 37 degrees C, gamma/2 = 0.15. The initial event, thrombin-catalyzed proteolysis at Arg-A alpha 16 to release fibrinopeptide A (kcat/Km = 1.09 X 10(7) M-1s-1) was followed by association of the resulting fibrin I monomers. Association of fibrin I was found to be a reversible process with rate constants of 1 X 10(6) M-1s-1 and 0.064 s-1 for association and dissociation, respectively. Assuming random polymerization of fibrin I monomer, the equilibrium constant for fibrin I association (1.56 X 10(7) M-1) indicates that greater than 80% of the fibrin I protofibrils should contain more than 10 monomeric units at 37 degrees C, pH 7.4, when the fibrin I concentration is 1.0 mg/ml. Association of fibrin I monomers was shown to result in a 6.5-fold increase in the susceptibility of Arg-B beta 14 to thrombin-mediated proteolysis. The 6.5-fold increase in the observed specificity constant from 6.5 X 10(5) M-1s-1 to 4.2 X 10(6) M-1s-1 upon association of fibrin I monomers and the rate constant for fibrin association indicates that most of the fibrinopeptide B is released after association of fibrin I monomers. The interaction between a pair of polymerization sites in fibrin I dimer was found to be weaker than the interaction of fibrin I with Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro and weaker than the interaction of fibrin I with fibrinogen.  相似文献   

10.
We used fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) to study the activation of fibrinogen by thrombin and the subsequent aggregation of fibrin monomers into fibrin polymers at a very low and at physiological fibrinogen concentrations. In the labeling procedure used the fibrinogen was randomly labeled and the label was bound to the fibrinopeptide A and/or to the part of fibrinogen which after activation takes part in fibrin formation. We measured a diffusion coefficient for fibrinogen of 2.48 x 10(-7) +/- 0.10 x 10(-7) cm2/s. After activation with thrombin both fibrinopeptide A and fibrin polymerization products could be demonstrated. From our findings we suggest a model for the formation of a three-dimensional network as two parallel processes, elongation and branching and that fibrin oligomers are not only intermediates in the polymerization process but also are substrates for branching.  相似文献   

11.
By combining measurements of the enzymatic release of fibrinopeptide A (FPA) with measurements of intensity and linewidth of Rayleigh scattering from fibrin polymer solutions prior to gelation, we have systematically tested a variety of predictions that can be made on the basis of a simple geometrical abstraction of fibrin polymerization. The experimental investigations include FPA content of fibrin polymers, aggregation of fibrin with fibrinogen, enzyme kinetics, shift of the chemical equilibrium by adding Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro or fibrinogen to the polymer solution, evolution of the polymerization, and influence of fibrinopeptide B release. Among the considered geometrical abstractions there is only one that survives the experimental tests and at the same time is compatible with the electron micrographs by other authors. The main conclusions that can be drawn are (1) the location of binding sites A must be taken from the structure of the fibrinogen molecule proposed by Hoeprich and Doolittle [Biochemistry (1983) 22 , 2049–2055], (2) The fibrinogen monomer is basically centrosymmetric, (3) the state of polymerization is reversible and corresponds to a chemical equilibrium, and (4) Michaelis–Menten enzyme kinetics can be applied.  相似文献   

12.
Interactions which determine the rate of conversion of fibrinogen into monomer fibrin and the retention of monomer fibrin in a noncompactible form through interaction with residual fibrinogen (solution stabilization) were examined through the kinetics of formation of equilibrium compactible network at pH 7 and ionic strength 0.15. For studies of conversion, reactions with thrombin were at 29 or 2 °C, hirudin was added at successive times to inhibit thrombin, and compactible network was equilibrated at 2 °C, where solution stabilization is negligible. A substrate dependency of initial rate is interpreted on the basis of inactive complex formation between thrombin and both fibrinogen and monomer fibrin. At 29 or 2 °C specific rate constants are 32 or 2.9 × 106 liter/mol, and association constants for inactive complex formation are 5.2 or 2.0 × 105 liter/mol. The second peptide-A is removed from fibrinogen ~ 40-fold as rapidly as the first.With equilibration at 29 °C, compactible network does not appear until the solution stabilization ratio of residual fibrinogen/monomer fibrin is four. Thereafter, increasing amounts of compactible network appear. However, the stabilization ratio progressively decreases to approximately two, a situation which indicates the complexity of the stabilization mechanism.The thrombin-hirudin association constant is estimated to be 4.9 or 17 × 1011 liter/mol at 29 or 2 °C.  相似文献   

