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 The central role of thrombin in hemostasis Crawley JT; Zanardelli S; Chion CK; Lane DAJ Thromb Haemost  2007[Jul]; 5 Suppl 1 (ä): 95-101Following vascular injury, blood loss is controlled by the mechanisms of  hemostasis. During this process, the serine proteinase, thrombin, is generated  both locally and rapidly at sites of vessel damage. It plays a pivotal role in  clot promotion and inhibition, and cell signaling, as well as additional  processes that influence fibrinolysis and inflammation. These functions involve  numerous cleavage reactions, which must be tightly coordinated. Failure to do so  can lead to either bleeding or thrombosis. The crystal structures of thrombin, in  combination with biochemical analyses of thrombin mutants, have provided insight  into the ways in which thrombin functions, and how its different activities are  modulated. Many of the interactions of thrombin are facilitated by exosites on  its surface that bind to its substrates and/or cofactors. The use of cofactors  not only extends the range of thrombin specificity, but also enhances its  catalytic efficiency for different substrates. This explains a paradox (i.e.  thrombin is a specific proteinase, and yet one that has multiple, and sometimes  opposing, substrate reactions). In this review, we describe the context in which  thrombin acts during hemostasis and explain the roles that its exosites and  cofactors play in directing thrombin function. Thereafter, we develop the concept  of cofactor competition as a means by which the activities of thrombin are  controlled.|Hemostasis/*physiology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Thrombin/*physiology[MESH]
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