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Usage Information

The effect of fibrin-stabilizing factor on the subunit structure of human fibrin
Martin L. Schwartz, … , Robert L. Hill, Patrick A. McKee
Martin L. Schwartz, … , Robert L. Hill, Patrick A. McKee
Published July 1, 1971
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1971;50(7):1506-1513. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI106636.
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Research Article

The effect of fibrin-stabilizing factor on the subunit structure of human fibrin

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Abstract

The formation of human fibrin from fibrinogen has been examined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate, a method which separates a mixture of proteins on the basis of differences in molecular weight. It has been found that the plasma from a patient with a congenital deficiency of fibrin-stabilizing factor forms clots lacking the cross links among the α- and γchains found in normal, cross-linked human fibrin. The addition of purified fibrin-stabilizing factor or normal plasma to the deficient plasma results in extensive cross-linking of the chains. Thus, the fibrinogen in the fibrin-stabilizing factor deficient plasma appears to be normal and forms fibrin which contains dimeric, cross-linked γ-chains and polymeric, high molecular weight forms of α-chains. By the use of these electrophoretic methods, it has also been possible to develop a highly sensitive method for measuring the content of fibrin-stabilizing factor in plasma. This method depends upon the use of urea-treated fibrinogen, which is completely devoid of fibrin-stabilizing factor, but which forms the usual cross-linked subunits after conversion to fibrin by thrombin in the presence of fibrin-stabilizing factor.

Authors

Martin L. Schwartz, Salvatore V. Pizzo, Robert L. Hill, Patrick A. McKee

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