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The natural occurrence of human fibrinogen variants disrupting inter-chain disulfide bonds (AαCys36Gly, AαCys36Arg and AαCys45Tyr) confirms the role of N-terminal Aα disulfide bonds in protein assembly and secretion
Document Type
article
Source
Haematologica, Vol 96, Iss 8 (2011)
Subject
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs
RC633-647.5
Language
English
ISSN
0390-6078
1592-8721
Abstract
Analyses of site-directed fibrinogen mutants expressed in several recombinant models have previously shown that both inter- and intra-chain disulfide bonds are critical for fibrinogen assembly and secretion. Four naturally occurring mutations on AαCys36 and AαCys45 residues are reported here to be associated with decreased fibrinogen levels. This confirms the main role of the AαCys36-BβCys65 and AαCys45-γCys23 disulfide bonds in reaching a normal fibrinogen plasma level. Decreased coagulant/antigen ratios indicate abnormal species secretion in heterozygous subjects which varies between individuals. However, in contrast to overexpression in experimental models, disruption of the AαCys36-BβCys65 disulfide bond did not result in the appearance of Aα-Bβ-γ moieties in vivo. A 188 kDa molecule reacting only with anti Aα and anti Bβ chains was found in the plasma of the AαCys45Tyr variant. Heterozygous carriers of Aα chain mutations usually have normal fibrinogen levels, in contrast to the AαCys36Gly, AαCys36Arg and AαCys45Tyr variants that are shown here to cause hypofibrinogenemia.