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Query: EC:3.4.21.68 (
tissue plasminogen activator
)
11,311
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Venous thromboembolism is complex with a multifactorial etiology. The Virchow triad (changes in blood flow, changes in vessel wall, and changes in the properties of blood) gives the main factors involved in venous thromboembolism. Venous stasis during immobilization in general anesthesia, stroke with hemiparesis, and heart failure plays a central role. The thromboembolic process can be initiated by a disturbance in the normal "hemostatic balance," with an increased thrombogenic potential, due to release of thromboplastin and collagen exposure during vessel wall injury by stasis and hypoxia, decreased fibrinolysis during surgery, malignancy, among others. Many substances modify these processes, including heparan sulfate, AT III,
protein C
,
t-PA
inhibitor, and alpha 2-antiplasmin.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of venous thromboembolism. 175 82
To investigate the possibility that a hypercoagulable state develops during autologous bone marrow transplantation (BMT), we measured levels of circulating natural anticoagulants and fibrinolytic proteins before and weekly during the hospital course of 18 patients undergoing autologous BMT for Hodgkin's and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Patients received either weekly (standard dose group) or daily (high dose group) vitamin K supplements with their total parenteral nutrition. By day 14 there had been a significant drop in
protein C
activity (mean of 95% of normal to 52%),
protein C
antigen (mean of 105% of normal to 70%), and antithrombin 3 activity (111% of normal to 83%), and an increase in fibrinogen (471-621 mg/dl) and
tissue plasminogen activator
(6.9-13.8 ng/ml). No changes were seen in free or total protein S, plasminogen activator inhibitor, prothrombin time or partial thromboplastin time. The decreases in
protein C
and antithrombin 3 persisted through day 28 after transplantation. The drop in
protein C
correlated strongly with decrease in serum albumin, suggesting impaired synthesis of these proteins by the liver. No differences were seen in any of these parameters between the standard and high dose groups. Deficiencies in anticoagulant proteins antithrombin 3 and
protein C
and a rise in fibrinogen without a concomitant improvement in fibrinolytic variables create a potentially hypercoagulable state which may contribute to the thrombotic complications of autologous BMT.
...
PMID:High frequency of antithrombin 3 and protein C deficiency following autologous bone marrow transplantation for lymphoma. 179 Apr 30
After a bite by the aglyphous red-necked keelback snake Rhabdophis subminiatus a complete defibrinogenation syndrome with severe hemorrhagic diathesis developed in a 25-year-old man. In vitro studies showed that the venom gland extract of the snake contains a very active prothrombin (Factor II) activator. The thrombin generated is inhibited neither by antithrombin III nor the antithrombin-III-heparin complex. The venom gland extract stimulated also the
tissue plasminogen activator
; however, it did not cause direct activation of plasminogen,
protein C
, Factor X or direct degradation of fibrinogen.
...
PMID:Hemostatic changes due to the venom gland extract of the red-necked keelback snake (Rhabdophis subminiatus). 180 26
Changes in the fibrinolytic and coagulation values measured preoperatively in brain tumor patients have not been done systematically using individual rather than global assays. Such measurements can provide meaningful information on the status of tumor-host interactions and could potentially help in predicting thromboembolic and hemorrhagic tendencies. A complete fibrinolytic profile including total fibrinolytic activity (TFA), tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), plasmin inhibitor (PI), plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI),
protein C
(PC) and plasminogen (PLG) was obtained preoperatively in 114 brain tumor patients. PLG and PI did not show much variation among the groups. TFA was slightly reduced (15%) in patients with malignant brain tumors.
t-PA
, however, was abnormally low in several patients and in almost 40% of patients with brain metastasis. PAI was above the upper limit of normal in approximately 50% of the patients but particularly in glioma, glioblastoma and metastasis patients. Finally, mean PC was abnormally increased in the glioblastoma and metastasis groups (p less than 0.001). This is the first study that has measured
protein C
in brain tumor patients. In conclusion, plasma fibrinolytic levels show marked changes in a substantial number of brain tumor patients prior to surgery--suggesting an ongoing tumor-host interaction.
...
