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Review
. 1988:18 Suppl 1:7-13.
doi: 10.1159/000215824.

Plasminogen: a brief introduction into its biochemistry and function

Affiliations
Review

Plasminogen: a brief introduction into its biochemistry and function

C Miyashita et al. Haemostasis. 1988.

Abstract

Human plasminogen is a beta-globulin (2% carbohydrate, molecular weight 90 KD), which in its native form has NH2-terminal glutamic acid (Glu-plasminogen) whose primary structure is known (31, 37, 38). From human plasma plasminogen can easily be isolated by affinity chromatography techniques (10, 25, and Table 1). Plasminogen is synthesized in many organs. The production site of the zymogen may be the liver (21), the eosinophiles (3) or the kidney (15). The plasma-plasminogen level is low in newborns (22) and even lower in the premature infant (2). In healthy adults it is found in plasma or serum in a concentration of 200 mg/l (= 2 microM, 22, 39). The half-life of the native (Glu-) plasminogen is 2.24 +/- 0.29 days (6). Two types of Glu-plasminogen occur in human plasma, which differ in their carbohydrate composition as well as in their content of sialic acid. Genetic variants (see Mayr, 3.1.); of plasminogen have been reported (16) after isoelectric focusing of human plasma in polyacrylamide gels. Three patterns were found, two completely different and the third most likely a mixture of the other two. Characteristical functional properties of plasminogen are related to its molecular structure, e.g. its in vivo specificity for fibrin in contrast to the fairly unspecific in vitro activity of plasmin. Glu-plasminogen is easily converted by limited plasmic digestion to modified forms with NH2-terminal lysine, valine or methionine, which are commonly designated "Lys-plasminogen" displaying a plasma half-life time of 0.8 days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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