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Recombinant Human Fibrinogen That Produces Thick Fibrin Fibers with Increased Wound Adhesion and Clot Density
26
Citations
47
References
2012
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBiomimetic MaterialsBiomaterials DesignBiofabricationBiomedical EngineeringDermatologyProtein ExpressionTranslational Tissue EngineeringWound CareMatrix BiologyThick Fibrin FibersConnective Tissue DiseaseVascular Tissue EngineeringFibrosisRecombinant Human FiClot DensityFibrinolysisWound InfectionFunctional Tissue EngineeringWound AdhesionHuman FibrinogenBiomolecular EngineeringTransgenic Dairy CowsHemostasisWound HealingMedicineBiomaterialsHuman TissueExtracellular Matrix
Human fibrinogen is a biomaterial used in surgical tissue sealants, scaffolding for tissue engineering, and wound healing. Here we report on the post-translational structure and functionality of recombinant human FI (rFI) made at commodity levels in the milk of transgenic dairy cows. Relative to plasma-derived fibrinogen (pdFI), rFI predominantly contained a simplified, neutral carbohydrate structure and >4-fold higher levels of the γ'-chain transcriptional variant that has been reported to bind thrombin and Factor XIII. In spite of these differences, rFI and pdFI were kinetically similar with respect to the thrombin-catalyzed formation of protofibrils and Factor XIIIa-mediated formation of cross-linked fibrin polymer. However, electron microscopy showed rFI produced fibrin with much thicker fibers with less branching than pdFI. In vivo studies in a swine liver transection model showed that, relative to pdFI, rFI made a denser, more strongly wound-adherent fibrin clot that more rapidly established hemostasis.
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