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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)
Procoagulant, anticoagulant, and fibrinolytic activities are associated with endothelial cells and involve the production, secretion, and receptor mediated binding of proteins involved in these processes. The procoagulant aspect of endothelial cells function involves the production and release of von Willebrand Factor(vWF), the production of
tissue factor
, and the presence of Factor IX/IXa receptors on the cell surface. Secretion of vWf will promote the initial steps in thrombus formation by supporting platelet-platelet interaction and platelet-subendothelial matrix adhesion.
Tissue factor
which is undetectable in resting cells appears after exposure to various cytokines and initiates factor VIIa activation of factors IX and X. Receptors of Factor IX/IXa are also present and mediate the assembly of the prothrombinase complex on the endothelial cell surface. The anticoagulant pathway involves the cell surface protein thrombomodulin, protein C and its cofactor protein S. Thrombomodulin binds thrombin which activates protein C which in the presence of protein S cleaves and inactivates Factors V and VIII. Inactivation of these two coagulation cofactors halts the coagulation. Finally, endothelial cells also play a pivotal role in the fibrinolytic system. Production and regulated secretion of tissue plasminogen activator creates a profibrinolytic state in the endothelial cell environment. In addition, receptors for plasminogen and
urokinase
are also present, constituting a cell surface mediated fibrinolytic pathway. Plasminogen activator inhibitor type I, the primary inhibitor of tPA, is also produced by endothelial cells. Thus endothelial cells can promote and inhibit fibrinolysis, depending on the prevailing environmental conditions.
...
PMID:[Endothelial cells and vascular hemostasis]. 131 12
The report describes the effect of an in vitro infection of human umbilical vein endothelial cells with human Cytomegalovirus (CMV). The parameters studied are cellular procoagulant activity, secretion of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) and
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
(
u-PA
), activation and internalization of factor X and Merocyanine 540 staining. The infection does not result in an increase in PAI-1 and
u-PA
secretion, but it brings about a procoagulant response, which is relatively rapid compared to the
tissue factor
mediated response induced by inflammatory mediators. The time course and the coagulation factor dependency suggest a facilitated interaction of coagulation factors on the surface of infected cells. Chromogenic activity measurements after the addition of purified factor X and electron microscopic examination of the cells after addition of colloidal gold-factor X conjugates both point to an internalization of factor X and/or Xa after interaction with the endothelial cell surface. Merocyanine 540 staining suggests that CMV infection leads to membrane perturbations.
...
PMID:The procoagulant response of cytomegalovirus infected endothelial cells. 133 11
The localization of
tissue factor
(TF) in atherosclerotic plaques of human aortas was immunohistochemically examined using rabbit anti-IgG against recombinant TF, which was expressed in E. coli. TF, the initiator of the extrinsic coagulation pathway, was ubiquitously present in atherosclerotic intima, and was expressed mainly by macrophages, but not by endothelial cells. It has been suggested that some macrophages in atherosclerotic intima co-express both molecules of TF and platelet-derived growth factor-B chain. We have developed a morphometrically quantitative in vitro assay for angiogenesis, using endothelial cultures on collagen gel incorporating plasminogen. With this method, we have obtained findings suggesting that plasminogen and plasminogen activators (PAs), especially
urokinase
-type PA (uPA) derived from endothelial cells, enhance angiogenic activity, probably by increasing endothelial migration. uPA was immunohistochemically observed to be primarily cell-associated on the focal contract areas, probably via its receptors on endothelial cells. These findings may support the hypothesis that the activation and regulation of the pericellular fibrinolysis system is closely related to angiogenesis.
...