13.
Fibrinogen, purified from a recently identified case of dysfibrinogenaemia, fibrinogen Sydney I, was shown by thrombin digestion, high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and amino acid analysis to be a heterozygous case of an A alpha Arg-16----His substitution. Kinetic studies have been carried out on the thrombin-induced release of fibrinopeptide A (FPA), fibrinopeptide B (FPB) and the variant peptide [His16]FPA. When thrombin was added to fibrinogen Sydney I at a concentration of 0.2 U/ml release of FPA was rapid and there was a 79-fold reduced rate of release of [His16]FPA, but the rate of release of FPB was not appreciably reduced. In contrast, at lower thrombin concentrations the rate of FPB release was reduced in proportion to the rate of total FPA release, supporting the view that release of fibrinopeptides is a sequential process. The second-order kinetic constant kcat/Km for hydrolysis of the abnormal A alpha chain by thrombin was calculated from Lineweaver-Burk plots to be 16-30-fold less than that for the normal A alpha chain. Molecular modelling studies, using a refined model of the trypsin-pancreatic-trypsin-inhibitor complex have been used to suggest how the histidine at the P1 site can be accommodated within the enzyme hydrophobic active-site pocket.  相似文献   

14.

Background

Numerous interactions between the coagulation and complement systems have been shown. Recently, links between coagulation and mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-1 (MASP-1) of the complement lectin pathway have been proposed. Our aim was to investigate MASP-1 activation of factor XIII (FXIII), fibrinogen, prothrombin, and thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) in plasma-based systems, and to analyse effects of MASP-1 on plasma clot formation, structure and lysis.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We used a FXIII incorporation assay and specific assays to measure the activation products prothrombin fragment F1+2, fibrinopeptide A (FPA), and activated TAFI (TAFIa). Clot formation and lysis were assessed by turbidimetric assay. Clot structure was studied by scanning electron microscopy. MASP-1 activated FXIII and, contrary to thrombin, induced FXIII activity faster in the Val34 than the Leu34 variant. MASP-1-dependent generation of F1+2, FPA and TAFIa showed a dose-dependent response in normal citrated plasma (NCP), albeit MASP-1 was much less efficient than FXa or thrombin. MASP-1 activation of prothrombin and TAFI cleavage were confirmed in purified systems. No FPA generation was observed in prothrombin-depleted plasma. MASP-1 induced clot formation in NCP, affected clot structure, and prolonged clot lysis.

Conclusions/Significance

We show that MASP-1 interacts with plasma clot formation on different levels and influences fibrin structure. Although MASP-1-induced fibrin formation is thrombin-dependent, MASP-1 directly activates prothrombin, FXIII and TAFI. We suggest that MASP-1, in concerted action with other complement and coagulation proteins, may play a role in fibrin clot formation.  相似文献   

15.
Concanavalin A dimer interacts with fibrinogen and soluble fibrin at pH 5.2 Analysis of the binding data shows that there are in both cases four binding sites per molecule and that the dissociation constant does not change by removal of fibrinopeptides A and B. Ultracentrifugal studies shows that no aggregates of fibrinogen or fibrin are formed through concanavalin A binding and that up to four molecules of concanavalin A dimer can be bind to one molecule of fibrinogen or fibrin. These results imply that the four carbohydrate chains in the molecule are accessible to concanavalin A dimer. There is a diminution in the coagulation of fibrinogen by thrombin at low relative lectin concentrations and an increase at high concentrations. However, the lectin always favours the aggregation of fibrin monomers and does not have any inhibitory effect on the release of fibrinopeptides. We conclude that the electric charge in the neighbourhood of the carbohydrate in both chains, Bβ and γ plays an important role in the attraction between monomeric fibrin and fibrinogen-monomeric fibrin. The different effect of concanavalin A on the coagulation, depending on the relative concentration of the lectin, would be the result of the screening of this electric charge favouring either the interaction of fibrinogen-monomeric fibrin or the polymerization of monomeric fibrin.  相似文献   

