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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (
reverse transcriptase
)
31,746
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The endothelial cell (EC) urokinase receptor plays an important role in the localization and receptor-mediated activation of EC-bound
plasminogen
and hence surface-localized fibrinolysis. Thrombin induced a rapid (< 5 minute), time- (0 to 30 minutes) and dose- (0.1 to 8 U/mL) dependent decrease in the specific binding of 125I-labeled two-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator (tcu-PA) or diisopropylfluoro-phosphate-tcu-PA to urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (u-PAR) in cultured ECs from various sources (range, 21% to 50%). The thrombin receptor activation peptide but not control peptide showed a similar but reduced decrease in the specific binding of 125I-labeled tcu-PA to u-PAR. Incubation of thrombin-treated cultures (10 to 12 hours) in complete medium restored 125I-labeled tcu-PA ligand binding to normal levels. u-PAR mRNA levels rapidly (1 hour) increased and peaked 10 to 12 hours after thrombin treatment as analyzed by
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction. Decreased thrombin-induced 125I-labeled tcu-PA binding correlated with the time-dependent decrease in surface-localized plasmin generation, as measured by the direct activation of 125I-labeled Glu-
plasminogen
and quantification of the 20-kD light chains of 125I-labeled plasmin. After incubation with thrombin, plasmin generation was decreased 50% to 56% (125 to 152 fmol/3 to 3.5 x 10(4) cells). Isolation of metabolically labeled 35S-labeled u-PAR from the media of thrombin and phospholipase C-treated human aortic cultures yielded approximately 10- and approximately 12-fold more 55-kD M(r) and approximately 6-fold more 35-kD M(r) 35S-labeled u-PAR forms than control cultures, respectively. The u-PAR antigen forms (M(r), 54 kD) and the glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-anchored protein CD59 (M(r), 20 kD) were also simultaneously identified by immunoprecipitation in the media of thrombin-treated cultures. This suggests that thrombin may release u-PAR and decrease u-PA ligand binding through a common pathway involving phospholipase C. These results establish a novel interrelation between thrombin and EC fibrinolysis and suggest that thrombin may also have an additional regulatory role in the net expression of surface-localized EC fibrinolytic activity.
...
PMID:Thrombin decreases the urokinase receptor and surface-localized fibrinolysis in cultured endothelial cells. 774 51
Rat glomerular epithelial cells were grown to confluency on semipermeable tissue culture inserts and the
plasminogen
system of these cells was analyzed using enzyme assays, Western analysis, zymography, and
reverse transcriptase
-PCR. The glomerular epithelial cells are capable of activating exogenous
plasminogen
to plasmin by endogenous
plasminogen
activators. The cells produce both tissue-plasminogen activator and urokinase-plasminogen activator with urokinase being the prominent activator. Both activators are present primarily on the basolateral side of the cells with urokinase found primarily at the cell surface presumably bound to its receptor and tissue-plasminogen activator found primarily in the matrix secreted by the cells on the semipermeable insert. The cells also produce plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 and urokinase-plasminogen activator receptor. Inhibition of
plasminogen
activation occurred with plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, anti-catalytic anti-tissue-plasminogen activator antibody, epsilon-aminocaproic acid, which inhibits the binding of
plasminogen
through its lysine binding sites, and amiloride, which specifically inhibits urokinase.
...
PMID:Analysis of the plasminogen system on rat glomerular epithelial cells. 779 90
Lipoprotein(a) is an atherogenic lipoprotein whose function and plasma concentration reflect the structure and regulation of the apolipoprotein(a) gene. Apolipoprotein(a) is a close homologue of
plasminogen
, and their genes are tightly linked on chromosome 6. To further characterize these genes, we analyzed overlapping human genomic yeast artificial chromosome clones, which revealed a cluster of four highly homologous genes encoding apolipoprotein(a),
plasminogen
, and two apolipoprotein(a)-related genes (rg) or pseudogenes. Hybridization analysis and
reverse transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction showed that one of these novel genes, designated apolipoprotein(a)rg-C, has a domain structure similar to apolipoprotein(a) and is transcribed in human liver. Three additional homologues designated as
plasminogen
-related genes are shown to be unlinked to this gene cluster and reside on chromosomes 2 and 4.
...
