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Fibrin(ogen) as a Therapeutic Target: Opportunities and Challenges

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22136916

Keywords

fibrinogen; fibrin; fibrinolysis; thrombosis; hyperfibrinolysis; therapeutics

Funding

  1. BBSRC
  2. Diabetes UK
  3. NIHR
  4. BHF
  5. Avacta Life Sciences
  6. Abbott Diabetes Care

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Fibrinogen plays a crucial role in blood clotting, with alterations in its structure or incorporation of antifibrinolytic proteins potentially leading to unstable or persistent clots, increasing the risk of bleeding or thrombosis. Understanding fibrinogen function can help in developing effective therapies to modulate clotting and bleeding risk while maintaining the delicate balance between clot formation and lysis.
Fibrinogen is one of the key molecular players in haemostasis. Thrombin-mediated release of fibrinopeptides from fibrinogen converts this soluble protein into a network of fibrin fibres that form a building block for blood clots. Thrombin-activated factor XIII further crosslinks the fibrin fibres and incorporates antifibrinolytic proteins into the network, thus stabilising the clot. The conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin also exposes binding sites for fibrinolytic proteins to limit clot formation and avoid unwanted extension of the fibrin fibres. Altered clot structure and/or incorporation of antifibrinolytic proteins into fibrin networks disturbs the delicate equilibrium between clot formation and lysis, resulting in either unstable clots (predisposing to bleeding events) or persistent clots that are resistant to lysis (increasing risk of thrombosis). In this review, we discuss the factors responsible for alterations in fibrin(ogen) that can modulate clot stability, in turn predisposing to abnormal haemostasis. We also explore the mechanistic pathways that may allow the use of fibrinogen as a potential therapeutic target to treat vascular thrombosis or bleeding disorders. Better understanding of fibrinogen function will help to devise future effective and safe therapies to modulate thrombosis and bleeding risk, while maintaining the fine balance between clot formation and lysis.

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