16.
Human plasma fibrin stabilizing factor (factor XIII) may be separated from fibrinogen through reversible fibrinogen polymer formation at pH 6.6, gamma/2 0.3, 0 degrees C, and subsequent Bio-Gel A 1.5m filtration. Factor XIII activity is eluted after the monomer fibrinogen peak. Polymer fractions from eight preparations, processed in duplicate, contain a mean 0.002 units factor XIII per mg fibrinogen, or about 0.7% the factor XIII content of standard plasma. Factor XIII-free fibrinogen polymers are easily dissociated (greater than 98%) to the monomer form by incubation at 37 degrees C, 18 hours. The fibrinogen preparations utilized were devoid of plasma fibronectin; thus these studies also show that reversible human fibrinogen polymer formation occurs in its absence.  相似文献   

17.
The influence of Ca2+ on the basic reaction between thrombin and fibrinogen was investigated. The results demonstrate that: (a) A Ca2+-dependent dimeric intermediate is formed during the early step of the clotting process. This dimeric intermeidate is shown to be formed by the association of an intact fibrinogen molecule and a fibrin monomer devoid in only the peptide A, (b) Ca2+ enhances the proteolytic step as illustrated by the measure of the kinetics of H+ release at pH 8.6. On the basis of these observations it is proposed that Ca2+ catalyses the proteolysis of fibrinogen by thrombin through the formation of a Ca2+-dependent dimer.  相似文献   

18.
Wound healing is a complex process initiated by the formation of fibrin fibers and endothelialization. Normally, this process is triggered in a wound by thrombin cleavage of fibrinopeptides on fibrinogen molecules, which allows them to self spontaneously-assemble into large fibers that provide the support structure of the clot and promote healing. We have found that the fibrous structures can also form without thrombin on most polymer or metal surfaces, including those commonly used for stents. We show that the relatively hydrophobic E and D regions of the fibrinogen molecule are adsorbed on these surfaces, exposing the αC domains, which in turn results in the formation of large fiber structures that promote endothelial cell adhesion. We show that the entire process can be suppressed when stents or other substrates are coated with polymers that are functionalized to bind the αC domains, leading to the development of potentially nonthrombogenic implant materials.  相似文献   

19.
H Okamoto  S Kanai  P Tipayang  Y Inada 《Enzyme》1979,24(4):273-276
Transglutaminase from guinea pig liver catalyzed the formation of cross-links between fibrinogen (or fibrin) and ribonuclease. Using transglutaminase, immoblized ribonuclease was prepared by two separate methods: (1) fibrinogen-ribonuclease conjugates formed by transglutaminase were treated with thrombin to make fibrin membrane bound covalently to the enzyme; (2) fibrin polymer formed from fibrinogen with thrombin was covalently bound to ribonuclease by transglutaminase to make fibrin-ribonuclease conjugates.  相似文献   

20.
Factor XIII-induced crosslinking in solutions of fibrinogen and fibronectin   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In solutions containing fibrinogen and fibronectin, factor XIIIa catalyzes the formation of two types of crosslinked polymers: hybrid oligomers consisting of equimolar amounts of fibrinogen and fibronectin, and fibrinogen oligomers. The two types of oligomers are produced in amounts proportional to the starting concentration of fibronectin and fibrinogen in the reaction mixture. Increasing the fibronectin concentration relative to the fibrinogen concentration results in the production of more hybrid and less fibrinogen type oligomers. The lowest molecular weight hybrid oligomer, a dimer, is formed by ligation of one molecule of fibrinogen and fibronectin. The A alpha-chain of fibrinogen and one fibronectin subunit participate in the crosslinking. Larger size hybrid oligomers form by the joining of two hybrid dimers to each other via gamma-chain dimerization in the fibronectin moiety of the dimers. In fibrinogen oligomer formation, fibrinogen molecules are ligated by gamma-chain dimerization in a step-wise fashion producing fibrinogen dimers, trimers, tetramers, etc. without A alpha-chain crosslinking. The hybrid type and the fibrinogen type of oligomer grow in size and eventually become crosslinked to each other yielding large molecular weight complexes that interact to form a gel network.  相似文献   

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