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Fibrin binding protein peptide

The most important reaction in blood clotting is the conversion, catalyzed by thrombin, of the soluble plasma protein fibrinogen (factor 1) into polymeric fibrin, which is deposited as a fibrous network in the primary thrombus. Thrombin (factor 11a) is a serine proteinase (see p. 176) that cleaves small peptides from fibrinogen. This exposes binding sites that spontaneously allow the fibrin molecules to aggregate into polymers. Subsequent covalent cross-linking of fibrin by a transglutaminase (factor Xlll) further stabilizes the thrombus. [Pg.290]

Fibronectins are typical representatives of adhesive proteins. They are filamentous dimers consisting of two related peptide chains (each with a mass of 250 kDa) linked to each other by disulfide bonds. The fibronectin molecules are divided into different domains, which bind to cell-surface receptors, collagens, fibrin, and various proteoglycans. This is what gives fibronectins their molecular glue" characteristics. [Pg.346]


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