Within blood,
thrombins cleave
fibrinogens to fibrins during coagulation and a fibrin-based blood clot forms. Factor XIII is a
transglutaminase that circulates in human blood as a
heterotetramer of two A and two B subunits. Factor XIII binds to the clot via their B units. In the presence of fibrins, thrombin efficiently cleaves the
R37–
G38
peptide bond of each A unit within a XIII tetramer. A units release their
N-terminal activation
peptides. Both of the non-
covalently bound B units are now able to dissociate from the tetramer with the help of
calcium ions (Ca2+) in the blood; these ions also activate the remaining dimer of two A units via a conformational change. Factor XIIIa (dimer of two active A units)
crosslinks fibrins within the clot by forming
isopeptide bonds between various
glutamines and
lysines of the fibrins. These bonds make the clot physically more durable and protect it from premature enzymatic degradation (
fibrinolysis). In humans,
plasmin,
antithrombin and
TFPI are the most relevant proteolytic inhibitors of the active factor XIIIa.
α2-macroglobulin is a significant non-proteolytic inhibitor. Factor XIII activation via thrombin.svg|Activation peptides (pink) of A units are removed by thrombin (IIa) in the presence of fibrin. B units (gray) are released with the help of calcium and A unit dimer is activated (XIIIa forms). Stabilisation de la fibrine par le factor XIII.png|XIIIa crosslinks fibrin (simplified picture) ==Genetics==