Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.7 (plasmin)
9,023 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The prognosis of patients with metastasised follicular thyroid carcinoma (FTC) is limited, necessitating the search for new treatment options. Beneficial effects of retinoids have been suggested in thyroid cancer and the present study was performed to investigate the effects of retinoic acid (RA) on important determinants of metastatic behaviour in FTC: the disengagement of tumour cells from the primary tumour and the degradation of extracellular matrix, focusing on the role of the plasmin activation system and the integrin and E-cadherin families of attachment molecules. Three FTC cell lines were studied: FTC-133, derived from the primary tumour; and FTC-236 and FTC-238, derived from metastases. FTC cell lines were cultured with 0.1, 1 and 10 microM 13-cis-RA or with the solvent DMSO for 1 and 5 days. Extracellular matrix degradation by these cell lines was studied by assessing the 48-h release of radioactivity from (35)S-methionine labelled extracellular matrix proteins synthesised by the MC3T3 cell line coated onto plastic. The involvement of constituents of the plasmin activation system was investigated by semi-quantitative RT-PCR and zymography. Attachment to extracellular matrix was studied by determining the number of adhering FTC cells to extracellular matrix coated onto plastic, 3 h after seeding. The involvement of attachment molecules was studied by RT-PCR with primers for integrin subclasses and E-cadherin and immunofluorescence for E-cadherin. Five days culturing with 10 microM RA reduced the degradation of extracellular matrix significantly in all cell lines: FTC-133 by 35%, FTC-236 by 74% and FTC-238 by 31%. Zymography revealed diminished activity of urokinase type plasminogen activator (uPA) in FTC-236 and FTC-238, but not in FTC-133 cultured with RA. mRNA expression of the uPA receptor was diminished in FTC-236. In the attachment assay, 10 microM RA for 5 days increased the number of adherent cells to extracellular matrix significantly by 91% in FTC-133, 64% in FTC-236 and 87% in FTC-238. No effects of RA on integrin or E-cadherin mRNA expression were observed. Immunofluorescence, however, revealed enhanced organisation of E-cadherin along the cell membrane by RA treatment. In conclusion, the present study demonstrates beneficial effects of RA on important determinants of metastatic behaviour in FTC cell lines, e.g. decreased degradation of extracellular matrix which may in part be explained by effects on the plasmin activation system and enhanced attachment to extracellular matrix. These findings may add to the explanations for beneficial effects of retinoids in thyroid cancer.
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PMID:Beneficial effects of retinoic acid on extracellular matrix degradation and attachment behaviour in follicular thyroid carcinoma cell lines. 1105 36

The purpose of this study was to determine whether chronic thyroid hormone suppression therapy (THST) is prothrombotic. We obtained blood samples from 14 thyroid cancer patients while on THST and after they had become hypothyroid for radioiodine whole-body scanning and therapy. Prothrombin fragment 1 + 2, fibrinogen, factor VIII, antithrombin, tissue plasminogen activator antigen (tPA), plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), PAI-1/tPA, and C-reactive protein were significantly (P < 0.05) higher in the hyper- than in the hypothyroid state, whereas protein C and plasmin-antiplasmin complexes were significantly lower during the hyperthyroid period. When the 10 female patients were hyperthyroid, their levels of prothrombin fragment 1 + 2, fibrinogen, protein S, antithrombin, tPA, PAI-1, and PAI-1/tPA were significantly higher (P </= 0.05) than in healthy female controls, whereas when the female patients were hypothyroid, their antithrombin and plasmin-antiplasmin were lower and their protein S was higher than in controls. Factor II, plasminogen, and D-dimer were not significantly affected by the thyroid status in either assessment. In conclusion, we found evidence that the majority of patients treated with THST have a prothrombotic profile.
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PMID:Is thyroid hormone suppression therapy prothrombotic? 1535 49

The urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) system (uPAS) comprises the uPA, its cell membrane receptor (uPAR) and two specific inhibitors, the plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) and 2 (PAI-2). The uPA converts the plasminogen in the serine protease plasmin, involved in a number of physiopathological processes requiring basement membrane (BM) or extracellular matrix (ECM) remodelling, including tumor progression and metastasis. The tumor-promoting role of PAS is not limited to the degradation of ECM and BM required for local diffusion and spread to distant sites of malignant cells, but widens to tumor cell proliferation, adhesion and migration, intravasation, growth at the metastatic site and neoangiogenesis. The relevance of uPAS in cancer progression has been confirmed by several studies which documented an increased expression of uPA, uPAR and PAI-1 in different human malignancies, and a positive correlation between the levels of one or more of them and a poor prognosis. For these reasons, the uPAS components have aroused considerable interest as suitable targets for anticancer therapy, and several pharmacological approaches aimed at inhibiting the uPA and/or uPAR expression or function in preclinical and clinical settings have been described. In the present manuscript, we will first glance at uPAS biological functions in human cancer progression and its clinical significance in terms of prognosis and therapy. We will then review the main findings regarding expression and function of uPAS components in thyroid cancer tissues along with the experimental and clinical evidence suggesting its potential value as molecular prognostic marker and therapeutic target in thyroid cancer patients.
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PMID:The urokinase plasminogen activating system in thyroid cancer: clinical implications. 2309 56