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)

Despite the ubiquitous presence of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) in normal tissues, endothelial cell proliferation in these tissues is usually very low, suggesting that bFGF is somehow sequestered from its site of action. Immunohistochemical staining revealed the localization of bFGF in basement membranes of diverse tissues, suggesting that the extracellular matrix (ECM) may serve as a reservoir for bFGF. Moreover, functional studies indicated that bFGF is an ECM component required for supporting endothelial cell proliferation and neuronal differentiation. We have found that bFGF is bound to heparan sulfate (HS) in the ECM and is released in an active form when the ECM-HS is degraded by heparanase expressed by normal and malignant cells (i.e. platelets, neutrophils, lymphoma cells). It is proposed that restriction of bFGF bioavailability by binding to ECM and local regulation of its release provide a novel mechanism for neovascularization in normal and pathological situations. The subendothelial ECM contains also tissue type- and urokinase type-plasminogen activators which participate in cell invasion and tissue remodeling. These results and studies on the properties of other ECM-immobilized enzymes (i.e. thrombin, plasmin, lipoprotein lipase) and growth factors (GM-CSF, IL-3, osteogenin), suggest that the ECM provides a storage depot for biologically active molecules which are thereby stabilized and protected. This may allow a more localized and persistent mode of action, as compared to the same molecules in a fluid phase.
...
PMID:Extracellular matrix-resident basic fibroblast growth factor: implication for the control of angiogenesis. 171 29

We have identified a leukemia-differentiating activity (LDA) in medium conditioned by the LD-1 melanoma, a G-CSF secreting human tumor line. Partially-purified LDA induces HL-60 cells to produce superoxide, become phagocytic, and to develop macrophage-like morphology and surface markers. The LDA markedly suppresses clonal growth in agar of HL-60 cells, and cells of the human myeloid leukemia lines PBL 985 and K562, but does not suppress clonal growth of the B-lymphoblast lines Raji and Daudi. The molecular weight of this material is approx. 40,000 daltons. It can be separated from the bulk of the colony stimulating activity on phenyl sepharose chromatography. The LDA is not neutralized by antibodies to G-CSF, GM-CSF, IFN alpha, IFN gamma, TNF, urokinase, and tissue plasminogen activator, and is not inhibited by preincubation with aprotinin. The LDA in conditioned medium may be different from previously described differentiating factors, and may represent an additional class of human growth regulators.
...
PMID:Leukemia-differentiating activity expressed by the human melanoma cell line LD-1. 316 98

Although Mycobacterium avium is usually nonpathogenic in healthy individuals, in vitro infection of macrophages (M phi) from the majority of healthy donors induces death of the cells 2 wk after infection; this effect is in contrast to noninfected M phi, which survive for months in culture. We demonstrate here that treatment of normal M phi with indomethacin further shortens the life of these cells to 48 h after infection with M. avium. Indomethacin treatment of the M phi also prevents M. avium-dependent accumulation of mRNA-encoding plasminogen activator inhibitor type-2 (PAI-2), an inhibitor of urokinase-type plasminogen activator. Occurrence of nuclear condensation and DNA fragmentation in M phi pretreated with indomethacin and infected with M. avium indicates that the early death of these cells is caused by apoptosis. In contrast, priming of M phi with GM-CSF significantly prolongs their survival after M. avium infection and enhances M. avium-induced accumulation of PAI-2 mRNA. Most importantly, addition of PAI-2 is sufficient to prevent apoptosis of M phi infected with M. avium in the presence of indomethacin. Finally, M phi not treated with indomethacin also die of apoptosis 7 to 10 days after M. avium infection and can be rescued by PAI-2. These studies indicate that production of PAI-2 by normal M phi as a consequence of M. avium infection inhibits programmed cell death, a mechanism that might serve to prevent the spread of the infection.
...
PMID:Plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 prevents programmed cell death of human macrophages infected with Mycobacterium avium, serovar 4. 763 97