PMID:Endothelial function in thrombosis and thrombolysis. 137 73
Premature infants who have self-limited respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) rapidly improve, whereas infants with a complicated respiratory course are more likely to develop bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a chronic lung disorder that is the result of prolonged lung injury and impaired healing. The balance of competing activities of coagulation and fibrinolysis may contribute to the premature lung's response to acute injury and determine, in part, whether there is early resolution or protracted alveolar inflammation. To determine the relative activities of the coagulation and fibrinolytic pathways in neonatal lung injury, procoagulant (PC) and plasminogen activator (PA) activities were measured in undiluted cell-free lung lavage samples obtained serially over the first 28 days of life from 11 infants with self-limited RDS, 11 infants with evolving BPD, and 5 mechanically ventilated control infants without lung disease. Lung lavage from all three groups contained readily detectable procoagulant activity due mainly to the
tissue factor
-Factor VII complex. Plasminogen activator activity was relatively high in control lavage samples but depressed on the first day of life in the two groups of infants with lung disease: median, 0.3814 IU/ml (control); 0.0541 IU/ml (RDS); and 0.0454 IU/ml (BPD), p < 0.05 in each case compared with control. Two infants with severe lung disease had no detectable plasminogen activator activity in lung lavage on the first day of life. Depressed fibrinolytic activity correlated with severity of lung disease assessed radiographically and by pulmonary function measurements. Plasminogen activator activity was due to both tissue plasminogen activator and
urokinase
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Disordered pathways of fibrin turnover in lung lavage of premature infants with respiratory distress syndrome. 148 46
A series of new compounds, 6-amino-1-naphthalenesulfonamides (ANSN), were used as fluorescent detecting groups for substrates of amidases. These compounds have a high quantum fluorescent yield, and the sulfonyl moiety permits a large range of chemical modification. Fifteen ANSN substrates with the structure (N alpha-Z)Arg-ANSNR1R2 were synthesized and evaluated for their reactivity with 8 proteases involved in blood coagulation and fibrinolysis. Thrombin, activated protein C, and
urokinase
rapidly hydrolyzed substrates with monosubstituted sulfonamide moieties (R1 = H). The maximum rate of substrate homologue). The hydrolysis rates for substrates with branched substituents were slower than their linear analogues. Monosubstituted (N alpha-Z)Arg-ANSNR1R2 possessing cyclohexyl or benzyl groups in the sulfonamide moiety were hydrolyzed by these three enzymes at rates similar to that of the n-butyl homologue (except the cyclohexyl compound for
u-PA
). Factor Xa rapidly hydrolyzed substrates with short alkyl chains, especially when R1 = R2 = CH3 or C2H5. Lys-plasmin and rt-PA demonstrated low activity with these compounds, and the best results were accomplished for monosubstituted compounds when R2 = benzyl (for both enzymes). Factor VIIa and factor IXa beta exhibited no activity with these substrates. A series of 14 peptidyl ANSN substrates were synthesized, and their reactivity for the same 8 enzymes was evaluated. Thrombin, factor Xa, APC, and Lys-plasmin hydrolyzed all of the substrates investigated. Urokinase, rt-PA, and factor IXa beta exhibited reactivity with a more limited group of substrates, and factor VIIa hydrolyzed only one compound (MesD-LGR-ANSN(C2H5)2). The substrate ZGGRR-ANSNH (cyclo-C6H11) showed considerable specificity for APC in comparison with other enzymes (kcat/KM = 19,300 M-1 s-1 for APC, 1560 for factor IIa, and 180 for factor Xa). This kinetic advantage in substrate hydrolysis was utilized to evaluate the activation of protein C by thrombin in a continuous assay format. Substrate (D-LPR-ANSNHC3H7) was used to evaluate factor IX activation by the factor VIIa/
tissue factor
enzymatic complex in a discontinuous assay. A comparison between the commercially available substrate chromozyme TH (p-nitroanilide) and the ANSN substrate with the same peptide sequence (TosGPR) demonstrated that aminonaphthalenesulfonamide increased the specificity (kcat/KM) of substrate hydrolysis by thrombin more than 30 times, with respect to factor Xa substrate hydrolysis.
...
