To further evaluate the role of sialic acid in the dysfibrinogenemia associated with liver disease, we studied the effect of removal of excess sialic acid residues from the fibrinogen of five patients with liver disease on the thrombin time and fibrin monomer aggregation. Patient fibrinogens containing 1.4–3.4 residues of sialic acid per molecule in excess of normal controls, with thrombin times 12–22 sec longer than normal and with abnormal fibrin monomer aggregation, were stripped of their excess sialic acid by incubation with Vibrio cholerae neuraminidase, followed by rapid removal of the enzyme by antineuraminidase antibody affinity chromatography. These partially desialylated patient fibrinogens, with a normal number of sialic acid residues remaining, exhibited normal thrombin times and normal fibrin monomer aggregation. Sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) of reduced normal, patient, and partially desialylated patient (sialyl-3H)-fibrinogen exhibited 60% of the radioactivity in the B beta chain and 40% in the gamma chain. There was no radioactivity detectable in the A alpha chain. These studies provide additional evidence that the increased sialic acid content of the acquired dysfibrinogenemia of liver disease is responsible for its functional defect and that the excess sialic acid is distributed on the B beta chain and gamma chains of the fibrinogen.

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