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

Temporal and topographic expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) after perivascular electric injury was studied in wild-type (WT) and urokinase-deficient (u-PA-/-) mice. Neointima formation after injury of the femoral artery was significantly reduced in u-PA-/- mice as compared to WT mice (area of 0.002+/-0.0007 mm2 versus 0.008 + 0.002 mm2 at 3 weeks after injury; p <0.001), associated with impaired cellular migration (nuclear cell counts of 44+/-5 versus 82+/-9in cross-sectional areas; p <0.001). Zymographic and/or microscopic analysis indicated that MMP expression gradually increased to reach a maximum at 1 to 2 weeks after vascular injury. In general, MMP levels were lower in u-PA-/- than in WT mice. In non-injured arteries, MMP-2 (gelatinase A) and MMP-3 (stromelysin-1) were produced mainly by adventitial fibroblasts and/or non-contractile smooth muscle cells (SMC). One week after injury, MMP-2 and MMP-3 levels were enhanced due to an increased number and size of producing cells; 2 to 3 weeks after injury, MMP-2 and MMP-3 were produced also by some contractile SMC, which stained with alpha-actin antiserum. MMP-9 (gelatinase B), MMP-12 (metalloelastase) and MMP-13 (collagenase-3) were found in macrophages located mainly in the adventitia. Immunogold electron microscopic examination revealed that MMP-2 was located predominantly in association with the cell surface of fibroblasts or SMC, while MMP-9 and MMP- 12 were located in well defined storage granules within macrophages. MMP-2, MMP-3 and MMP-13, but not MMP-9 or MMP-12, were also found extracellularly, associated with elastin-containing structures (MMP-2), with the basement membrane and occasionally with collagen fibres (MMP-3), or with proteoglycans, collagen and elastin (MMP-13). The temporal and topographic expression pattern of MMPs after vascular injury, coinciding with smooth muscle cell migration and neointima formation, thus is compatible with a role in vascular remodeling.
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PMID:Temporal and topographic matrix metalloproteinase expression after vascular injury in mice. 1036 56

Cardiac rupture is a fatal complication of acute myocardial infarction lacking treatment. Here, acute myocardial infarction resulted in rupture in wild-type mice and in mice lacking tissue-type plasminogen activator, urokinase receptor, matrix metalloproteinase stromelysin-1 or metalloelastase. Instead, deficiency of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA-/-) completely protected against rupture, whereas lack of gelatinase-B partially protected against rupture. However, u-PA-/- mice showed impaired scar formation and infarct revascularization, even after treatment with vascular endothelial growth factor, and died of cardiac failure due to depressed contractility, arrhythmias and ischemia. Temporary administration of PA inhibitor-1 or the matrix metalloproteinase-inhibitor TIMP-1 completely protected wild-type mice against rupture but did not abort infarct healing, thus constituting a new approach to prevent cardiac rupture after acute myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Inhibition of plasminogen activators or matrix metalloproteinases prevents cardiac rupture but impairs therapeutic angiogenesis and causes cardiac failure. 1050 7

Acute and chronic pulmonary diseases are characterized by impaired fibrinolytic activity within the lung. To determine the role of the fibrinolytic system in regulating the pathologies associated with lung injury, we examined the effect of bleomycin, an agent that induces the development of pulmonary fibrosis, in mice deficient for plasminogen (Pg(-)(/-)), urokinase (u-PA(-)(/-)), urokinase receptor (u-PAR(-)(/-)), or tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA(-)(/-)), and in control wild-type (WT) mice. Pg(-)(/-) and t-PA(-)(/-) mice demonstrated an enhanced increase in lung collagen content relative to that observed in WT mice. Levels in u-PA(-)(/-) and u-PAR(-)(/-) mice were similar to those in WT mice. Histological analysis 14 days after lung injury confirmed enhanced interstitial fibrosis in Pg(-)(/-), u-PA(-)(/-), and t-PA(-)(/-) mice relative to WT and u-PAR(-)(/-) mice. Areas of pulmonary hemorrhage were observed in bleomycin-treated WT mice and not in Pg(-)(/-), u-PA(-)(/-), and u-PAR(-)(/-) mice or saline controls. Instead, extensive areas of fibrosis were present throughout the lungs of bleomycin-treated Pg(-)(/-) and u-PA(-)(/-) mice. A mixed phenotype (hemorrhage and fibrosis) was observed in t-PA(-)(/-) and Pg(+/-) mice. Hemosiderin-laden macrophages were abundant in the lungs of mice exhibiting hemorrhage and these mice were prone to an early death. Enhanced macrophage levels in the lungs and activation of matrix metalloelastase (MMP-12) were found in mice with a hemorrhage phenotype. The results of these studies indicate a role for the fibrinolytic system in acute lung injury and suggests that intra-alveolar hemorrhage is the result of basement membrane degradation through cell-mediated u-PA activation of Pg with possible involvement of matrix metalloproteinases. Absence of these two components of the fibrinolytic system, either urokinase or plasminogen, results in accelerated fibrosis.
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PMID:The development of bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis in mice deficient for components of the fibrinolytic system. 1088 Mar 88

The matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) and fibrinolytic (plasminogen/plasmin) systems cooperate in many (patho)physiological processes requiring extracellular proteolysis. The effect of MMP-3 (stromelysin-1), MMP-7 (matrilysin), MMP-9 (gelatinase B) or MMP-12 (metalloelastase) on cellular fibrinolytic activity was studied with the use of smooth muscle cells (SMC) and fibroblasts derived from mice with specific inactivation of these genes. Activation of cell-bound plasminogen by two-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator (tcu-PA) was not significantly different with SMC or fibroblasts from the gene-deficient mice (78% to 140% of wild-type). For all cell types, very limited conversion of plasminogen to angiostatin-like kringle-containing fragments was observed (< 3% of the total cell-bound plasminogen). Activation of plasminogen in solution by cell-associated tcu-PA was also comparable for SMC or fibroblasts of the different genotypes (54% to 160% of wild-type). In vitro SMC migration on scrape wounded collagen-coated surfaces was comparable for wild-type, MMP-7(-/-), MMP-9(-/-) and MMP-12(-/-) SMC, but was significantly reduced for MMP-3(-/-) SMC (P < .005 vs. wild-type). Serum-free conditioned medium of MMP-3(-/-) and MMP-7(-/-) SMC or fibroblasts induced similar lysis of fibrin films as wild-type cells. These findings indicate that several interactions that have been described between these MMPs and the plasminogen/plasmin system in a purified system do not significantly affect plasmin-mediated cellular fibrinolytic activity under cell culture conditions.
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PMID:Matrix metalloproteinase deficiencies do not impair cell-associated fibrinolytic activity. 1132 16

Plasminogen activators (PAs) and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are considered to play an important role in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis. Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is widely used as an animal model of multiple sclerosis. Whereas several studies have addressed the expression of various MMPs and their inhibitors in the pathogenesis of EAE, the expression of the molecules of the PA system during EAE has not been reported previously. The present study was undertaken to investigate the expression of the molecules of the PA system (tPA, uPA, PAI-1, uPAR, LRP), as well as several members of the MMP family and their inhibitors in the course of actively induced EAE in BALB/c mice. During clinical EAE, the PA system was up-regulated in the central nervous system at several levels. Induction of expression of tPA and PAI-1 transcripts was detected in activated astrocytes in the white matter. Inflammatory cells expressed uPA receptor, uPAR. In situ zymography demonstrated the presence of increased tPA and uPA activities in the areas of the inflammatory damage. Accumulation of fibrin, fibronectin, and vitronectin immunoreactivity was seen in perivascular matrices of symptomatic animals. In addition, transcription of MT1-MMP and metalloelastase (in inflammatory cells), and TIMP-1 (in activated astrocytes) was induced during EAE. Increased gelatinolytic activity was detected at the sites of inflammatory cell accumulation by in situ zymography of fluorescently labeled gelatin; substrate gel zymography identified the up-regulated gelatinolytic activity as gelatinase B. Overall, our study demonstrates concurrent induction of PA and MMP systems during active EAE, supporting further the concept that the neuroinflammatory damage in EAE involves altered balance between multiple extracellular proteases and their inhibitors.
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PMID:Coordinated induction of extracellular proteolysis systems during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in mice. 1173 72

Circumstantial evidence has suggested an important role of the fibrinolytic (plasminogen/plasmin) and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) systems in biological processes involving (extra)cellular proteolysis and/or matrix degradation, such as restenosis after vascular interventions in patients with atherothrombosis. The generation of mice with inactivation of main components of both systems and of suitable experimental models has allowed to study the interactions between both systems and their biological role in arterial neointima formation after vascular injury. During neointima formation after electric injury of the femoral artery, expression of MMP-2 and MMP-9 (gelatinase A and B) is strongly enhanced, independently of the presence or absence of plasminogen or of the physiological tissue-type (t-PA) or urokinase-type (u-PA) plasminogen activators. Activation of proMMP-2 occurs independently of plasmin, whereas proMMP-9 activation occurs via plasmin-dependent as well as plasmin-independent (MMP-3- or stromelysin-1-dependent) mechanisms. The temporal and topographic expression patterns of MMP-2, MMP-3, MMP-9, MMP-12 (metalloelastase) and MMP-13 (collagenase) after vascular injury are compatible with a role of MMPs in neointima formation. This is further substantiated by the finding that smooth muscle cell (SMC) migration and neointima formation after vascular injury is significantly enhanced in mice with deficiency of TIMP-1, the main physiological MMP inhibitor. In contrast, arterial neointima formation in mice is not affected by deficiency of alpha 2-antiplasmin, the main physiological plasmin inhibitor. Thus, SMC migration and neointima formation after vascular injury appear to be promoted by several MMP system components, that may be activated via plasmin-dependent or plasmin-independent mechanisms.
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PMID:Role of the fibrinolytic and matrix metalloproteinase systems in arterial neointima formation after vascular injury. 1181 12

Human macrophages found in juxtaposition to fragmented elastin in vivo express the elastolytic matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) progelatinase B, prometalloelastase, and promatrilysin. Though MMPs can degrade a range of extracellular matrix components, increasing evidence suggests that preferred targets in vivo include nonmatrix substrates such as chemokines and growth factors. Hence, the means by which MMPs participate in elastin turnover remain undefined as does the identity of the elastolysins. Herein, human macrophage cultures have been established that express a complement of elastolytic proteinases similar, if not identical, to that found in vivo. Under plasminogen-free conditions, macrophages preferentially use metalloelastase to mediate elastolysis via a process that deposits active enzyme on elastin surfaces. By contrast, in the presence of plasminogen, human macrophages up-regulate proteolysis 10-fold by processing promatrilysin to an active elastolysin via a urokinase-type plasminogen activator-dependent pathway. Matrilysin-deficient human macrophages fail to mediate an elastolytic response despite the continued expression of gelatinase B and metalloelastase. Thus, acting in concert with cosecreted cysteine proteinases whose activities are constrained to sites of macrophage-elastin contact (Punturieri, A., S. Filippov, E. Allen, I. Caras, R. Murray, V. Reddy, and S.J. Weiss. 2000. J. Exp. Med. 192:789-799), matrilysin confers macrophages with their most potent MMP-dependent elastolytic system.
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PMID:Matrilysin-dependent elastolysis by human macrophages. 1296 95