Here we report the crystal structure at ≃4-Å resolution of a selectively proteolyzed bovine fibrinogen. This key component in hemostasis is an elongated 340-kDa glycoprotein in the plasma that upon activation by thrombin self-assembles to form the fibrin clot. The crystals are unusual because they are made up of end-to-end bonded molecules that form flexible filaments. We have visualized the entire coiled-coil region of the molecule, which has a planar sigmoidal shape. The primary polymerization receptor pockets at the ends of the molecule face the same way throughout the end-to- end bonded filaments, and based on this conformation, we-have developed an improved model of the two-stranded protofibril that is the basic building block in fibrin. Near the middle of the coiled-coil region, the plasmin- sensitive segment is a hinge about which the molecule adopts different conformations. This segment also includes the boundary between the three- and four-stranded portions of the coiled coil, indicating the location on the backbone that anchors the extended flexible Aα arm. We suggest that a flexible branch point in the molecule may help accommodate variability in the structure of the fibrin clot.
CITATION STYLE
Brown, J. H., Volkmann, N., Jun, G., Henschen-Edman, A. H., & Cohen, C. (2000). The crystal structure of modified bovine fibrinogen. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 97(1), 85–90. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.97.1.85
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