Fragments D1 and DD, plasmic degradation products of human fibrinogen and cross-linked fibrin, respectively, originate from the COOH-terminal domain of the parent molecule. Since a specific binding site for fibrin resides in the COOH-terminal region of the gamma chain, the primary structure of the two fragments was compared and their affinity for fibrin monomer measured. Fragments D1 and DD contained the same segments of the three fibrinogen chains, corresponding to the sequences alpha 105-206, beta 134-461, and gamma 63-411. Fragment DD had a double set of the same chain remnants. Fragments D1 and DD inhibited polymerization of fibrin monomer in a dose-dependent manner; 50% inhibition occurred at a molar ratio of fragment to monomer of 1:1 and 0.5:1, respectively. To prevent fibrin monomer polymerization and render it suitable for binding studies in the liquid phase, fibrinogen was decorated with Fab fragments isolated from rabbit antibodies to human fragment D1. Fibrinogen molecules decorated with 6 molecules of this Fab fragment did not clot after incubation with thrombin, and the decorated fibrin monomer could be used to measure binding of fragments D1 and DD in a homogeneous liquid phase. The data analyzed according to the Scatchard equation and a double-reciprocal plot gave a dissociation constant of 12 nM for fragment D1 and 38 nM for fragment DD. There were two binding sites/fibrin monomer molecule for each fragment. After denaturation in 5 M guanidine HCl, the inhibitory function on fibrin polymerization was irreversibly destroyed. Denatured fragments also lost binding affinity for immobilized fibrin monomer. The preservation of the native tertiary structure in both fragments was essential for the expression of polymerization sites in the structural D domain.