B. Fibrinolysis
Main enzyme that breaks down fibrin is plasmin
Plasmin
Structure of plasminogen
- 560 amino-acid heavy chain + 241 amino-acid light chain
- Glutamate at amino terminal
- Folded into 5 loop structures
* Each held together by 3 disulfide bonds
Function of plasmin
Plasmin
--> Lyses fibrin and fibrinogen
--> Produces fibrinogen degradation products (FDP)
* FDP also inhibits thrombin
NB:
- D-Dimers are cleavage products of cross-linked fibrin
Production of plasmin
Conversion of plasminogen to plasmin is by
- Thrombin
* [WG21:P546]
- Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA)
* Released from local endothelium in response to local thrombin production
- Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA)
- Factor 12
* [Lecture notes]
- Proteases released from leucocytes
Conversion of plasminogen to plasmin is inhibited by:
- Alpha2-antiplasmin
--> Binds to plasmin and block its action on fibrin
* Inhibits free plasmin in circulation
- Plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1, PAI-2)
* PAI is made in endothelium and also released by platelets
* Found in plasma
* Main inhibitor of t-PA and u-PA
- Antifibrinolytic agents
* e.g. tranexamic acid
Plasminogen receptors
- Plasminogen receptors are located on many different types of cells
* e.g. endothelial cells
- When plasminogen binds to plasminogen receptors
--> Becomes activated
--> Prevents clot formation at intact blood vessel walls
* [WG21:p546]
Control of fibrinolysis
- When plasminogen is bound to fibrin
--> Protected from alpha2-antiplasmin
- Systemic fibrinolysis is prevented by circulating alpha2-antiplasmin, which breaks down free plasmin in circulation