PMID:The human apolipoprotein(a)/plasminogen gene cluster contains a novel homologue transcribed in liver. 814 51
Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), a proteinase which activates
plasminogen
by cleaving at -CPGR(arrow downward)V-, was shown to cleave the V3 loop in recombinant gp120 of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) IIIB and MN strains, as well as a synthetic, cyclized peptide representing the clade B consensus sequence of V3. Proteolysis occurred at the homologous -GPGR(arrow downward)A-, an important neutralizing determinant of HIV-1. It required soluble CD4 and was prevented by inhibitors of uPA but not by inhibitors of likely contaminating plasma proteinases. It was accelerated by heparin, a known cofactor for
plasminogen
activation. In immune capture experiments, tight binding of uPA to viral particles, which did not depend on CD4, was also demonstrated. Active site-directed inhibitors or uPA diminished this binding, as did a neutralizing antibody to V3. Addition of exogenous uPA to the laboratory-adapted IIIB strain of HIV-1, the macrophage-tropic field strains JR-CSF and SF-162, or a fresh patient isolate of indeterminate tropism, followed by infection of macrophages with the various treated viruses, resulted in severalfold increases in subsequent viral replication, as judged by yields of
reverse transcriptase
activity and p24 antigen, as well as incorporation, as judged by PCR in situ. These responses were reversible by inhibitors or antibodies targeting the proteinase active site or the V3 loop. We propose that uPA, a transcriptionally regulated proteinase which is upregulated when macrophages are HIV infected, can be bound and utilized by the virus to aid in fusion and may be an endogenous component that is critical to the infection of macrophages by HIV-1.
...
PMID:A role for urokinase-type plasminogen activator in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection of macrophages. 867 69
Rat proximal tubular epithelial cells derived from Wistar-Kyoto and spontaneously hypertensive rats were grown to confluency on semipermeable tissue culture inserts, and the
plasminogen
system of these cells was analyzed using enzyme assays, Western analysis, zymography, and
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction. The tubular epithelial cells are capable of activating exogenous
plasminogen
to plasmin by endogenous
plasminogen
activators. The cells produce tissue-plasminogen activator, urokinase-plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, and urokinase-plasminogen activator receptor. These cells also produce the Heymann nephritis autoantigen, gp330 (megalin), and an associated protein of 45 kd (RAP). Incubation with transforming growth factor-beta 1 resulted in a decrease in
plasminogen
activation, primarily because of an increase in plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 RNA and protein and a decrease in u-PA RNA as noted by quantitative
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction, Western analysis, and zymography. Incubation of these cells with tumor necrosis factor-alpha resulted in an increase in
plasminogen
activating ability, presumably through an increase in urokinase. Gp330 and the associated 45-kd protein (RAP) RNA were decreased in cells treated with tumor necrosis factor-alpha. The data presented indicates that these transformed proximal tubular epithelial cells may be used to study changes that may occur during Heymann nephritis with respect to the
plasminogen
system and the autoantigen gp330.
...
PMID:Effect of TGF-beta 1 and TNF-alpha on the plasminogen system of rat proximal tubular epithelial cells. 904 36
Clinical studies suggest that moderate alcohol consumption may decrease the risk for coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction. This effect may be attributed, in part, to the alcohol-mediated increase in endothelial cell (EC)-mediated fibrinolytic activity mediated by the increase in synthesis and/or activity of tissue-type
plasminogen
activators (t-PAs) and/or urokinase-type PA (u-PAs). To determine whether low alcohol levels (0.01 to 0.1%, v/v) induced the expression of these proteins, cultured human saphenous vein ECs (HSVECs) were preincubated in the absence/presence of ethanol for 5 to 120 min at 37 degrees C, washed, refed, and further incubated for 8 and 24 hr without alcohol. PA mRNA (
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction) and secreted antigen (ELISA) levels were analyzed after incubation for 8 and 24 hr and the net expression of (sustained) endogenous PA-mediated surface-localized HSVEC fibrinolytic activity (plasmin generation) quantitated by activation of 125I-Glu-
plasminogen
after incubation for 24 hr. A brief 5 to 30 min preincubation (induction) of both t-PA and u-PA antigen increased approximately 3-fold (t-PA control, 14.2 +/- 1.7, plus alcohol, 25.4 +/- 5 ng/ml; u-PA control, 15 +/- 0.8, plus alcohol, 46.4 +/- 1.3 ng/ml) and mRNA levels approximately 2-fold, as compared with controls. Increased PA expression was associated with a significant concomitant approximately 2-fold increase in surface-localized fibrinolytic activity (control, 96 +/- 2.8, plus alcohol, 255 +/- 42 fmol/ well). These combined results indicate that a brief exposure (<30 min) to low levels of alcohol can induce synthesis of EC-produced t-PA and u-PA resulting in an increased expression of HSVEC surface-localized fibrinolytic activity and may account, in part, for the apparent cardioprotective benefit associated with moderate alcohol consumption.
