Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.7 (
plasmin
)
9,023
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Squash inhibitors of serine proteinases form an uniform family of small proteins. They are built of 27-33 amino-acid residues and cross-linked with three disulfide bridges. The reactive site peptide bond (P1-P1') is between residue 5 (Lys, Arg or Leu) and 6 (always Ile). High resolution X-ray structures are available for two squash inhibitors complexed with trypsin. NMR solution structures have also been determined for free inhibitors. The major structural motif is a distorted, triple-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet. A similar folding motif has been recently found in a number of proteins, including: conotoxins from fish-hunting snails, carboxypeptidase inhibitor from potato, kalata B1 polypeptide, and in some growth factors (e.g. nerve growth factor,
transforming growth factor beta 2
, platelet-derived growth factor). Squash inhibitors are highly stable and rigid proteins. They inhibit a number of serine proteinases: trypsin,
plasmin
, kallikrein, blood clotting factors: Xa and XIIa, cathepsin G. The inhibition spectrum can be much broadened if specific amino-acid substitutions are introduced, especially at residues which contact proteinase. Squash inhibitors inhibit proteinases via the standard mechanism. According to the mechanism, inhibitors are substrates which exibit at neutral pH a high kcat/K(m) index for hydrolysis and resynthesis of the reactive site, and a low value of the hydrolysis constant.
...
PMID:Squash inhibitor family of serine proteinases. 892 25
Chronic hyperglycemia may cause growth factor alterations that are likely to participate in tissue remodeling typical for diabetic late complications. However, few details of such events are known. The ocular vitreous fluid allows studies of growth factor levels in human eyes (after vitrectomy). The vitreous is highly inert and protected by the blood-retina barrier and thus probably reflects growth factor production by the normal retina. Vitreous from patients with proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) was compared with vitreous obtained from patients with nonproliferative eye disease and with vitreous from patients without diabetes but with marked neovascular proliferations due to ischemia. This design permits us to distinguish diabetes-related from non-diabetes-related alterations. Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), IGF-II, IGF binding protein 2 (IGFBP-2), and IGFBP-3 were elevated 3- to 13-fold in nondiabetic retinal ischemia and 1.5- to 3-fold in PDR, indicating that the changes were not restricted to diabetes. These changes may partially be explained by leakage of serum into the vitreous, since IGFs and IGFBPs are 20- to 50-fold higher in serum than in vitreous, and vitreous protein content was 1.5-fold elevated in PDR subjects and 5-fold in ischemia patients compared with control subjects. TGF-beta is a proposed antiangiogenic factor in the eye.
TGF-beta2
was the predominant subtype in vitreous, and its total amount was not altered in PDR patients. More importantly, the active fraction of TGF-beta was decreased by 30 and 70% in PDR and nondiabetic retinal ischemia patients, respectively. Since
plasmin
may control TGF-beta activation, the serum protein alpha2-antiplasmin was measured and found to be significantly elevated to 150 and 250% of control values in PDR and ischemia patients, respectively. Thus, influx of serum proteins due to microvascular disturbances and hypoxia is proposed as a possible cause for vitreous alterations of IGF-I and of active TGF-beta. These changes seem to occur late in the sequence of events leading to PDR and are not specific for diabetes, but they were also observed in other diseases characterized by retinal hypoxia.
...
PMID:Growth factor alterations in advanced diabetic retinopathy: a possible role of blood retina barrier breakdown. 928 95
Melanoma invasion requires migration through the vascular barrier. An early event in this process is the adhesion of metastatic cells to the endothelium. To elucidate the role of TGF-beta in the regulation of this process, human melanoma SK-MEL24 cells were labelled with [5'-(3)H]-thymidine and co-cultured with bovine pulmonary artery endothelial-cell monolayers. Radioactivity was assumed to be proportional to the number of SK-MEL24 cells bound to the endothelium. A low number of melanoma cells adhered to endothelial cells in a time-related manner. Pretreatment for 24 hr with 0.001 to 10 ng/ml TGF-beta1 or
TGF-beta2
of both cell types enhanced melanoma-endothelium adhesion in a dose-dependent manner. Both melanoma and endothelial cells expressed RI- and RII-type TGF-beta receptors. The effect of TGF-beta was abolished by co-incubation with the proteoglycan decorin. Conditioned media from melanoma-endothelium co-cultures contained latent TGF-beta and failed to affect cell-cell adhesion. However, activation of TGF-beta by heating the medium or reducing the pH, increased melanoma-endothelium adhesion to an extent similar to that of the TGF-beta administered to the cultures. Zimography demonstrated that both cell types expressed urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). Addition of plasminogen to the co-cultures, which was likely to be activated to
plasmin
by uPA, resulted in activation of TGF-beta and parallel stimulation of melanoma-endothelium adhesion. In conclusion, TGF-beta may enhance adhesion of melanoma cells to the endothelium, playing a relevant autocrine/paracrine role in the progression of invasive melanoma.
...
