Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.7 (
plasmin
)
9,023
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Factor VIII/von Willebrand factor (
FVIII
/vWF) is a glycoprotein with a molecular weight greater than one-million daltons. Two activities are associated with this large molecule:
FVIII
procoagulant activity and vWF activity. Incubation of
FVIII
/vWF with proteolytic enzymes causes rapid inactivation of the
FVIII
procoagulant activity but has little effect on the vWF activity or antigenicity. In an attempt to gain insight into the structural features required for these two activities, antisera were raised in rabbits to normal, thrombin-inactivated, and
plasmin
-inactivated
FVIII
/vWF. All of these proteolytically modified forms of
FVIII
/vWF cross-reacted with each of the rabbit antisera; each blocked the ability of a human inhibitor to inactivate native active
FVIII
/vWF. Each of the antisera was a potent inhibitor of vWF activity and inactivated vWF activity at the same titer. The antisera were much less potent inhibitors of
FVIII
activity than of vWF activity. Antibodies to thrombin-inactivated
FVIII
/vWF or normal
FVIII
/vWF had about the same ability to inactivate
FVIII
procoagulant activity. Surprisingly, those to
plasmin
-inactivated
FVIII
/vWF still retained about 50% of this inhibitory capacity. A comparison of the three types of antigens by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate-6 M urea demonstrated that the structure of thrombin-inactivated
FVIII
/vWF was indistinguishable from that of normal
FVIII
/vWF, while
plasmin
-inactivated FVII/vWF was completely cleaved to lower molecular weight fragments. Some of the reported variations in the ability of rabbit antibodies to inhibit procoagulant activity may be due to partial degradation of the starting antigen. The retention by
FVIII
/vWF protein of its immunologic properties even after extensive proteolytic degradation suggests that under nondenaturing conditions, the conformation of the native and degraded molecules are very similar.
...
PMID:Immunologic studies of native and modified human factor VIII/von Willebrand factor. 8 37
The relationship between factor VIII (
AHF
) procoagulant activity and factor VIII-related antigen were examined in patients with disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), pulmonary embolism (PE), and coronary artery disease with or without myocardial infarction (MI). It was found that 13 of 13 patients with DIC, 17 of 17 patients with PE, and 10 of 12 patients with MI possessed a significantly elevated factor VIII-related antigen to factor VIII activity ratio (VIII-ratio). The VIII-ratio returned to normal in each of 2 patients with DIC and 1 paitent with PE after treatment with heparin, heparin and alpha-amino-caproic acid, and heparin and coumadin respectively. In contrast, the VIII-ratio was slightly elevated only in 1 of 15 patients with coronary artery insufficiency without MI. In in vitro studies, after treatment of plasma with thrombin or
plasmin
, factor VIII activity was lost, whereas the amount of factor VIII-related antigen remained the same or was even increased when measured by agarose quantitative immunoelectrophoresis. These observations have led us to conclude that an elevated VIII-ratio is a very sensitive indicator of intravascular coagulation.
...
PMID:In vivo and in vitro effects of thrombin and plasmin on human factor VIII (AHF). 13 71
Partially purified human antihemophilic factor (
AHF
, factor VIII), when treated with high concentrations of salt, has been shown to dissociate into two components: one, of relatively low molecular weight, possesses procoagulant activity, and the other, of higher molecular weight, forms precipitates with heterologous antiserum against
AHF
and supports ristocetin-induced platelet aggregation. The ease of separation suggests that the two components in the native state might be held together by noncovalent bonds. Earlier observations do not exclude the possibility that the subunits may be covalently bonded in nature but might be severed by plasma proteolytic enzymes during laboratory manipulation. The issue was examined by preparing partially purified
AHF
from fresh human plasma in the presence of protease inhibitors, including benzamidine, soybean trypsin inhibitor, epsilon-aminocaproic acid, heparin, and hirudin. Under these conditons, gel filtration in the presence of 0.25 M calcium chloride and 0.001 M benzamidine resulted in its separation into two components, having properties identical to those separated in the absence of these protease inhibitors. The inhibitor mixture blocked generation and action of streptokinase- and kaolin-activated
plasmin
from plasma, and protected both plasma
AHF
and partially purified
AHF
from the action of thrombin. Surface-induced activation of PTA (factor XI) was partially inhibited, and that of Christmas factor (factor IX) was completely inhibited. This observation provides further evidence that in the native state the high- and low-molecular-weight components of preparations of antihemophilic factor are held together by noncovalent bonds.
