fibrinemonomers
Fibrinemonomers are the initial soluble subunits of fibrin, a fibrous protein essential for blood clot formation. They are generated during the final stage of the coagulation cascade, where the enzyme thrombin cleaves fibrinogen, a larger plasma glycoprotein, into fibrin monomers. This process is critical for hemostasis, the body’s mechanism to prevent excessive bleeding following vascular injury.
Each fibrin monomer consists of two pairs of non-identical polypeptide chains (Aα, Bβ, and γ chains), arranged
Fibrinemonomers play a transient role in clot formation, as they rapidly polymerize into insoluble fibrin clots.