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)

Previously, we demonstrated that the Heymann nephritis autoantigen, gp330, can serve as a receptor site for plasminogen. This binding was not significantly inhibited by the lysine analogue epsilon-amino caproic acid (EACA), indicating that plasminogen binding was not just through lysine binding sites as suggested for other plasminogen binding sites. We now report that once plasminogen is bound to gp330, it can be converted to its active form of plasmin by urokinase. This conversion of plasminogen to plasmin proceeds at a faster rate when plasminogen is first prebound to gp330. Although there is a proportional increase in the Vmax of the urokinase-catalyzed reaction with increasing gp330 concentrations, no change in Km was observed. Once activated, plasmin remains bound to gp330 in an active state capable of cleaving the chromogenic tripeptide, S-2251. The binding of plasmin to gp330 did not significantly change its enzymatic activity; however, gp330 did have a stabilizing effect on plasmin activity at 37 degrees C. While bound to gp330, plasmin is protected from inactivation by its natural inhibitor alpha 2-antiplasmin. The binding of plasmin to gp330 as analyzed by ELISA was shown to be time dependent, reversible, saturable, and specific for gp330. Inhibition of binding of both plasminogen and plasmin to gp330 by benzamidine was similar, although EACA inhibited the binding of plasmin to gp330 slightly more than the binding of plasminogen to gp330. These results indicate that the binding of plasminogen to gp330 serves as an effective means of increasing the rate of plasmin production on the glomerular and tubular epithelial cell surface while protecting the active plasmin from natural inhibitors.
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PMID:Analysis of plasmin binding and urokinase activation of plasminogen bound to the Heymann nephritis autoantigen, gp330. 128 65

The urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) is secreted as a single-chain inactive zymogen (pro-uPA). Upon its secretion, pro-uPA binds to its glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored specific cell receptor (uPAR). The activation of pro-uPA to the active two-chain uPA is accelerated with uPAR-bound pro-uPA and is achieved by plasmin and proteases of other classes like cathepsins G and L. uPAR-bound uPA is susceptible to inhibition by its specific inhibitors (PAI-1, PAI-2, and PN-1). uPA-PAI-1 and uPA-PN-1 complexes, but not free uPA, are readily internalized and degraded through a mechanism that involves the multiligand receptors alpha 2-macroglobulin receptor/low density lipoprotein receptor-associated protein (alpha 2-MR) and epithelial glycoprotein 330 (gp330). Upon uPA-inhibitor internalization, uPAR is itself endocytosed and recycled back to the cell surface. PMA-induced differentiation of myeloid cells is accompanied by inhibition of uPA-PAI-1 internalization/degradation and the down-regulation of alpha 2-MR. The regulation of uPAR and alpha 2-MR levels might be part of the differentiation program of myeloid cells.
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PMID:Urokinase/urokinase receptor system: internalization/degradation of urokinase-serpin complexes: mechanism and regulation. 761 91

The plasminogen (Plg) system on rat yolk sac carcinoma (L2) cells was characterized by zymography, Western and immunoprecipitation analysis, reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, binding, and activity assays. The L2 cells produced tissue Plg activator but not urokinase Plg activator and contained RNA for Plg activator inhibitor 1, but Plg activator inhibitor 1 was not detectable by zymography or Western analysis and contained the receptor for urokinase Plg activator. Plg bound to the cells in a saturable manner when plasmin inhibitors were present with a dissociation constant of 1.34 +/- 0.18 x 10(-6) M and 1.54 +/- 0.25 x 10(7) sites/cell. Immunoprecipitation analysis showed that Plg was binding to gp330, a known Plg receptor. Once bound to the L2 cells, Plg was activated by tissue Plg activator to plasmin in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Under saturating Plg conditions, most of the plasmin produced was released into the medium. Inhibition of plasmin activation occurred when Plg activator inhibitor 1, anticatalytic tissue Plg activator antibody, or Heymann nephritis autoantibody was present.
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PMID:Characterization of plasminogen system on rat yolk sac carcinoma (L2) cells. 786 83

Previous results have shown that the autoantibody eluted from the glomeruli of rats with active Heymann nephritis contain a population of antibodies not only to the putative autoantigen of the disease, gp330, but also to plasminogen. Since gp330 has been shown to serve as a receptor for plasminogen, we have analyzed the effects of autoantibody on plasminogen-binding to gp330 and activation of plasminogen to plasmin by urokinase. Autoantibody does not inhibit the binding of plasminogen to gp330. The binding of autoantibody to plasminogen was shown to be very specific for the compact conformation of glu-plasminogen. The change in the conformation of plasminogen when its lysine-binding sites are occupied or after conversion to plasmin results in a significant decrease in autoantibody-binding. The most significant effect of autoantibody on this system is the inhibition of plasminogen activation to plasmin by urokinase. The binding of autoantibody to plasminogen acts as a competitive inhibitor of the reaction by apparently blocking access of urokinase to plasminogen's activation site. These results indicate that autoantibody obtained from the immune deposits in the glomeruli of rats with active Heymann nephritis does not inhibit the binding of plasminogen to gp330 but does significantly alter the urokinase catalyzed activation of plasminogen to plasmin.
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PMID:Effect of the nephritogenic autoantibody of Heymann's nephritis on plasminogen-binding to gp330 and activation by urokinase. 824 Dec 86

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.
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PMID:Effect of TGF-beta 1 and TNF-alpha on the plasminogen system of rat proximal tubular epithelial cells. 904 36