trombine
Trombine, typically known as thrombin in English, is a serine protease that sits at the heart of the blood coagulation cascade. It is generated in blood plasma as the zymogen prothrombin (factor II) and activated to thrombin by the prothrombinase complex, a combination of factor Xa and factor Va on a phospholipid surface in the presence of calcium ions. The activation of prothrombin is the converging point of the extrinsic and intrinsic pathways, linking tissue factor–VIIa signaling to the formation of active thrombin.
Thrombin has several key substrates and roles. It cleaves fibrinogen to fibrin, which polymerizes to form a
Regulation of thrombin activity is tight. Antithrombin III, with the help of heparin, neutralizes thrombin. Thrombin
Clinical relevance: excessive thrombin generation can lead to thrombosis, while deficient thrombin activity can cause bleeding.
Name note: trombine is the term used in some languages for the same enzyme that English sources