An overall study of the in vitro plasma coagulation system in the crab Liocarcinus puber has been carried out using various analytical methods, namely thromboelastography, spectrophotometrical examination, and a new one based on changes of the mechanical impedance of the developing clot. From the results reported here the clotting pattern in this species appears surprisingly complex for an invertebrate and unexpectedly closer to that of the vertebrates. Indirect evidences suggest that the fibrinogen polypeptide chains in this species and very likely in the other crustacean, are very different from those of the vertebrates. This would imply that crustacean and vertebrate fibrinogen would have diverged from one another in a far remote past, far beyond the individualization of the vertebrate alpha chain, that is, over 1.5 million years ago.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0022-2011(89)90008-6DOI Listing

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