Fibrin monomer protects thrombin from inactivation by heparin-antithrombin III: implications for heparin efficacy.

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Abstract

Fibrin II monomer has a dramatic inhibitory effect on the rate of heparin-catalyzed inactivation of human alpha-thrombin by antithrombin III. At 6 microM fibrin II monomer, equivalent to the concentration of fibrinogen in plasma, the second-order rate constant was reduced by a factor of 308--from 2.05 x 10(8) M-1.s-1 to 6.65 x 10(5) M-1.s-1. Fibrin II monomer minimally affected the uncatalyzed rate of thrombin inactivation showing a reduction in the second-order rate constant by a factor of only 1.6. Fibrinogen and the product of plasmin degradation of fibrinogen, fragment E, at 6 microM concentrations also decreased the second-order rate constant for heparin-catalyzed thrombin inactivation, but by factors of only 2.7 and 1.9, respectively. On the basis of these observations it is proposed that protection of thrombin from inactivation by heparin-antithrombin III by fibrin II monomer can explain the limited efficacy of heparin in preventing coronary reocclusion in patients treated with tissue plasminogen activator and other fibrinolytic agents.

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Hogg, P. J., & Jackson, C. M. (1989). Fibrin monomer protects thrombin from inactivation by heparin-antithrombin III: implications for heparin efficacy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 86(10), 3619–3623. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.86.10.3619

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