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)

Pro-MMP2 activation is a two-step process resulting in (1) an intermediate 64 kDa form generated by the MT1-MMP activity, and (2) a mature 62 kDa form. Addition of plasminogen to HT1080 cells cultured under various conditions, or to their membrane preparation, induced a complete conversion of the intermediate MMP-2 form to the mature one, and processing of pro-MMP-9. The pro-MMP-2 activation was inhibited by plasmin inhibitors and anti-uPA antibody. These results provide evidence for involvement of the PA/plasmin system in the second step of MMP-2 activation.
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PMID:Involvement of PA/plasmin system in the processing of pro-MMP-9 and in the second step of pro-MMP-2 activation. 908 82

The urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and the matrix-degrading metalloproteinases MMP-2 and MMP-9 (type IV collagenases/gelatinases) have been implicated in a variety of invasive processes, including tumor invasion, metastasis and angiogenesis. MMP-2 and MMP-9 are secreted in the form of inactive zymogens that are activated extracellularly, a fundamental process for the control of their activity. The physiological mechanism(s) of gelatinase activation are still poorly understood; their comprehension may provide tools to control cell invasion. The data reported in this paper show multiple roles of the uPA-plasmin system in the control of gelatinase activity: (i) both gelatinases are associated with the cell surface; binding of uPA and plasmin(ogen) to the cell surface results in gelatinase activation without the action of other metallo- or acid proteinases; (ii) inhibition of uPA or plasminogen binding to the cell surface blocks gelatinase activation; (iii) in soluble phase plasmin degrades both gelatinases; and (iv) gelatinase activation and degradation occur in a dose- and time-dependent manner in the presence of physiological plasminogen and uPA concentrations. Thus, the uPA-plasmin system may represent a physiological mechanism for the control of gelatinase activity.
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PMID:Control of type IV collagenase activity by components of the urokinase-plasmin system: a regulatory mechanism with cell-bound reactants. 917 46

Membrane vesicles are shed by tumor cells both in vivo and in vitro. Although their functions are not well understood, it has been proposed that they may play multiple roles in tumor progression. We characterized membrane vesicles from human HT1080 fibrosarcoma cell cultures for the presence of proteinases involved in tumor invasion. By gelatin zymography and Western blotting, these vesicles showed major bands corresponding to the zymogen and active forms of gelatinase B (MMP-9) and gelatinase A (MMP-2) and to the MMP-9. tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1 complex. Both gelatinases appeared to be associated with the vesicle membrane. HT1080 cell vesicles also showed a strong, plasminogen-dependent fibrinolytic activity in 125I fibrin assays; this activity was associated with urokinase plasminogen activator, as shown by casein zymography and Western blotting. Urokinase was bound to its high affinity receptor on the vesicle membrane. Addition of plasminogen resulted in activation of the progelatinases associated with the vesicles, indicating a role of the urokinase-plasmin system in MMP-2 and MMP-9 activation. We propose that vesicles shed by tumor cells may provide a large membrane surface for the activation of membrane-associated proteinases involved in extracellular matrix degradation and tissue invasion.
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PMID:Urokinase plasminogen activator and gelatinases are associated with membrane vesicles shed by human HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells. 920 45

Al-trans retinoic acid (RA) enhanced human, S-type, SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cell invasion of reconstituted basement membrane in vitro but did not induce terminal differentiation of this cell line. In contrast to basal invasion, which was urokinase (uPA)- and plasmin-dependent, RA-enhanced invasion was dependent on tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and plasmin activity. Neither basal nor RA-enhanced invasion involved TIMP-2 inhibitable metalloproteinases. Enhanced invasion was associated with the induction of t-PA expression, increased expression of the putative t-PA receptor amphoterin, increased association of t-PA with cell membranes and increased net membrane-associated PA activity. Enhanced invasion was not associated with significant changes in the expression of uPA or its membrane receptor UPAR; plasminogen activator inhibitors PAI-1 and PAI-2; metalloproteinases MMP-1, MMP-2, MMP-3, MMP-9 and membrane type MMP1; or tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases TIMP-1 and TIMP-2. RA stimulated the association of t-PA with the external cell membrane surface, which could be inhibited by heparin sulphate but not by mannose sugars or chelators of divalent cations, consistent with a role for amphoterin. Our data indicate that RA can promote the malignant behavior of S-type neuroblastoma cells refractory to RA-mediated terminal differentiation by enhancing their basement membrane invasive capacity. We suggest that this results from the action of a novel, RA-regulated mechanism involving stimulation of t-PA expression and its association with the cell membrane leading to increased PA-dependent matrix degradation.
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PMID:Retinoic acid-enhanced invasion through reconstituted basement membrane by human SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cells involves membrane-associated tissue-type plasminogen activator. 939 56

