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Multiple Approaches to Visualizing Fibrin Clot Structure and Assembly
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2020
Extract
Fibrin clot formation is necessary for maintaining the integrity of the vasculature via physiological processes of hemostasis and wound healing and is also involved in pathological processes, such as thrombosis and atherosclerosis. A variety of structural and biophysical approaches has been used to examine intermediates in the formation of clots and to visualize in vitro clots and ex vivo thrombi.
Structures at all stages of polymerization have been examined to learn about molecular mechanisms of assembly. Fibrinogen is a polyfunctional, multi-domain protein that is essential for platelet aggregation and for the formation of the three-dimensional network of fibrin fibers which is the structural basis of the clot. Distinctive functions for several of fibrinogen's domains in the fibrin assembly process have been elucidated. Enzymatic removal of the fibrinopeptides exposes binding sites in the central region which then interact with complementary sites at the ends of a neighboring molecule to yield fibrin oligomers.
- Type
- From Scanning Probe Microscopy to High Resolution Ultrasound: New Versions of the Vasculature
- Information
- Microscopy and Microanalysis , Volume 3 , Issue S2: Proceedings: Microscopy & Microanalysis '97, Microscopy Society of America 55th Annual Meeting, Microbeam Analysis Society 31st Annual Meeting, Histochemical Society 48th Annual Meeting, Cleveland, Ohio, August 10-14, 1997 , August 1997 , pp. 329 - 330
- Copyright
- Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 1997