We apologize for Proteopedia being slow to respond. For the past two years, a new implementation of Proteopedia has been being built. Soon, it will replace this 18-year old system. All existing content will be moved to the new system at a date that will be announced here.

Antithrombin

From Proteopedia

Revision as of 11:00, 29 December 2014 by Michal Harel (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

Template:STRUCTURE 1tb6

Antithrombin (AT) inactivates several enzymes of the coagulation cycle. α-AT contains 4 occupied glycosylation sites and is found in blood palsma. β-AT contains only 3 occupied glycosylation sites. AT-I refers to the absorption of thrombin to fibrin; AT-II and heparin interfere with the interaction of thrombin and fibrinogen; AT-III inactivates thrombin in plasma; AT-IV becomes activated during blood coagulation. See details for the antithrombin pentasaccharide complex in Molecular Playground/antithrombin-Heparin.


3D structures of antithrombin

Updated on 29-December-2014

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Michal Harel, Alexander Berchansky

Personal tools