PMID:Plasma fibrinolytic profile in patients with brain tumors. 182 14
Activated
protein C
(APC) has been shown to stimulate fibrinolysis in both in vitro and in vivo experimental systems. In order to test the importance of protein S in the fibrinolytic activity of APC we have compared the activity of APC, prepared from rabbit, bovine and human plasma, in the stimulation of whole blood clot lysis, the inactivation of plasminogen activator inhibitors and anticoagulant activity. When whole blood clot lysis was performed using
tissue plasminogen activator
in either human or rabbit blood, APC was found to enhance clot lysis in a species specific manner that paralleled the pattern observed for its anticoagulant activity. Bovine APC, was the poorest stimulator of fibrinolysis in human plasma. However, if bovine protein S was also added to human plasma, bovine APC was as effective in promoting fibrinolysis as human APC. In contrast, no species specific effects on the inactivation of plasminogen activator inhibitor activity was observed. Though substantial effects of APC on plasminogen activator inhibitor levels were made by rabbit, human and bovine activated protein C in human plasma, there was no effect of activated protein C on the rate of clot lysis of human plasma. These results suggest that protein S is important for the expression of the fibrinolytic activity of activated protein C and that the effect of protein S may be useful for the differentiation of fibrinolytic effects of activated protein C that may be related to the inactivation of plasminogen activator inhibitors and those that are not.
...
PMID:Species specificity of the fibrinolytic effects of activated protein C. 183 79
Six patients (three males and three females), mean age 35.2 years (range 31-43 years), with extensive venous thrombosis were studied. Initial laboratory data indicated that all patients had normal antithrombin III (ATIII), four patients had low
protein C
(PC), three patients had low protein S (PS) and two patients had low plasminogen. Four patients had high fibrinogen and all patients had reduced
tissue-type plasminogen activator
activity, elevated
tissue plasminogen activator
inhibitor and low fibrinolytic activity. All patients were treated with danazol, 5-7 mg/kg orally once daily. In all patients there was significant elevation of ATIII, PC, PS, and plasminogen, reduction in plasma fibrinogen and PAI and enhancement of fibrinolysis. During the 12-36 months period of follow-up, there were no symptoms or signs that suggested recurrence of thrombosis. Apart from weight gain of 5-10 kg and disturbed menstrual cycle in two women, no major side effects were seen. These data suggest that danazol is potentially useful therapy that may increase levels of natural anticoagulants in patients with thrombotic illnesses in which ATIII, PC and PS are low or normal. Further studies are needed to confirm these observations.
...
PMID:Significant elevation of protein C and protein S levels in thrombotic disorders by low dose danazol. 183 83
Increased thrombogenesis observed in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is derived from multiple mechanisms, including: Enhanced coagulation factor VIII:VWf activity, lupus anticoagulants, anti-phospholipid antibodies, acquired deficiencies of natural anti-thrombotic mechanisms (
protein C
, protein S, anti-thrombin III), and impaired fibrinolytic mechanisms. We studied the fibrinolytic mechanisms of 18 patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, selected carefully to avoid other possible causes of abnormalities in the fibrinolytic activity. Despite the fact that the euglobulin lysis time in steady state was normal in all instances, disturbances in the
tissue plasminogen activator
/plasminogen activator inhibitor (TPA/PAI) system were found in all SLE patients: TPA activity was undetectable in all cases, whereas it was above 0.4 IU/ml in a control group. In 72 percent of patients, the undetectable TPA activity was correlated with abnormally high PAI activity; PAI levels were normal in all members of the control group, their mean value being 0.74 versus 8.63 IU/ml for SLE patients (P less than .01). Coagulation
protein C
deficiency was found in 3 patients (17%). Even though within normal range, fibrinogen levels were significantly higher in SLE than in normal controls (219 versus 192 mg/dl, P less than .01) and plasminogen levels were significantly higher in SLE than in controls (117 versus 78.2%, P less than .01). Cross-linked fibrin derivatives (D-D dimers) were negative in all patients with SLE. Sixty-eight percent of SLE patients had high levels of antiphospholipid antibodies, but no correlation with the disturbances of the TPA/PAI system was found. It is concluded that most patients with SLE display severe abnormalities in the TPA/PAI anti-thrombotic system and that these abnormalities may be related to the lupus thrombophilia, apparently multifactorial in its origin.
...
