Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.73 (urokinase-type plasminogen activator)
10,685 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The regulation of urokinase secretion and receptor display in a well-differentiated colon carcinoma cell line, GEO, adapted to serum-free conditions was examined. In protein-free medium, the cell line secreted 0.8 +/- 0.1 ng/ml/10(6) cells of urokinase in a 3-day period as determined by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. This value was elevated 4-fold when the cells were cultivated in the presence of epidermal growth factor (EGF) but not insulin or transferrin. Propagation of the cell line with any combination of these growth factors was not superior to EGF alone in inducing urokinase secretion. The presence of EGF raised the radioactive laminin-solubilizing activity of the conditioned medium. In the absence of the growth factor, spent medium supplemented with plasminogen solubilized 23,000 +/- 7,000 dpm/10(6) cells of the immobilized laminin. This value was increased to 95,000 +/- 10,000 dpm/10(6) cells when the cultures were grown with EGF. Northern analysis indicated that the elevated level of the plasminogen activator protein by EGF was a consequence of a more abundant urokinase transcript. The stimulation of urokinase secretion by EGF was accompanied by a reduction of radioactive urokinase binding to the cell line. The reduction in plasminogen activator binding was not further enhanced by insulin or transferrin. In addition, these latter growth factors, by themselves, were ineffective in altering the amount of plasminogen activator bound. The attenuation in 125I-labeled urokinase binding did not reflect occupation of the receptors with endogenous ligand as acid pretreatment was without effect on the binding profile. Scatchard analysis revealed that the altered urokinase binding by EGF reflected a decrease in receptor number from 14,000 +/- 1,500 to 8,000 +/- 1,500 sites per cell. The temporal relationship of urokinase secretion and receptor display was examined. Changes in either parameter required an EGF exposure period of 10 h or more. Further amplification of the EGF effects was seen with longer incubation times with the growth peptide. These opposite effects of EGF on urokinase secretion and receptor display may suggest a homeostatic control mechanism for keeping the plasminogen activator system in check. The ability of the cell line to express biological characteristics associated with a well-differentiated colon cell type may reflect its capacity to suppress a system which is usually associated with the transformed state.
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PMID:Determination of the effects of epidermal growth factor on urokinase secretion and urokinase receptor display in a well-differentiated human colon carcinoma cell line. 253 50

The expression of the plasminogen activator, urokinase, and the display of its receptor in response to growth factors were examined in a serum-free adapted colon cancer cell line, CBSsf. Cells propagated in protein-free medium secreted 6.5 +/- 1.0 ng/ml of urokinase/10(6) cells in a 3-day period as determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Inclusion of insulin or transferrin into the protein-free medium was without effect on this parameter. However, addition of epidermal growth factor (EGF) to the protein-free medium resulted in a 50% reduction in this parameter. This change was also reflected in the plasminogen-dependent solubilization of immobilized radioactive laminin. Plasminogen-supplemented conditioned medium derived from CBSsf cells grown in protein-free medium solubilized 135,000 +/- 25,000 dpm/10(6) cells of radioactive substrate. This value was decreased to 59,000 +/- 6,000 when conditioned medium was collected in the presence of EGF. Dose-response curves indicated that, while 0.5 ng/ml of EGF were suboptimal for the suppression of urokinase secretion, a concentration of 5.0 ng/ml had a maximum effect on this measurement. Northern hybridization studies indicated that the reduced plasminogen activator reflected, at least in part, translation of a less abundant transcript. Examination of the colon carcinoma cell line for altered urokinase receptor display revealed that EGF caused a dose-dependent increase in the amount of radioactive urokinase bound. This did not reflect reduced occupation of binding sites with endogenous ligand. Scatchard manipulation of the binding data indicated that the increased amount of radioactive plasminogen activator bound to cells cultured with EGF reflected an increase in receptor number from 7,500 to 13,000 sites/cell. Time course studies revealed that the decrease in urokinase secretion precedes changes in receptor display by 5 h. A 60% reduction in assayable urokinase was demonstrated in the conditioned medium from cells treated with the growth peptide for 10 h. However, a 24-h period was required to observe an increase (80%) in the amount of radioligand bound to EGF-treated cells. These data suggest EGF to be a regulator of both urokinase production and urokinase receptor display in a colon cancer cell line.
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PMID:Examination of the effects of epidermal growth factor on the production of urokinase and the expression of the plasminogen activator receptor in a human colon cancer cell line. 253 3

