1 research outputs found
Buffers Strongly Modulate Fibrin Self-Assembly into Fibrous Networks
Fibrin
is a plasma protein with a central role in blood clotting
and wound repair. Upon vascular injury, fibrin forms resilient fibrillar
networks (clots) via a multistep self-assembly process, from monomers,
to double-stranded protofibrils, to a branched network of thick fibers.
In vitro, fibrin self-assembly is sensitive to physicochemical conditions
like the solution pH and ionic strength, which tune the strength of
the noncovalent driving forces. Here we report a surprising finding
that the bufferî—¸which is necessary to control the pH and is
typically considered to be inertî—¸also significantly influences
fibrin self-assembly. We show by confocal microscopy and quantitative
light scattering that various common buffering agents have no effect
on the initial assembly of fibrin monomers into protofibrils but strongly
hamper the subsequent lateral association of protofibrils into thicker
fibers. We further find that the structural changes are independent
of the molecular structure of the buffering agents as well as of the
activation mechanism and even occur in fibrin networks formed from
platelet-poor plasma. This buffer-mediated decrease in protofibril
bundling results in a marked reduction in the permeability of fibrin
networks but only weakly influences the elastic modulus of fibrin
networks, providing a useful tuning parameter to independently control
the elastic properties and the permeability of fibrin networks. Our
work raises the possibility that fibrin assembly in vivo may be regulated
by variations in the acute-phase levels of bicarbonate and phosphate,
which act as physiological buffering agents of blood pH. Moreover,
our findings add a new example of buffer-induced effects on biomolecular
self-assembly to recent findings for a range of proteins and lipids