PMID:Disturbances in the tissue plasminogen activator/plasminogen activator inhibitor (TPA/PAI) system in systemic lupus erythematosus. 190 23
Sepsis is often associated with hemostatic dysfunction. This study aimed to relate changes in fibrinolysis and coagulation parameters to sepsis and sepsis outcome. Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) antigen,
tissue-type plasminogen activator
(t-PA) antigen and activity, plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) type 1 antigen, PAI activity, antithrombin (AT) III activity, and
protein C
activity were measured in 24 patients suffering from sepsis or septic shock and the results were compared with those observed in 30 non-sepsis patients with severe infectious disease. The u-PA level was markedly increased in plasma of sepsis patients as compared to non-sepsis patients (11.5 +/- 9.4 versus 1.6 +/- 1.5 ng/ml, p less than 0.0001). PAI-1 antigen and t-PA activity showed a significant increase in sepsis patients (320 +/- 390 ng/ml versus 120 +/- 200 ng/ml, and 3.0 +/- 3.6 IU/ml versus 1.0 +/- 0.7 IU/ml, respectively, p less than 0.01). AT III was decreased in sepsis patients (58 +/- 28% in sepsis versus 79 +/- 26% in severe infectious disease, p less than 0.01) as was
protein C
(30 +/- 18% versus 58 +/- 27%, p less than 0.001). No significant difference was found for t-PA antigen nor for PAI activity. Nonsurvivors of sepsis were distinguished mainly by a high u-PA antigen level and increased t-PA activity. It is concluded that plasma u-PA antigen showed the strongest significant difference, among the parameters evaluated, between sepsis and severe infection. u-PA antigen may be of prognostic value in patients admitted to the medical intensive care unit for severe infectious disease.
...
PMID:Fibrinolysis and coagulation in patients with infectious disease and sepsis. 190 55
Since the early seventies, synthetic peptide substrates have been used in haemostaseology, enabling the introduction of photometry in coagulation analysis. Synthetic peptide substrates are short peptides (3-5 amino acid residues), with a chromogenic group coupled to the C-terminal end by an amide bond. The chromogenic group may be relatively specifically removed by proteases, and measured photometrically. By using the special properties of the many available substrates, test systems have been developed for procoagulant clotting factors, fibrinolytic factors, inhibitors of both systems and also for global tests of plasmatic coagulation. These tests can be performed manually or on automated analytical systems with high specificity, sensitivity and accuracy. The analytical advantages and new possibilities of the tests with chromogenic substrates have, in recent years, decisively stimulated not only haemostaseological basic research, but also clinical investigation and routine. Today, inhibitors of plasma coagulation (e.g. antithrombin III,
protein C
, C1-esterase inhibitor) as well as fibrinolytic parameters (e.g.
tissue plasminogen activator
, plasminogen activator inhibitor, alpha 2-antiplasmin) are nearly exclusively determined with chromogenic substrates. Further development will constitute the application of chromogenic substrates to "dry chemistry" methods.
...
PMID:Test systems with synthetic peptide substrates in haemostaseology. 191 84
We have explored the heterogeneity in the proteolytic processing of the N-terminus of human
tissue plasminogen activator
. We demonstrate that normal propeptide processing occurs following Arg-4, preceding the sequence Gly-Ala-Arg-Ser+1. Generation of the previously designated Ser+1 occurs via secondary proteolysis following secretion. By site-directed mutagenesis, we have eliminated this cleavage site resulting in a derivative containing the propeptide sequence. N-terminal sequence analysis of this form indicated that signal peptide cleavage occurs following Ser-13. The pro-
tPA
derivative had near normal serine protease and plasminogen activating activities, and could be stimulated by fibrin. An additional derivative, containing the tribasic sequence from the human
protein C
propeptide preceding Ser+1, was secreted with full processing of the propeptide. Our data have defined the cleavages for the signal peptide and propeptide and demonstrate that a tribasic sequence can be used to eliminate N-terminal heterogeneity in this molecule. In addition, we demonstrate that, unlike several other serine proteases, a propeptide sequence does not alter the activity of this enzyme.
...
PMID:Signal and propeptide processing of human tissue plasminogen activator: activity of a pro-tPA derivative. 193 Jan 75
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