𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Experimental Study of Fibrin/Fibrin-Specific Molecular Interactions Using a Sphere/Plane Adhesion Model

✍ Scribed by Sylvie Lorthois; Philippe Schmitz; Eduardo Anglés-Cano


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
213 KB
Volume
241
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9797

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Fibrin, the biopolymer produced in the final step of the coagulation cascade, is involved in the resistance of arterial thrombi to fragmentation under shear flow. However, the nature and strength of specific interactions between fibrin monomers are unknown. Thus, the shear-induced detachment of spherical monodispersed fibrincoated latex particles in adhesive contact with a plane fibrin-coated glass surface has been experimentally studied, using an especially designed shear stress flow chamber. A complete series of experiments for measuring the shear stress necessary to release individual particles under various conditions (various number of fibrin layers involved in the adhesive contact, absence or presence of plasmin, the main physiological fibrinolytic enzyme) has been performed. The nonspecific DLVO interactions have been shown to be negligible compared to the interactions between fibrin monomers. A simple adhesion model based on the balance of forces and torque on particles, assuming an elastic behavior of the fibrin polymer bonds, to analyze the experimental data in terms of elastic force at rupture of an elementary intermonomeric fibrin bond has been used. The results suggested that this force (of order 400 pN) is an intrinsic quantity, independent of the number of fibrin layers involved in the adhesive contact.