Abstract

We used fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) to study the activation of fibrinogen by thrombin and the subsequent aggregation of fibrin monomers into fibrin polymers at a very low and at physiological fibrinogen concentrations. In the labeling procedure used the fibrinogen was randomly labeled and the label was bound to the fibrinopeptide A and/or to the part of fibrinogen which after activation takes part in fibrin formation. We measured a diffusion coefficient for fibrinogen of 2.48 × 10−7 ± 0.10 × 10−7 cm2/s. After activation with thrombin both fibrinopeptide A and fibrin polymerization products could be demonstrated. From our findings we suggest a model for the formation of a three-dimensional network as two parallel processes, elongation and branching and that fibrin oligomers are not only intermediates in the polymerization process but also are substrates for branching.

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