| Literature DB >> 8364202 |
M W Mosesson1, J P DiOrio, K R Siebenlist, J S Wall, J F Hainfeld.
Abstract
Fibrin molecules polymerize to double-stranded fibrils by intermolecular end-to-middle domain pairing of complementary polymerization sites, accompanied by fibril branching to form a clot network. Mass/length measurements on scanning transmission electron microscopic images of fibrils comprising branch points showed two types of junctions. Tetramolecular junctions occur when two fibrils converge, creating a third branch with twice the mass/length of its constituents. Newly recognized trimolecular junctions have three fibril branches of equal mass/length, and occur when an extraneous fibrin molecule initiates branching in a propagating fibril by bridging across two unpaired complementary polymerization sites. When trimolecular junctions predominate, clots exhibit nearly perfect elasticity.Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1993 PMID: 8364202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113