Fibronectin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

fibronectin 1
Identifiers
Symbol(s) FN1
Entrez 2335
OMIM 135600
RefSeq NM_002026
UniProt P02751
Other data
Locus Chr. 2 q34-q36

Fibronectin is a high-molecular-weight glycoprotein containing about 5% carbohydrate that binds to receptor proteins that span the cell's membrane, called integrins. In addition to integrins, they also bind extracellular matrix components such as collagen, fibrin and heparin.

Fibronectin can be found in the blood plasma in its soluble form which is composed of two 250 kDa subunits joined together by disulfide bonds. Plasma fibronectin is made in the liver by hepatocytes. The insoluble form that was formerly called cold-insoluble globulin is a large complex of cross-linked subunits.

There are several isoforms of fibronectin all of which are the product of a single gene. The structure of these isoforms are made of three types of repeated internal regions called I, II and III which exhibit different lengths and presence or absence of disulfide bonds. Alternative splicing of the Pre-mRNA leads to the combination of these three types of regions but also to a variable region.

Fibronectin is involved in the wound healing process and so can be used as a therapeutic agent. It is also one of the few proteins for which production increases with age without any associated pathology.

[edit] External links

In other languages