Using urea-solubilized human fibrin monomer as an immunogen, we raised in mice a battery of monoclonal antibodies that reacted with the immunogen but not with urea-treated or native fibrinogen. Although they all failed to react with acid-solubilized fibrin monomer (acid-FM) alone, an antibody designated as IF-43 was found to recognize acid-FM, which was bound with fibrinogen or its derivatives to form a 1:2 complex of soluble fibrin. The epitope for this antibody, thus, appears to be exposed most probably by conformation changes induced in the acid- FM molecule upon formation of the complex. Because IF-43 was able to recognize fibrin-derived plasmic fragment E treated with urea but not the thrombin- and urea-treated amino-terminal disulfide knot of fibrinogen, the presence of the A alpha (52–78) residue segment seems to be prerequiste for the epitope expression. The antibody was found to react with soluble fibrin monomer spiked to normal plasma dose- dependently up to 200 micrograms/mL. By an aggregation assay using latex beads coated with IF-43, we found that concentrations of soluble fibrin monomer in plasma derived from patients with thrombotic diseases were mostly elevated, but not necessarily correlated with those of the D-dimer, reflecting another aspects of the disease. Furthermore, the soluble fibrin monomer in plasma derived from patients with thrombotic diseases was found to be depleted solely of the A peptides, but not the B peptides, based on its subunit polypeptide compositions lacking the beta-chain on immunoblotting.

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