PMID:Transforming growth factor-beta enhances adhesion of melanoma cells to the endothelium in vitro. 937 35
The B10/B10.A congenic mouse pair serves as a model for identifying specific genes related to morphogenesis and dysmorphogenesis of the embryonic palate and other organs. The present report describes our initial investigation of the Fraser-Juriloff paradigm, which proposes that susceptibility to malformation results from genetically determined differences in normal developmental patterns. Specifically, we evaluated the relationship between Igf2r gene expression, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) activation, and cdk4 gene expression. By using in situ hybridization, RNase protection assays, indirect immunofluorescence, Western blots, and bioassays, we show 1) the presence of insulin-like growth factor II (IGF-II), IGF-II receptor (IGF-IIR), IGF-IR, TGF-beta, plasminogen, plasminogen activators [urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and tissue plasminogen activator (tPA)], and Cdk4 in developing palates; 2) on embryonic day 14 (E14), which is a critical day for palatal growth, B10.A embryos have 82% greater IGF-IIR mRNA than B10; 3) on E14, B10.A embryonic palates have a 57% greater level of active
TGF-beta2
than B10, although the total
TGF-beta2
is nearly identical; and 4) on E14, B10 embryonic palates have a 52% greater level of Cdk4 mRNA than B10.A palates, a measure of cell cycle progression. Because cellular activation of latent TGF-beta appears to require binding to the mannose-6-phosphate (M6P) binding site of the IGF-IIR and is
plasmin
and plasminogen activator dependent, the positive correlation of IGF-IIR levels and active
TGF-beta2
levels seems to be key. Thus, the strain variation of
TGF-beta2
/IGF-IIR-mediated growth inhibition in late G1 phase would appear to account for the slower growth and development of B10.A palates relative to B10. Elevated corticosteroid (CORT) exposure in E14 B10.A embryos significantly increases TGF-beta levels, 87% of which is
TGF-beta2
, as well as the levels of active TGF-beta, 64% of which is
TGF-beta2
. Without exogenous CORT, B10.A embryos do not have clefts; hence, we present an outline of pathogenesis: slower growing B10.A embryos have an up-regulation of IGF-IIR, which serves to sequester IGF-II from the growth-promoting IGF-IR and to bind more CORT-up-regulated, latent
TGF-beta2
for subsequent
plasmin
-dependent activation; higher levels of
TGF-beta2
signaling down-regulate Cdk4 and result in greater palatal growth inhibition at a critical stage of palatogenesis and, thus, cleft palate. We present an epigenetic model of information processing related to cell proliferation. The model is a dynamical network that uses continuous logic to learn its rules from changing conditions.
...
PMID:Insulin-like growth factor II receptor, transforming growth factor-beta, and Cdk4 expression and the developmental epigenetics of mouse palate morphogenesis and dysmorphogenesis. 943 20
Different extracellular matrix proteins have been described as binding proteins for growth factors, influencing their storage or presentation towards cellular receptors. The multifunctional adhesive glycoprotein vitronectin (VN), which is found in the circulation and widely distributed throughout different tissues, has been implicated in the regulation of vascular cell functions, and these activities could be related to interactions with various growth factors. In vitro, soluble VN interfered with transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) binding to isolated extracellular matrix and was found to associate with TGF-beta1 and
TGF-beta2
as well as with other growth factors such as vascular endothelial growth factor, epidermal growth factor, or basic fibroblast growth factor in a saturable manner. In particular, binding of TGF-beta was maximal for the heparin-binding multimeric isoform of VN, whereas VN in a ternary complex with thrombin and antithrombin or plasma VN exhibited weaker binding. Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) or heparin, but not desulfated glycosaminoglycans, interfered with binding of VN to TGF-beta, and soluble PAI-1 was able to dissociate VN-bound TGF-beta. Upon limited
plasmin
proteolysis of VN, only the fragments comprising the intact aminoterminal portion of VN bound to TGF-beta as did a synthetic peptide (amino acids 43 to 62), indicating that TGF-beta and PAI-1 share common binding site(s) on VN. Although VN did not influence TGF-beta bioactivity for mink lung epithelial cells, TGF-beta dose dependently inhibited both urokinase-receptor as well as alpha(v)-integrin-dependent adhesion to VN. This activity of TGF-beta was reminiscent of the antiadhesive function of PAI-1. In atherosclerotic tissue sections, staining patterns of VN and TGF-beta indicated their colocalization. These findings describe VN as a new binding protein for TGF-beta, whereby specific functions of both factors become modulated by this interaction.
...
PMID:Molecular interactions and functional interference between vitronectin and transforming growth factor-beta. 1179 24
Transforming growth factor-beta (TGFbeta) plays a central role in a number of developmental and pathological processes. There are 3 isoforms of TGFbeta (1-3) and all are sequestered in the extracellular matrix as latent complexes. Activation of this complex is the key biological checkpoint controlling TGF-beta bioavailability. This process is tightly regulated in a temporal, spatial and isoform specific manner highlighting its importance. There are many different mechanisms by which TGF-beta can be activated. Both serine and metalloproteinases play an important role in TGF-beta activation, at least in vitro, and many of these proteases have been implicated in pathological conditions. The mechanism of activation is distinct between the different proteases, but is not conserved between the two groups. Both serine proteases, such as
plasmin
, and metalloproteases, such as MMP2, can directly cleave latent TGFbeta, whereas others, such as thrombin and MMP14, interact with integrin mediated TGFbeta activation pathways. However, further studies are still required to fully understand the relevance of all of these pathways in vivo. Currently, the best described mechanism of TGF-beta1 activation in vivo is by integrins, although this process can be modulated by proteases. The primary mechanism of
TGF-beta2
and TGF-beta3 activation has yet to be defined in vivo, although it is likely that TGF-beta3 is activated in a similar manner to TGF-beta1. This review describes the mechanism of protease driven TGF-beta activation, and discusses the physiological and pathological relevance of this process.
...
PMID:The role of proteases in transforming growth factor-beta activation. 1824 66