Human Interaction Network Ontology

Last uploaded: June 27, 2014
Preferred Name

Formation of Fibrin Clot (Clotting Cascade)
Synonyms
Definitions

Authored: D'Eustachio, P, 2004-08-24 14:00:00 The formation of a fibrin clot at the site of an injury to the wall of a normal blood vessel is an essential part of the process to stop blood loss after vascular injury. The reactions that lead to fibrin clot formation are commonly described as a cascade, in which the product of each step is an enzyme or cofactor needed for following reactions to proceed efficiently. The entire clotting cascade can be divided into three portions, the extrinsic pathway, the intrinsic pathway, and the common pathway. The extrinsic pathway begins with the release of tissue factor at the site of vascular injury and leads to the activation of factor X. The intrinsic pathway provides an alternative mechanism for activation of factor X, starting from the activation of factor XII. The common pathway consists of the steps linking the activation of factor X to the formation of a multimeric, cross-linked fibrin clot. Each of these pathways includes not only a cascade of events that generate the catalytic activities needed for clot formation, but also numerous positive and negative regulatory events.

ID

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0015297

comment

Authored: D'Eustachio, P, 2004-08-24 14:00:00

The formation of a fibrin clot at the site of an injury to the wall of a normal blood vessel is an essential part of the process to stop blood loss after vascular injury. The reactions that lead to fibrin clot formation are commonly described as a cascade, in which the product of each step is an enzyme or cofactor needed for following reactions to proceed efficiently. The entire clotting cascade can be divided into three portions, the extrinsic pathway, the intrinsic pathway, and the common pathway. The extrinsic pathway begins with the release of tissue factor at the site of vascular injury and leads to the activation of factor X. The intrinsic pathway provides an alternative mechanism for activation of factor X, starting from the activation of factor XII. The common pathway consists of the steps linking the activation of factor X to the formation of a multimeric, cross-linked fibrin clot. Each of these pathways includes not only a cascade of events that generate the catalytic activities needed for clot formation, but also numerous positive and negative regulatory events.

definition source

Reactome, http://www.reactome.org

Pubmed1931959

Pubmed12524220

label

Formation of Fibrin Clot (Clotting Cascade)

located_in

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/NCBITaxon_9606

prefixIRI

HINO:0015297

prefLabel

Formation of Fibrin Clot (Clotting Cascade)

seeAlso

ReactomeREACT_2051

GENE ONTOLOGYGO:0007596

Reactome Database ID Release 43140877

subClassOf

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/INO_0000021

has_part

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0015303

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0015301

http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/HINO_0015299

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http://scai.fraunhofer.de/PWDICT#ID1710 PTS LOOM