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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Human platelet fibrinogen gamma chain structure.

Human plasma fibrinogen is produced by liver parenchymal cells. Such molecules contain two classes of gamma-chains (gamma A, gamma'), which differ with respect to their COOH-terminal sequences. When fibrin is crosslinked in the presence of factor XIIIa and Ca2+, three types of gamma-dimer are formed (gamma A-gamma A; gamma A-gamma'; gamma'-gamma'). A separate fibrinogen pool is located in platelet alpha-granules. We analyzed this fibrinogen to determine whether gamma'-chains were present to the same extent (7%) that they are found in plasma fibrinogen. Electrophoretic analysis (Laemmli system) of reduced samples of the clot that formed subsequent to release of fibrinogen from thrombin-stimulated washed platelets, revealed a single crosslinked gamma-dimer band in the gamma A-gamma A position. Material collected into EDTA-containing buffer and subsequently crosslinked in the presence of added factor XIII and Ca2+ also revealed a gamma A-gamma A dimer band. This finding was further investigated by Western blotting of reduced gel specimens that had been reacted with an anti-gamma-chain antibody followed by 125I-labeled protein A. A single type of gamma-chain, gamma A, was present in the fibrinogen from a Triton X-100 or 10 M urea platelet lysate, or in noncrosslinked fibrin obtained from thrombin-treated platelets. Crosslinked reduced fibrin from thrombin-treated platelets or that prepared from the Triton lysate revealed a single type of gamma-dimer, gamma A-gamma A. We conclude that there are no gamma'-chains (less than 1%) in platelet fibrinogen. This structural difference from hepatic fibrinogen probably results from differences in the processing and/or regulation of the fibrinogen gamma-chain gene in megakaryocytes.[1]

References

  1. Human platelet fibrinogen gamma chain structure. Mosesson, M.W., Homandberg, G.A., Amrani, D.L. Blood (1984) [Pubmed]
 
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