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The role of thrombin in haemostasis

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BLOOD COAGULATION & FIBRINOLYSIS
卷 33, 期 3, 页码 145-148

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LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/MBC.0000000000001130

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coagulation; pro-coagulant and anticoagulant; thrombin

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Thrombin plays a central role in coagulation, functioning both as a procoagulant and an anticoagulant, as well as having inflammatory and cellular proliferation effects.
Thrombin is a multifunctional serine protease generated in injured cells. The generation of thrombin in coagulation plays a central role in the functioning of haemostasis. The last enzyme in the coagulation cascade is thrombin, with the function of cleaving fibrinogen to fibrin, which forms the fibrin clot of a haemostatic plug. Although thrombin primarily converts fibrinogen to fibrin, it also has many other positive regulatory effects on coagulation. Thrombin has procoagulant, inflammatory, cellular proliferation and anticoagulant effects. In coagulation system, thrombin has two very distinct roles. Firstly, it acts as a procoagulant when it converts fibrinogen into an insoluble fibrin clot, activates factor (F) XIII, activates thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) and activates FV, FVIII and FXI. Thrombin also enhances platelet adhesion by inactivating a disintegrin and metalloprotease with thrombospondin type1 motif (ADAMTS13). However, when thrombin activates protein C, it acts as an anticoagulant. A natural anticoagulant pathway that supplies regulation of the blood coagulation system contains protein C, which is the key component. This is accomplished by the specific proteolytic inactivation of FV and FVIII. In this review, the multiple roles of thrombin in the haemostatic response to injury are studied in addition to the cofactors that determine thrombin activity and how thrombin activity is thought to be coordinated.

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