PMID:Aminonaphthalenesulfonamides, a new class of modifiable fluorescent detecting groups and their use in substrates for serine protease enzymes. 160 66
Fibrin deposition is a prominent finding in the synovium of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Macrophages are found in increased numbers in RA synovium, and these cells are known to produce a variety of procoagulant and anticoagulant molecules. Using immunohistologic techniques, the content and distribution of several important components of the coagulation system in the synovium of patients with RA, osteoarthritis (OA), or traumatic joint abnormalities requiring surgery were investigated. Samples from 3 patients from each category were examined in detail. RA synovium (compared with that of patients with OA or joint trauma) had increased numbers of macrophages and increased expression/content of fibrinogen,
tissue factor
, factor XIII, tissue transglutaminase, cross-linked fibrin (fibrin D dimer),
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
, and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor. Macrophage content in RA synovium was increased in both the lining cell areas and the interstitial cell areas. Fibrinogen was distributed throughout the tissue in all samples and was greater in RA synovium. In trauma and OA synovia,
tissue factor
was seen only in association with vessels (endothelial cells), but in RA synovium, it was markedly increased throughout the tissues. While fibrin D dimer was seen in small amounts in synovial lining cell areas of trauma and OA synovia, it was present in increased amounts in the lining cell and interstitial cell areas of RA synovium. Factor XIII and tissue transglutaminase were present in scant amounts in trauma and OA synovia, but there were increased amounts of both (especially tissue transglutaminase) in RA synovium in the vessel, lining cell, and interstitial cell areas. Urokinase and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor were also markedly increased in RA synovium. These results suggest that in inflamed synovium, there is ongoing extravascular tissue fibrin formation and dissolution that correlates with the degree of inflammation and macrophage content. Extravascular coagulation/fibrinolysis in RA represents a potential target for therapeutic intervention in this disease.
...
PMID:Extravascular fibrin formation and dissolution in synovial tissue of patients with osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis. 167 74
Immunohistochemical techniques applied to fresh frozen sections of metastatic malignant melanoma tissue revealed abundant fibrinogen (or fibrin I) in perivascular areas throughout the tumor connective tissue stroma. Fibrin was readily detected in a focal distribution in the connective tissue around nodules of viable tumor. Staining for D-dimer of cross-linked fibrin (using an antibody that cross-reacted with fragment D of fibrinogen) coincided with staining for fibrin. Diffuse staining of tumor cell bodies was observed for Factor X, and Factor XIII ("a" subunit) was detected in scattered areas of connective tissue throughout the tumors. Factor VII was not detected, and only rare tumor cells stained for
tissue factor
. These results support the concept that a tumor cell-associated, thrombin-generating pathway exists in situ in malignant melanoma tissue that includes Factor X but neither
tissue factor
nor Factor VII. By contrast, tumor cell staining was observed rarely for
urokinase
and to a variable extent for tissue plasminogen activator.
...
PMID:Malignant melanoma. Interaction with coagulation and fibrinolysis pathways in situ. 169 Sep 50
To explore mechanisms of coagulation activation in adenocarcinoma of the prostate, the occurrence and distribution of components of coagulation and fibrinolysis pathways in situ were studied by means of immunohistochemical techniques applied to frozen sections of fresh malignant and benign hyperplastic prostatic tissue obtained at transurethral resection. Fibrinogen was distributed throughout the perivascular and tumor connective tissue in both malignant and benign disease but was not present in adjacent areas of normal prostate. Antibodies specific for fibrin and D-dimer crosslink sites stained vascular endothelium focally in both malignant and benign tissues. Both neoplastic cells and benign hyperplastic glandular epithelial cells stained weakly and in a patchy distribution for
tissue factor
and focally for low-molecular-weight
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
. Focal staining of vascular endothelium was also observed for tissue plasminogen activator and plasmin-antiplasmin complex neoantigen. By contrast, no tissue staining was observed for factor VII, factor X, factor XIII "a" subunit, high-molecular-weight
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
, plasminogen activator inhibitors 1 to 3, protein C, and protein S. Thus, the similarity in findings between benign hyperplastic and neoplastic prostate tissue, the lack of either an intact tumor cell-associated coagulation pathway or fibrin formation, and the presence of fibrin on vascular endothelium are consistent with the concept that coagulation activation in prostatic cancer may not be due to a direct effect of the tumor cells on the clotting mechanism. Rather, such activation may be induced by a soluble tumor product that activates procoagulant activity on certain host (for example, vascular endothelial) cells. These findings, together with the lack of effect of warfarin anticoagulation on the clinical course of patients with prostatic cancer, contrast with findings in certain other tumor types and suggest that coagulation activation may not contribute to progression of adenocarcinoma of the prostate.
