Clotting or coagulation is the mechanism used by the body to stop bleeding. When a blood vessel is injured, bleeding is stopped by coagulation factors that form a thrombus/clot of fibrin threads which trap platelet aggregates and other blood cells. Next, small molecules called clotting factors, cause fibrin strands to adhere and seal the inside of the wound. Thrombin/TFIIa is a multifunctional serine protease that has an indispensable role in the coagulation cascade and is essential for fibrin formation and platelet activation. It resides in the cell in an inactive form, called prothrombin...