A potential physiological role of stromelysin-1 (MMP-3) in the expression or activation of gelatinase A (MMP-2) or gelatinase B (MMP-9) in the wall of injured arteries was studied with the use of homozygous MMP-3-deficient (MMP-3-/-) mice. One week after perivascular electric injury of the carotid or femoral artery in wild-type (MMP-3+/+) or MMP-3-/- mice, 70 kD and 65 kD proMMP-2 levels were enhanced by twofold to fourfold, with corresponding increases of 20- to 40-fold for active 61 kD and 58 kD MMP-2, and of 10- to 80-fold for 94 kD proMMP-9. Active MMP-2 species represented approximately one third of the total MMP-2 concentration for both MMP-3+/+ and MMP-3-/- mice. Active 83 kD MMP-9 was not detected in noninjured carotid or femoral arteries, whereas one week after injury its contribution to the total MMP-9 level was 11% to 18% for MMP-3+/+ and MMP-3-/- mice. Immunostaining of arterial sections confirmed enhanced expression of both MMP-2 and MMP-9 after vascular injury. Double immunostaining showed colocalization of MMP-9 with macrophages in the adventitia, whereas MMP-2 was also detected mainly in the adventitia but failed to colocalize with smooth muscle cells. Cell culture experiments confirmed comparable ratios of active versus latent MMP-2 in skin fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells derived from MMP-3+/+ and MMP-3-/- mice. Addition of plasmin(ogen) did not significantly affect activation of proMMP-2. In MMP-3+/+ and MMP-3-/- macrophages, comparable levels of 94 kD proMMP-9 were detected, and plasmin(ogen)-mediated conversion to 83 kD MMP-9 was obtained in both genotypes. These data thus indicate that proMMP-2 activation may occur via a plasmin- and MMP-3-independent mechanism, whereas plasmin can directly activate proMMP-9 via a MMP-3-independent mechanism.
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PMID:Stromelysin-1 (MMP-3)-independent gelatinase expression and activation in mice. 949 Jun 89

Transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta1) enhances human MDA-MB-231 breast tumour cell invasion of reconstituted basement membrane in vitro but does not inhibit proliferation of this cell line. In contrast to basal invasion, which is plasmin-, urokinase (uPA)-, tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA)-, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9- and TIMP-1-inhibitable MMP-dependent, TGFbeta1 enhanced-invasion is dependent upon plasmin and uPA activity but does not appear to involve t-PA-, MMP9- or TIMP-1-inhibitable MMPs, as judged by inhibitor studies. Enhanced invasion is associated with increased u-PA, UPAR, PAI-1, MT-MMP-1, MMP-9 and TIMP-1 expression; with reduced t-PA, MMP-1 and MMP-3 expression; and with the induction of membrane MMP-9 association. The net result of these changes includes increased secreted, but not membrane-associated, uPA levels and activity and reduced secreted levels of plasmin and APMA-activatable gelatinolytic, collagenolytic and caseinolytic MMP activity but no change in membrane-associated gelatinolytic activity, despite increased MT-MMP-1 expression and MMP-9 membrane association. TGFbeta1 does not induce MMP-2 expression. Our data indicate that TGFbeta1 can promote the malignant behaviour of MDA-MB-231 cells refractory to TGFbeta1-mediated proliferation control by enhancing their invasive capacity. We suggest that this results from the action of a uPA/plasmin-dependent mechanism resulting from stimulation of uPA expression, secretion and subsequent activity, despite elevated PAI-1 inhibitor levels.
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PMID:Transforming growth factor-beta1 enhances the invasiveness of human MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells by up-regulating urokinase activity. 949 40

The binding of two matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) to fibrin was evaluated. MMP-2 (72-kDa) and MMP-9 (92-, 130-, and 225-kDa) were selected since both contain a fibronectin-like region and fibronectin binds fibrin. Gelatin zymography indicated selective and dose dependent binding of MMP-9 to fibrin. No MMP-2 binding to fibrin occurred. Densitometry revealed that the 130- and 225-kDa forms demonstrated similar sigmoidal binding profiles whereas 92-kDa uptake was hyperbolic. Fibronectin and TIMP-1 competition studies indicated that the fibronectin and C-terminal MMP-9 domains, respectively, were not involved with fibrin binding. The MMP-9 collagen-like region may be of regulatory significance since type I and II fibrillar and type IV basement membrane collagens demonstrated fibrin binding. During fibrinolysis, latent fibrin-bound MMP-9 was processed to lower molecular weight forms consistent with proteolytic activation. This process was inhibited by epsilon-aminocaproic acid, indicating a plasmin-dependent pathway. The significance of these findings to procoagulant activity and MMP-mediated extracellular matrix destruction during inflammation and tumor invasion and metastasis is discussed.
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PMID:Binding of latent matrix metalloproteinase 9 to fibrin: activation via a plasmin-dependent pathway. 960 16

