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doi: 10.1007/bf01025423
The coagulation cascade that occurs in mammalian plasma involves a large number of plasma proteins that participate in a stepwise manner and eventually give rise to the formation of thrombin. This enzyme then converts fibrinogen to an insoluble fibrin clot. This series of reactions involves a number of glycoproteins that particupate as enzymes as well as cofactors. These proteins that circulate in the blood in a precursor or zymogen form are multifunctional proteins that share many common segments or domains. One group includes the vitamin K-dependent glycoproteins (prothrombin, factor IX, factor X, and protein C) that show considerable homology in both their amino acid sequences and their gene structures. The proteins that participate in the contact or early phase of the blood coagulation cascade include plasma prekallikrein, factor XII, and factor IX. The amino-terminal regions of both factor XI and plasma prekallikrein contain four tandem repeats of about 90 amino acids, and these tandem repeats show considerable amino acid sequence homology. Factor XII contains four different domains in the amino-terminai region of the protein, including a kringle structure, two growth factor domains, and type I and type II finger domains. The finger domains were first identified in fibronectin. The carboxyl-terminal portion of plasma prekallikrein, factor XII, and factor XI contains the serine or protease portion of the molecule. These various plasma proteins that share common domains appear to have evolved by gene shuffling that may have, in some cases, involved introns.
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