...
PMID:Evidence that functional subunits of antihemophilic factor (Factor VIII) are linked by noncovalent bonds. 94 7
Four large-scale batches of Antihemophilic Factor (
AHF
, factor VIII) were prepared from plasma derived from 4 to 6-day-old blood applying a method developed for preparation of
AHF
from fresh frozen plasma. The
AHF
product was 6 to 9-fold concentrated over plasma with 7 to 10-fold purification and a recovery of 100 to 140 factor VIII units per liter of starting plasma. In terms of purity and yield, this is about half that of
AHF
obtained from fresh frozen plasma. The
AHF
concentrate was free of detectable thrombin and
plasmin
and the solubility of the dry product was comparable to that of the product derived from fresh plasma but the hemoglobin content was slightly increased. After further fractionation with polyethylene glycol (PEG 4000), a highly soluble
AHF
product 100-fold purified, and 30-fold concentrated, was obtained with 60% factor VIII recovery, which corresponds to a final yield of 60 to 85 factor VIII units per liter of starting plasma.
...
PMID:Preparation of antihemophilic factor from indated plasma. 95 29
A patient with Weber-Christian disease (syn. nodular nonsuppurative panniculitis) is reported. The generalized cellular destruction in this patient resulted in liberation of proteolytic enzymes into the circulation, which led to multiple haemostatic disturbances with haemorrhagic diathesis. The most prominent haemostatic defects were thrombocytopenia with a normal life span of isologous platelets, high levels of
AHF
-related antigen, hypofibronigenaemia with short fibrinogen survival, low levels of Factor XIII (fibrin stabilizing factor = FSF) and increased amounts of fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products (FDP). Proteolytic enzymes, other than thrombin and
plasmin
which especially degrade Factor XIII and fibrongen, derived from destroyed cells (probably leukocytes) seem to have been involved in the pathogenesis of the bleeding disorder in this patient.
...
PMID:Generalized proteolysis in a young woman with Weber-Christian disease (nodular nonsuppurative panniculitis). 121 32
Plasmin, a proteolytic enzyme, has been detected in the tears of patients experiencing anterior ocular disease, and during contact lens wear. Using a radial caseinolysis procedure, we examined tear
plasmin
levels in 66 patients who were wearing soft and rigid lenses for daily and extended wear. Compared to non-contact lens wearers, patients wearing soft and rigid lenses for extended wear were significantly more likely to exhibit tear
plasmin
activity. Eight hours of open-eye thick
HEMA
lens wear did not induce tear
plasmin
activity in a group of 10 subjects. However, significant increases in tear
plasmin
activity were recorded after short-term (1 hour) eye closure with and without lens wear, and following overnight (8 hours) eye closure without lens wear. Overnight eye closure also resulted in significantly increased numbers of epithelial cells and leucocytes in the tear fluid. Our results suggest that increased tear
plasmin
activity during extended contact lens wear may be attributable to the effects of eye closure rather than hypoxia or the presence of the contact lens per se.
...
PMID:Tear plasmin activity with contact lens wear. 153 45
The intraindividual variability in terms of coagulation analyses was explored in 10-16 samples collected from each of 15 women during one menstrual cycle. For comparison, six men were sampled six times during a period of 30 days. The following variables were analysed: FVII,
FVIII
, FX, vWF:Ag, vWF:ristocetin cofactor, fibrinogen, antithrombin, plasminogen and anti-
plasmin
. The results demonstrated mean coefficients of variation ranging between 4.5 (plasminogen) and 20.7 (vWF:Ag). In certain individuals, the intraindividual variability amounted to nearly 40%, in particular in the assays of
FVIII
and vWF:Ag. No direct relation between these two factors and oestradiol, progesterone or testosterone levels could be observed in our individuals. The implications of these variations are discussed in terms of disease prediction and diagnosis of coagulation disorders.
...