At present, there is a lack of availability of differentiation markers for colon carcinoma. This may, in part, be a consequence of the diversified function of the normal human colon. This study addresses the possibility that the expression of urokinase and its receptor is inversely related to differentiation in colon carcinoma. Six colon carcinoma cell lines including three well-differentiated (CBS, GEO, FET) and three poorly differentiated ones (HCT116, HCT116b, RKO) were screened for urokinase receptor display and secretion of the plasminogen activator. A radioreceptor assay was used to determine receptor levels. Binding of radioactive urokinase to colon cells was saturable, specific, and time dependent. Cell-bound 125I-labeled protease was unaffected by the presence of epidermal growth factor, low-molecular-weight urokinase, plasminogen, or transferrin. Time course studies revealed that maximum amounts of radioactive tracer were bound in a 30-min period with no change occurring over the course of a 90-min incubation. Scatchard analysis of ligand binding indicated that the well-and poorly differentiated cells could be separated on the basis of receptor display; the aggressive RKO, HCT116, and HCT116b expressed in excess of 10(5) sites per cell, while the more indolent CBS, GEO, and FET possessed less than 1.5 X 10(4) receptors per cell. The colon carcinoma cells were also analyzed for urokinase in the conditioned medium. Low levels of the plasminogen activator (0.8 to 1.3 ng/ml/10(6) cells/72 h) were associated with the more "mature" cells. This was in contrast to the elevated levels of the protease (3.9 to 11.4 ng/ml/10(6) cells/72 h) present in the medium derived from the more aggressive cells (HCT 116, HCT116b, RKO). Thus, secreted urokinase and/or the expression of cellular receptor for the plasminogen activator may provide useful measurements of the degree of undifferentiation of in vitro colon carcinoma.
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PMID:Determination of the levels of urokinase and its receptor in human colon carcinoma cell lines. 283 52

Complex between urokinase and its type-1 inhibitor (uPA-PAI-1) may, when bound to the urokinase receptor (uPAR), be endocytosed by an ensuing binding of the complex to the multiligand receptors alpha (2)-macroglobulin receptor/low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (alpha 2MR/LRP) and glycoprotein 330 (gp330). We have found that phorbol esters regulate endocytosis of uPA-PAI-1 differently in different cell lines. In COS-1 cells, expressing uPAR and high levels of alpha 2MR/LRP under basal conditions, phorbol esters cause a time-dependent decrease in endocytosis concomitantly with a parallel down-regulation of alpha 2MR/LRP expression. An up-regulation of uPAR expression was also observed. General endocytosis via the clathrin-coated pit pathway was not affected by PMA treatment, as judged from measurements of transferrin endocytosis. In LLC-PK1 cells, expressing alpha 2MR/LRP but not uPAR under basal conditions, phorbol esters transiently increase endocytosis in parallel with a transient induction of uPAR expression, while there was virtually no change in alpha 2MR/LRP expression. Differential regulation of endocytosis therefore seems to be caused by differential regulation of the receptors, with either the alpha 2MR/LRP-level (in COS)-1 cells) or the uPAR-level (in LLC-PK1 cells) being rate-limiting.
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PMID:Differential regulation of urokinase-type-1 inhibitor complex endocytosis by phorbol esters in different cell lines is associated with differential regulation of alpha 2-macroglobulin receptor and urokinase receptor expression. 766 84