...
PMID:Fibrin formation on vessel walls in hyperplastic and malignant prostate tissue. 170 19
Vasculotropin/vascular endothelial cell growth factor (VAS/VEGF) is a newly purified growth factor with a unique specificity for vascular endothelial cells. We have investigated the interactions of VAS/VEGF with human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVE cells). 125I-VAS/VEGF was found to HUVE cells in a saturable manner with a half-maximum binding at 2.8 ng/ml. Scatchard analysis did show two classes of high-affinity binding sites. The first class displayed a dissociation constant of 9 pM with 500 sites/cell. The dissociation constant and the number of binding sites of the second binding class were variable for different HUVE cell cultures (KD = 179 +/- 101 pM, 5,850 +/- 2,950 sites/cell). Half-maximal inhibition of 125I-VAS/VEGF occurred with a threefold excess of unlabeled ligand. Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and heparin did not compete with 125I-VAS/VEGF binding. In contrast, suramin and protamin sulfate completely displaced 125I-VAS/VEGF binding from HUVE cells. VAS/VEGF was shown to be internalized in HUVE cells. Maximum internalization (55% of total cell-associated radioactivity) was observed after 30 min. 125I-VAS/VEGF was completely degraded 2-3 hr after binding. At 3 hr, the trichloroacetic acid (TCA)-soluble radioactivity accumulated in the medium was 60% of the total radioactivity released by HUVE cells. No degradation fragment of 125I-VAS/VEGF was observed. Chloroquine completely inhibited degradation. VAS/VEGF was able to induce angiogenesis in vitro in HUVE cells. However, it did not significantly modulate
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
(
u-PA
), tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1), and
tissue factor
(TF). Prostacyclin production was only stimulated at very high VAS/VEGF concentrations. Taken together, these results indicate that VAS/VEGF might be a potent inducer of neovascularization resulting from a direct interaction with endothelial cells. The angiogenic activity seems to be independent of the plasminogen activator or inhibitor system.
...
PMID:Interaction of vasculotropin/vascular endothelial cell growth factor with human umbilical vein endothelial cells: binding, internalization, degradation, and biological effects. 171 3
We studied the effect of fibrinogen degradation products D, E, and D-dimer on a human promonocytic leukemia cell line, NOMO-1. After exposure to a 10(-5)-mol/L fragment D or D-dimer, the cells displayed macrophage-like characteristics, such as adherence to plastic surfaces, and showed approximately a twofold increase in response to the nitroblue tetrazolium reduction test. The secretion of interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) into the medium was markedly stimulated by a 10(-5)-mol/L fragment D, E, and D-dimer, whereas a significant increase in IL-1 beta secretion was observed only in D-dimer-stimulated cells. In addition, D-dimer induced a rapid increase in
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
on day 1 (0.52 +/- 0.02 ng/mL v 0.07 +/- 0.01 ng/mL in the control culture) and a slow increase in plasminogen activator inhibitor-2 on day 5 (3.9 +/- 1.6 ng/mL v 1.2 +/- 0.2 ng/mL in the control culture). An increase in
tissue factor
(TF) was also demonstrated on the cell surface of NOMO-1 cells exposed to fragment D or D-dimer by indirect immunofluorescence using an anti-TF monoclonal antibody. Scatchard plot analysis showed that fragment D and D-dimer bound to the NOMO-1 cells with a kd of 3.3 nmol/L and 2.7 nmol/L, respectively. These results suggest that fragment D-dimer specifically stimulates cells of monocyte-macrophage lineage to secrete key substances that regulate blood coagulation, fibrinolysis, and inflammation.
...
PMID:FDP D-dimer induces the secretion of interleukin-1, urokinase-type plasminogen activator, and plasminogen activator inhibitor-2 in a human promonocytic leukemia cell line. 184 45
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