PMID:On the intraindividual and gender variability of haemostatic components. 161 87
We studied exercise-induced changes in coagulation and fibrinolytic factors and activation products in different age categories. Thirty-eight sedentary males, divided in three age categories (cats I-III; 20-30, 35-45 and 50-60 y) were subjected to a standardized exercise test. Pre-exercise levels (cats I-III resp) of FVII:c (105 +/- 5, 121 +/- 6 and 123 +/- 7% NP), fibrinogen (2.35 +/- 0.12, 2.55 +/- 0.10 and 2.66 +/- 0.09 mg/ml), prothrombin activation fragment F1 + 2 (0.80 +/- 0.10, 0.80 +/- 0.11 and 1.22 +/- 0.16 nM), t-PA (5.2 +/- 0.6, 9.2 +/- 1.0, 8.6 +/- 1.2 ng/ml) and PAI-I (42.8 +/- 7.5, 67.6 +/- 7.6, 62.2 +/- 10.9 ng/ml) showed differences that seemed related to age. Regression analysis revealed associations with anthropometry (FVII:c, fibrinogen, F1+2, t-PA, PAI-1) rather than with age. Exercise-induced changes in coagulation (increase in von Willebrand factor and
FVIII
:c and a shortening of APTT) and fibrinolytic potential (increase in t-PA and u-PA) were of comparable magnitude for the three age categories. Hardly any change in F1 + 2 (6%) was observed, while thrombin-antithrombin complexes (93%),
plasmin
-antiplasmin complexes (79%) and D-dimer (77%) almost doubled during maximal exercise. We conclude that anthropometric differences play a more significant role than age on constitutive levels of haemostatic factors in participants up to 60 years of age. The magnitude of exercise-induced changes is comparable in the age categories under study, and simply super-imposed on constitutive (pre-exercise) levels. Clear evidence for prothrombin activation is lacking, but
plasmin
formation is enhanced during exercise.
...
PMID:Changes in haemostatic factors and activation products after exercise in healthy subjects with different ages. 877 20
To find if there is a relation between levels of haemostatic variables at low and high hormonal levels (oestradiol and progesterone) in an individual, blood samples were drawn from 12 women repeatedly during one menstrual cycle (Study I) and from 14 women undergoing in vitro fertilization, before hormonal stimulation and daily during the periovulatory period (Study II). Regression coefficients were calculated between minimum (independent) and maximum (dependent) values in both studies. In Study II highly significant regression coefficients were found between oestradiol minimum (pretreatment) and maximum (median 105 and 4730 pmol/l, respectively) for coagulation factors
FVIII
, von Willebrand Factor (antigen), FVII (activity and antigen), fibrinogen, protein C, protein S (free), antithrombin, plasminogen and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1; furthermore, between progesterone-minimum at day -3 or -2 (related to ovum pick up) and maximum (median 4.7 and 98 nmol/l, respectively) for
FVIII
, von Willebrand Factor, FVII (activity and antigen), protein C, protein S (free), and plasminogen. In Study I, where much lower hormonal levels were obtained at maximum (oestradiol median 297 pmol/l and progesterone 47 nmol/l), the same pattern was observed especially for FVII, FX, fibrinogen, plasminogen and
plasmin
inhibitor. Thus, the concentration of a haemostatic variable at a low oestradiol or progesterone level can predict the level at a high hormonal level.
...
PMID:Prediction of changes in levels of haemostatic variables during natural menstrual cycle and ovarian hyperstimulation. 918
The influence of age on training-induced changes in resting and stimulated hemostatic potential was studied in three age categories (Cat I-III; 20-30 yr, 35-45 yr, and 50-60 yr, respectively) of sedentary men before and after 12 wk of training. Coagulation, fibrinolytic activity, and activation markers (reflecting fibrin formation and degradation) were determined. Physical conditioning resulted in a more pronounced increase in von Willebrand factor (vWF) and factor VIII clotting activity (
FVIII
:c) in Cat I and II and a more pronounced shortening of the activated partial thromboplastin time in all categories at maximal exertion and during recovery. Enhanced increases in tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen and activity and single-chain (sc) urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) at maximal exercise and 5 min of recovery were observed in all age groups after training. The effects on
FVIII
:c, vWF, and scu-PA were most pronounced in the youngest age group (Cat I). Increases in the marker of thrombin generation were highest in Cat III; no effect was seen on thrombin-antithrombin complex,
plasmin
-antiplasmin complex, and D-dimer in any of the age groups. We concluded that training enhances both coagulation and fibrinolytic potential during strenuous exercise. The effect on
FVIII
/vWF and t-PA/u-PA is most pronounced in younger individuals, whereas thrombin formation is most pronounced in older individuals.
...
PMID:Aging, physical conditioning, and exercise-induced changes in hemostatic factors and reaction products. 1079 12
1
2
3
Next >>