...
PMID:Alcohol-induced upregulation of plasminogen activators and fibrinolytic activity in cultured human endothelial cells. 958 43
The avascular cornea has limited access to plasma proteins, including
plasminogen
, a protein that is synthesized by the liver and supplied to most tissues via the blood. Recent experiments by others using
plasminogen
-deficient mice revealed the importance of plasmin, the active form of
plasminogen
, for the maintenance of the normal cornea and for corneal wound healing [Kao, Kao, Bugge, Kaufman, Kombrinck, Converse, Good and Degan (1998) Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci. 39, 502-508; Drew, Kaufman, Kombrinck, Danton, Daugherty, Degen and Bugge (1998) Blood 91, 1616-1624]. In the present experiments, plasmin was identified as a major serine proteinase in the human cornea. The major
plasminogen
and plasmin forms on non-reducing zymograms and Western blots had Mr values of 76x10(3) and 85x10(3), with minor forms of Mr 200x10(3), 135x10(3), 68x10(3) and 45x10(3). Angiostatin-like peptides with Mrs of 48x10(3), 45x10(3) and 38x10(3) were observed which bound to lysine-Sepharose and reacted with anti-
plasminogen
monoclonal antibodies directed towards kringle domains 1-3 of
plasminogen
. The cornea contained 1.1+/-0.15 microgram of plasminogen+plasmin/cornea, or 0.54+/-0.05 microgram of plasminogen+plasmin/mg of protein. Cornea conditioned medium contained nine times the amount of plasminogen+plasmin that could be extracted from the cornea. These data suggested that corneal cells, unlike most extrahepatic cells, synthesize
plasminogen
. The synthesis of
plasminogen
by the cornea was confirmed by immunoprecipitation of metabolically labelled
plasminogen
, sequencing of its cDNA obtained by
reverse transcriptase
-PCR and inhibition of protein synthesis. Interleukins-1alpha and -1beta stimulated corneal
plasminogen
synthesis 2-3-fold; however, interleukin-6 decreased corneal
plasminogen
synthesis by approx. 40% at early times after addition of the cytokine. By 24 h of culture, no differences were noted in the presence and absence of interleukin-6. Thus the cornea can synthesize
plasminogen
and regulate its synthesis in response to its environment, including cytokines induced in the cornea by injury and inflammation. Therefore the cornea can control the amount of
plasminogen
, the precursor of both plasmin and angiostatin.
...
PMID:Extrahepatic synthesis of plasminogen in the human cornea is up-regulated by interleukins-1alpha and -1beta. 1021 10
Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) play important roles in fibrinolysis, cell migration, tissue destruction, angiogenesis and tissue remodeling. u-PA and t-PA activity in tissue are tightly regulated by plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1). However, little is known of the activity of endogenous
plasminogen
activators (PAs) and PAI-1 in ischemic brain. To evaluate whether cerebral ischemic injury induces endogenous PAs and PAI-1, we measured PA activity from brain homogenates, and examined the expression of t-PA mRNA, u-PA mRNA and PAI-1 mRNA from brain homogenates in C57BL/6J mice (n=45) weighing 29-35 g in which the middle cerebral artery (MCA) was occluded by a fibrin-rich clot. Brain homogenates were prepared for direct casein zymography from control non-ischemic mice (n=4) and mice at 2 h (n=5), 4 h (n=5), and 24 h (n=4) after MCA occlusion (MCAO). Also, u-PA and t-PA knockout mice at 4 h (n=2, each) after MCAO were used as a negative control for direct casein zymography. Frozen sections for in situ zymography were obtained from control mice (n=2) and mice at 2 h, 4 h, and 24 h (n=2, per time point) after clot occlusion. Brain homogenates were prepared for
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to examine t-PA mRNA, u-PA mRNA and PAI-1 mRNA expression from control non-ischemic mice (n=4) and mice at 2 h (n=5), 4 h (n=5), and 24 h (n=5) after MCAO. By direct casein zymography, u-PA activity increased at 4 h (P<0.05), and 24 h (P<0.05) after stroke in the ischemic hemisphere compared with the non-ischemic mice. Activity of t-PA in ischemic brain was not significantly different from the control group. As measured by in situ zymography, PA activity, most likely u-PA, was present in the ischemic hemisphere. By RT-PCR, expression of PAI-1 mRNA, but not u-PA mRNA and t-PA mRNA, increased 3-, 15- and 25-folds in the ischemic hemisphere at 2 h, 4 h and 24 h after stroke, respectively, compared with control mice. This study demonstrates that PAI-1 mRNA and u-PA activity increase in mouse brain after stroke.