The degradation of soft connective tissue collagen is considered to depend on the activity of various proteolytic enzymes, particularly those belonging to the group of matrix metalloproteinases and cysteine proteinases. In the present study, we investigated the contribution of these enzymes to this process. Using a general inhibitor of MMPs (SC44463), collagen degradation was strongly inhibited, by about 40% after 24 h and up to 80% after 72 h of culturing. Blockage of cysteine proteinase activity (with leupeptin or E-64) reduced breakdown at these time intervals by 50% and 20%, respectively. Given the abundant presence of gelatinases--in particular gelatinase A (MMP-2)--in the tissue, the effect of an inhibitor selective for gelatinases (CT1166) was studied. Gelatinase inhibition resulted in a dose-dependent decrease of collagen breakdown up to 90% after 48 h. The ability of gelatinase A to degrade collagens was demonstrated by the induction of breakdown in devitalized explants by addition of activated gelatinase A, or by activation of endogenous enzyme with 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate. This latter effect was not found with plasmin, an activator of MMPs other than gelatinase A. Finally, the relevance of gelatinase A to the in vivo degradation of soft connective tissue collagen was implicated by the significant correlation found between its activity and the collagen turnover rates of four soft connective tissues (tooth pulp, periodontal ligament, molar gingiva and skin). We conclude that collagen degradation in soft connective tissue is mediated by MMPs and to a lesser extent by cysteine proteinases. Our data are the first to attach a key role to gelatinase A in this process.
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PMID:Gelatinase A (MMP-2) and cysteine proteinases are essential for the degradation of collagen in soft connective tissue. 962 51

We show that osteopontin (OPN), bone sialoprotein (BSP) and GRGDSP peptides, in solution, induce activation of metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) secreted by human GCT23 giant cell tumour cells. Activation of MMP-2 is RGD sequence dependent, possibly involves anti-alphaVbeta3 integrins, is preceded by a change from spread to rounded cell morphology and is mimicked by the actin depolymerising agent cytochalasin B. Cells that had spread on OPN, BSP and GRGDSP substrata failed to activate MMP-2, but subsequent addition of soluble GRGDSP induced rounding and MMP-2 activation. Activation induced by GRGDSP and cytochalasin B was cell mediated, inhibited by EDTA, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-2 (TIMP-2) and carboxyl terminal MMP-2 consistent with a role for membrane type (MT)-MMP but did not involve urokinase, plasmin or thrombin activity. Activation induced by GRGDSP and cytochalasin B, but not cell rounding, was inhibited by herbimycin A, cycloheximide and actinomycin D, suggesting a role for tyrosine kinases, protein and RNA synthesis, but was not associated with changes in mRNA for MT-MMP-1, MMP-1, MMP-2, TIMP-1 or TIMP-2. GRGDSP and cytochalasin B enhanced levels of membrane-associated pro- and active form MMP-1 and MMP-2 but not MT-MMP-1, stimulated cell surface MMP-1 staining and induced that of MT-MMP-1, MMP-2 and TIMP-2. This was consistent with the possible relocation of constitutive MT-MMP-1 to the cell surface as a prerequisite for subsequent cell surface MMP-2/TIMP-2/MT-MMP-1 complex formation and to the potential induction of conditions favourable for reciprocal cell surface MMP-1/MMP-2 activation. Our data provide a novel insight into interactions between RGD containing bone matrices, GCT cells and MMPs of potential relevance to GCT pathology.
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PMID:Activation of MMP-2 by human GCT23 giant cell tumour cells induced by osteopontin, bone sialoprotein and GRGDSP peptides is RGD and cell shape change dependent. 963 98

To investigate a potential physiological role of the plasminogen/plasmin system in activation of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) system, the distribution of latent and active MMP-2 (gelatinase A) or MMP-9 (gelatinase B) was monitored in aorta extracts and in serum-free conditioned cell culture medium obtained from wild-type (WT) mice and from mice with deficiency of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA(-/-)), urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA(-/-)), plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1(-/-)) or plasminogen (Plg(-/-)). In aorta extracts, the contribution of active MMP-2 to the total MMP-2 level ranged between 7 and 16% for the different genotypes, whereas active MMP-9 was not detected. The contribution of active 58 kDa MMP-2 to the total MMP-2 level (active plus latent) ranged between 14 and 29% (mean of 3 experiments) for fibroblasts of the different genotypes, and between 18 and 32% for smooth muscle cells, and was relatively constant in time (7-72 h). The contribution of active 83 kDa MMP-9 to the total MMP-9 level ranged between 15 and 29% for fibroblasts of the different genotypes and was relatively constant in time (24-72 h); corresponding values were 17 to 57% for smooth muscle cells, with the exception of Plg(-/-) smooth muscle cells which had undetectable levels of active MMP-9. Addition of plasmin(ogen) to the cell culture medium of fibroblasts did not significantly affect the distribution of active and latent MMP-2, but resulted in an approximately two-fold enhancement of the contribution of active MMP-9. In macrophages of Plg(-/-) mice, active MMP-9 was detected only when the cells were cultured in the presence of plasminogen. These data indicate that activation of proMMP-2 occurs independently of the physiological plasminogen activators and of plasmin(ogen) in all the cell types evaluated. Activation of proMMP-9 was enhanced in the presence of plasmin(ogen), but active MMP-9 was also detected in fibroblasts of Plg(-/-) mice, indicating that in vivo activation may occur via plasmin(ogen)-independent mechanisms.
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PMID:Regulation of gelatinase activity in mice with targeted inactivation of components of the plasminogen/plasmin system. 965 44


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