Gonadotrophin preparations extracted from post-menopausal urine are of low purity and the major protein components are not gonadotrophins. A study was undertaken to identify some of these non-gonadotrophin proteins present in the extracted human urinary gonadotrophin preparations that are commercially available, i.e. Humegon (Organon), HMG Massone (Massone), Metrodin (Serono), Metrodin HP (Serono), Pergonal (Serono) and Progonadyl (Elea). As revealed by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) with Coomassie blue staining and Western blotting analysis, these products had electrophoretic protein profiles which differed in the amounts and species of proteins present. With the exception of Metrodin HP, all the other preparations tested contained tumour necrosis factor binding protein-I, transferrin, and immunoglobulin-related proteins. Some of the products contained in addition: urokinase, Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein and epidermal growth factor. Recently, a highly purified human urinary follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) preparation (Metrodin HP) became available. In this preparation human FSH represents > 95% of the total proteins (approximately 10,000 IU of FSH/mg of protein). Metrodin HP was demonstrated to be the purest preparation tested, with none of the above-mentioned contaminants detected.
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PMID:Composition of commercial gonadotrophin preparations extracted from human post-menopausal urine: characterization of non-gonadotrophin proteins. 771 47

Although the mechanisms governing EC activation are not well understood, evidence points to a role for locally released cytokines from activated leukocytes. We propose that the sequence of events that result in EC activation are important in perivascular leukocyte infiltration into the CNS seen in MS. In the present study we examined expression of EC activation antigens on cerebral microvessels from patients with MS using immunofluorescence staining and quantitation by laser cytometry. Normal human microvessels do not express MHC class II antigens (Ags), intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1), or the urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPA-R). They express low levels of transferrin receptors and express factor VIII. Microvessels prepared from MS brain with plaque involvement expressed decreased factor VIII and increased transferrin receptors (tfR). Expression of the adhesion molecules VCAM-1, and ICAM-1 were found on 80% of isolated microvessels. HLA-DR Ags were expressed on 40-60% of microvessels, and the uPA-R was expressed on 50% of MS microvessels examined. MHC class II Ags co-express with VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 more frequently than with the uPA-R. Results indicate that activation of EC in MS is likely to be an important factor in disease pathology.
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PMID:Expression of endothelial cell activation antigens in microvessels from patients with multiple sclerosis. 833 39

The migration of arterial smooth muscle cells (SMCs) plays an important role in normal vessel development as well as the pathobiology of blood vessels. Because it is difficult to study cell migration in primates, we used ex vivo explants. The response of baboon aortic medial explants incubated in vitro in a serum-free medium with insulin and transferrin was compared with the response of whole artery injured in vivo by a balloon catheter to establish the validity of the explant model. Both the time course of entry of SMCs into the S phase and the changes in matrix metalloproteinase 9 were similar in the artery and the explants. SMCs began migrating from explants after a lag of 3 days. By day 11, > 90% of the explants exhibited SMC migration from the tissue (percent of explants with > or = 1 migrating cell). Basal migration was inhibited by antibodies to urokinase and tissue-type plasminogen activator, whereas addition of plasminogen to the explants increased migration. An inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases. BB-94 (Batimistat), decreased migration, as did alpha 2-macroglobulin. These data demonstrate that proteinases of the matrix metalloproteinase and plasminogen/plasminogen activator families play an important role in the migration of primate arterial SMCs through the extracellular matrix.
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PMID:The role of plasminogen, plasminogen activators, and matrix metalloproteinases in primate arterial smooth muscle cell migration. 891 Dec 76

Metastasis represents a hallmark of the tumor cell's escape from normal cellular behavior to acquired invasive and migratory style. Metastasis of prostate cancer (Pca) depends upon the interplay of a series of hematogenous and hematopoietic factors. We investigated the role of some of those factors implicated in the dissemination process in two separate sublines of adenocarcinoma of the prostate. Our data revealed that (1) the urokinase plasminogen activator activity was significantly higher in R3327-AT3, an aggressive metastatic tumor, as compared to R3327-G, a nonmetastatic tumor of the prostate, (2) the concentration of platelets decreased, and the platelet-aggregating activity increased significantly when the platelets were reacted with exogenous aggregating agents and tumor effusions to suggest that activation of the hemostatic system could protect tumor cells from immunosurveillance and facilitate the process of hematogenous dissemination, and (3) transferrin, which has been reported to have a growth-promoting effect on Pca, did not show any appreciable effect on tumor growth but did alter the level of in vitro adherence which possibly could lead to better attachment and increased invasive behavior of tumor cells.
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PMID:Metastatic behavior of prostatic tumor as influenced by the hematopoietic and hematogenous factors. 898 19

