4.6 Review

Activity Sensing of Coagulation and Fibrinolytic Proteases

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 29, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.202203473

Keywords

activity sensing; blood coagulation; protease inhibition; peptide probes; serine proteases; thrombosis

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The blood coagulation cascade is a complex process involving multiple enzymes, cofactors, and substrates, and its dysregulation can lead to bleeding disorders and thrombosis. This review summarizes the key proteases involved in blood clot formation and fibrinolysis, their recognition and hydrolysis of endogenous peptide sequences, and the use of synthetic peptide probes for measuring their activity. The information provided in this review can contribute to the development of novel anticoagulant therapies and specific substrates for point-of-care diagnosis of coagulation pathologies.
The blood coagulation cascade is a complex physiological process involving the action of multiple coupled enzymes, cofactors, and substrates, ultimately leading to clot formation. Serine proteases have a crucial role, and aberrations in their activity can lead to life-threatening bleeding disorders and thrombosis. This review summarizes the essential proteases involved in blood coagulation and fibrinolysis, the endogenous peptide sequences they recognize and hydrolyze, and synthetic peptide probes based on these sequences to measure their activity. The information in this review can contribute to developing novel anticoagulant therapies and specific substrates for point-of-care diagnosis of coagulation pathologies.

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