Thromb Haemost 1992; 67(03): 335-340
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1648443
Original Articles
Schattauer GmbH Stuttgart

Availability of the Bβ(15-21) Epitope on Cross-Linked Human Fibrin and Its Plasmic Degradation Products

Fabian Chen
The Cardiac Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA
,
Edgar Haber
The Cardiac Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA
,
Gray R Matsueda
The Cardiac Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA
› Institutsangaben
Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

Received 05. Juni 1991

Accepted after revision 09. September 1991

Publikationsdatum:
03. Juli 2018 (online)

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Summary

The binding of radiolabeled monoclonal antifibrin antibody 59D8 (specific for fibrin but not fibrinogen) to a series of degraded fibrin clots showed that the availability of the Bβ(15-21) epitope (against which 59D8 had been raised) was inversely proportional to the extent of clot lysis. Examination of digest supernatants revealed that the Bβ(15-21) epitope was released from clots as a high molecular weight degradation product in the presence of calcium ions but that the generation of low molecular weight peptides occurred in the absence of calcium ions. To address the question of epitope accessibility, we compared levels of fibrin clot binding among four radioactively labeled antibodies: antifibrin monoclonal antibody 59D8, two antifibrinogen monoclonal antibodies that cross-reacted with fibrin, and an affinity-purified polyclonal antifibrinogen antibody. We expected that the antifibrinogen antibodies would show enhanced binding to clots in comparison with the antifibrin antibody. However, the epitope accessibility experiments showed that all four antibody preparations bound fibrin clots at comparable levels. Taken together, these studies demonstrated that one fibrin-specific epitope, Bβ(15-21), remains available on clots as they undergo degradation by plasmin and, importantly, that the epitope is not solubilized at a rate faster than the rate at which the clot is itself solubilized. The availability of the Bβ(15-21) epitope during the course of plasminolysis assures the potential utility of antifibrin antibodies such as 59D8 for detecting thrombi and targeting plasminogen activators.