Internalization of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) requires two receptors, the uPA receptor (uPAR) and the low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP)/alpha2-macroglobulin (alpha2M) receptor. Here, we address whether protein kinases are involved in the internalization of uPA by human melanoma cells. Initially, we found that the internalization of uPA was significantly inhibited by the serine/threonine protein kinase inhibitors staurosporine, K-252a and H-89, but not by the tyrosine kinase inhibitors, genistein and lavendustin A. Internalization of uPA was also inhibited by a pseudosubstrate peptide for cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), but not by a pseudosubstrate peptide for protein kinase C. We confirmed a requirement for PKA-activity and implicated a specific isoform by using an antisense oligonucleotide against the regulatory subunit RI alpha of PKA which suppresses PKA-I activity. Exposure of cells to this oligonucleotide led to a specific, dose-dependent decrease in RI alpha protein and to a significant inhibition in the rate of uPA internalization. We further demonstrate that treatment of melanoma cells with either H-89 or PKA RI alpha antisense oligonucleotides also resulted in a decreased internalization of two other ligands of LRP, activated alpha2M and lactoferrin, indicating that PKA activity is associated with LRP. Finally, we demonstrate that PKA activity is also required for the internalization of transferrin, but not for the internalization of the epidermal growth factor or adenovirus 2, suggesting that in melanoma cells, PKA activity is not generally required for clathrin-mediated endocytosis, but is rather associated with specific internalization receptors.
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PMID:Receptor-mediated endocytosis of urokinase-type plasminogen activator is regulated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. 921 25

Human ovarian adenocarcinoma cells N.1 secrete an autocrine activity that stimulates active cell death under serum-reduced conditions. To substitute the autocrine activity by a single physiological component, 28 cytokines, growth factors and biomodulators were tested [interleukin 1alpha (IL-1alpha), IL-1beta, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-11, stem cell factor (SCF), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), acid fibroblast growth factor (aFGF), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), insulin-like growth factor (IGF-1), IGF-2, insulin, macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF), granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), oncostatin, RANTES (regulated on activation normal T cell expressed and secreted), angiogenin, leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF), erythropoietin (EPO), interferon alpha (INF-alpha), INF-gamma, transferrin, tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha, TNF-beta and bovine serum albumin for control reasons]. In these experiments, only TNF-alpha and TNF-beta rapidly induced apoptosis. TNF-alpha and TNF-receptor 1 were expressed by N.1 cells, and the secretion of TNF-alpha was verified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Autocrine factor-triggered apoptosis was inhibited when conditioned supernatant was preincubated with anti-TNF-alpha antibody. These findings suggested that the apoptosis-inducing component of the N.1 autocrine activity was TNF-alpha. In the presence of antisense c-myc oligonucleotides, induction of cell death by autocrine factor was partly inhibited. Autocrine factor and TNF-alpha stimulated transcription of the invasiveness-related protease plasminogen activator/urokinase mRNA (upa) with similar kinetics. When N.1 cells were exposed to purified plasminogen activator/urokinase protein (uPA), cell matrix contact was disrupted. Thus, uPA might serve a physiological role during TNF-induced apoptosis by affecting the interactions between cells and the basal membrane, thereby facilitating anoikis. This mechanistic study, which was restricted to a single human ovarian carcinoma model cell line (N.1), provides evidence that N.1 maintains the capacity to undergo c-myc-dependent apoptosis by the TNF-TNF-receptor pathway, and no additional pharmacological stimuli for induction of apoptosis are required.
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PMID:Autocrine self-elimination of cultured ovarian cancer cells by tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha). 976 76


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