...
PMID:Endogenous plasminogen activator expression after embolic focal cerebral ischemia in mice. 1043 99
Dissemination of uveal melanomas is almost exclusively haematogenous, making angiogenesis of the tumour a prerequisite for the formation of metastases. Uveal melanomas must employ strategies to evade the immune system in order to escape immune surveillance. We therefore determined the expression of the following angiogenic and immunosuppressive factors in seven human uveal melanoma cell lines using
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR): secreted interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (sIL-1ra), interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8, IL-10, transforming growth factor (TGF)-alpha, TGFbeta, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), platelet derived growth factor (PDGF), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), angiopoietin-1 and angiopoietin-2. In addition, the secretion of sIL-1ra, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, TGFbeta and VEGF was assayed by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The potential of uveal melanoma cell lines to convert
plasminogen
to angiostatin was tested in an in vitro assay. All the factors except angiopoietin-1 were determined in one or more cell lines using RT-PCR, although these results were not necessarily confirmed by ELISA. Expression of VEGF and angiopoietin-2 was found in all seven cell lines. Production of angiostatin was observed in one cell line. All seven cell lines examined expressed angiogenic factors and most cell lines expressed immunosuppressive factors. The expression of VEGF and angiopoietin-2 in combination with a lack of angiopoietin-1 expression suggest high vascular remodelling capacity and could be of great relevance for the metastatic potential of uveal melanoma.
...
PMID:Expression of angiogenic and immunosuppressive factors by uveal melanoma cell lines. 1059 10
Protease nexin-1 (PN-1), a potent inhibitor of serine proteases, is present in vascular cells and forms complexes with thrombin,
plasminogen
activators, and plasmin. We examined the effect of thrombin on PN-1 expression by rat aortic smooth muscle cells (RASMCs). PN-1 expression was determined by measuring protein and mRNA levels, using respectively immunoblotting and semi-quantitative
reverse transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Thrombin down-regulated PN-1 expression in a dose- and time-dependent manner. This effect was mediated via the interaction of thrombin with its receptor protease activated receptor (PAR-1) since the peptide thrombin receptor activating peptide (TRAP) reduced PN-1 expression. PN-1 secreted by smooth muscle cells remained essentially associated to cell-surface glycosaminoglycans and was released from the cell surface by heparin. A lower amount of PN-1 was released by heparin from TRAP-stimulated versus unstimulated cells and correlated with a decreased capacity to inhibit thrombin. In addition, the ability to generate peri-cellular plasmin was increased in cells with a low PN-1 expression. Pre-treatment of smooth muscle cells with cycloheximide abolished the reduction of PN-1 expression by thrombin. Furthermore, conditioned media from thrombin-treated cells reproduced the effect of thrombin, suggesting that thrombin acted via the induction of auto/paracrine mediator(s). We observed that fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2)-neutralizing antibodies abolished thrombin effect whereas FGF-2 reproduced it, indicating that FGF-2 is one of the involved mediator. Together, these results indicate that (i) PN-1 modulates the activity of endogenous and exogenous serine proteases in RASMCs, (ii) thrombin down-regulates PN-1 expression and thus may increase its own activity on cells.
...
PMID:Protease nexin-1: a cellular serpin down-regulated by thrombin in rat aortic smooth muscle cells. 1528 Oct 96
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