CBSE BOARD XII, asked by majhi3166, 5 months ago

what is the function of plasmin protine​

Answers

Answered by knowledgebooster
0

Answer:

Plasma proteins, such as albumin and globulin, that help maintain the colloidal osmotic pressure at about 25 mmHg. Electrolytes like sodium, potassium, bicarbonate, chloride, and calcium help maintain blood pH. Immunoglobulins help fight infection and various other small amounts of enzymes, hormones, and vitamins.

Answered by hkofficial654
4

Explanation:

Plasmin is an important enzyme (EC 3.4.21.7) present in blood that degrades many blood plasma proteins, including fibrin clots. The degradation of fibrin is termed fibrinolysis. In humans, the plasmin protein is encoded by the PLG gene.[5]

PLG

Plasminogenpress.png

Available structures

PDB Ortholog search: PDBe RCSB

List of PDB id codes

1B2I, 1BML, 1BUI, 1CEA, 1CEB, 1DDJ, 1HPJ, 1HPK, 1I5K, 1KI0, 1KRN, 1L4D, 1L4Z, 1PK4, 1PKR, 1PMK, 1QRZ, 1RJX, 2DOH, 2DOI, 2KNF, 2L0S, 2PK4, 3UIR, 4A5T, 4CIK, 4DCB, 4DUR, 4DUU, 5HPG

Identifiers

Aliases

PLG, plasminogen, plasmin

External IDs

OMIM: 173350 MGI: 97620 HomoloGene: 55452 GeneCards: PLG

Gene location (Human)

Chromosome 6 (human)

Chr. Chromosome 6 (human)[1]

Chromosome 6 (human)Genomic location for PLGGenomic location for PLG

Band 6q26 Start 160,702,238 bp[1]

End 160,753,315 bp[1]

Gene location (Mouse)

Chromosome 17 (mouse)

Chr. Chromosome 17 (mouse)[2]

Chromosome 17 (mouse)Genomic location for PLGGenomic location for PLG

Band 17 A1|17 8.5 cM Start 12,378,608 bp[2]

End 12,419,385 bp[2]

RNA expression pattern

PBB GE PLG 209978 s at fs.png

PBB GE PLG 209977 at fs.png

PBB GE PLG 205871 at fs.png

More reference expression data

Gene ontology

Molecular function • apolipoprotein binding

• protein domain specific binding

• peptidase activity

• GO:0001948 protein binding

• serine-type peptidase activity

• receptor binding

• hydrolase activity

• serine-type endopeptidase activity

• chaperone binding

• proteasome core complex binding

• protein antigen binding

• endopeptidase activity

• enzyme binding

• kinase binding

Cellular component • blood microparticle

• extracellular region

• cell surface

• extrinsic component of external side of plasma membrane

• extracellular exosome

• platelet alpha granule lumen

• extracellular

• cell membrane

• extrinsic component of plasma membrane

• intracellular membrane-bounded organelle

• collagen-containing extracellular matrix

Biological process • hemostasis

• negative regulation of cell-substrate adhesion

• cellular protein metabolic process

• negative regulation of fibrinolysis

• negative regulation of cell-cell adhesion mediated by cadherin

• platelet degranulation

• extracellular matrix disassembly

• positive regulation of fibrinolysis

• tissue remodeling

• negative regulation of cell proliferation

• blood coagulation

• proteolysis

• fibrinolysis

• positive regulation of blood vessel endothelial cell migration

• tissue regeneration

• myoblast differentiation

• muscle cell cellular homeostasis

• proteolysis involved in cellular protein catabolic process

• trophoblast giant cell differentiation

• labyrinthine layer blood vessel development

• mononuclear cell migration

Sources:Amigo / QuickGO

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