Expression of the receptor for the urokinase type plasminogen activator (uPAR) has been studied by flow cytometry and immunohistology in normal blood and bone marrow cells, in vitro activated lymphoid cells, and tissue samples from reactive lymph nodes (n = 6), thymus (n = 2) and malignant lymphomas (n = 82), or leukemias (n = 32). HL-60 myeloid precursor cells and CD34-positive normal stem cells also were analyzed. In the normal cells, staining was confined to monocytes, macrophages, neutrophils, and myeloid precursors. No labelling was seen of normal or activated lymphoid cells. Purified CD34-positive hematopoietic progenitors were uPAR negative, but expressed uPAR during differentiation in short-term liquid culture stimulated in vitro by recombinant interleukin (IL)-1, IL-3, IL-6, granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (CSF), granulocyte-CSF, and stem cell factor. Enhanced uPAR expression was also seen in HL-60 cells after induction of differentiation with dimethyl sulfoxide or 1 alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. In lymphomas and leukemias, the staining pattern was similar to that seen in the normal cells with labelling of monocytic and myeloid that seen in the normal cells with labelling of monocytic and myeloid malignancies, but not of the neoplastic cells in B-cell or T-cell lymphomas or Hodgkin's disease. In conclusion, uPAR is a differentiation marker for myeloid and monocytic cells, and may act to facilitate migration of these cells in normal and pathologic conditions by cell-associated plasminogen activation. Whether expression of uPAR in myeloid and monocytic malignancies relates to their growth and behavior will be an important topic for investigations in the future.
...
PMID:Expression of the receptor for urokinase-type plasminogen activator in normal and neoplastic blood cells and hematopoietic tissue. 780 1

It has been shown that, in breast stroma, urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) mRNA is predominantly expressed by myofibroblasts located at the invasive areas of the tumor. To examine which factors present in a tumor environment are candidates responsible for the induction of these uPA-producing myofibroblasts, we studied in vitro the capacity of a paired panel of normal and tumor-derived human breast fibroblasts to produce uPA protein and the myofibroblast marker alpha-smooth-muscle-actin (alpha-SMA) in response to various cytokines implicated in the process of tissue-remodeling during malignant transformation. We found that fibroblasts produced increased amounts of uPA protein after exposure to a-FGF, b-FGF, EGF, PDGF-BB, and IFN-gamma, were unaffected in this respect by IL-6, M-CSF, GM-CSF and Oncostatin M, and produced decreased amounts of uPA protein after exposure to IL-1alpha, TNF-alpha, IGF-I, and IGF-II. None of these cytokines were able to induce a striking increase in the fraction of alpha-SMA-positive fibroblasts. On the other hand, 25 pM TGFbeta1 increased the fraction of alpha-SMA-positive fibroblasts 5-fold in both normal and tumor-tissue-derived fibroblasts. Nonetheless, the normal-derived fibroblasts were unaffected in their uPA-producing capacity by TGFbeta1, and the tumor-derived fibroblasts produced decreased amounts of uPA protein after exposure to this cytokine, implying that at least in vitro the myofibroblast phenotype is not a prerequisite for the production of uPA by human breast fibroblasts. In addition, we established that the basal-uPA-production of both normal and tumor-derived fibroblasts was increased by autocrinely produced b-FGF-like activity, and that the basal-uPA-production of at least the normal-derived fibroblasts was decreased by autocrinely produced IGF-like activity. Altogether, our data suggest an active role for fibroblasts in the process of uPA-directed breast tumor proteolysis.
...
PMID:Cytokine-regulated urokinase-type-plasminogen-activator (uPA) production by human breast fibroblasts in vitro. 1047 75

Inflammatory conversion of murine astrocytes correlates with the activation of various MAPK, and inhibition of terminal MAPKs like JNK or p38 dampens the inflammatory reaction. Mixed lineage kinases (MLKs), a family of MAPK kinase kinases, may therefore be involved in astrocyte inflammation. In this study, we explored the effect of the MLK inhibitors CEP-1347 and CEP-11004 on the activation of murine astrocytes by either TNF plus IL-1 or by a complete cytokine mix containing additional IFN-gamma. The compounds blocked NO-, PG-, and IL-6 release with a median inhibitory concentration of approximately 100 nM. This activity correlated with a block of the JNK and the p38 pathways activated in complete cytokine mix-treated astrocytes. Although CEP-1347 did not affect the activation of NF-kappaB, it blocked the expression of cyclooxygenase-2 and inducible NO synthase at the transcriptional level. Quantitative transcript profiling of 17 inflammation-linked genes revealed a specific modulation pattern of astrocyte activation by MLK inhibition, for instance, characterized by up-regulation of the anti-stress factors inhibitor of apoptosis protein-2 and activated transcription factor 4, no effect on manganese superoxide dismutase and caspase-11, and down-regulation of major inflammatory players like TNF, GM-CSF, urokinase-type plasminogen activator, and IL-6. In conclusion, MLK inhibitors like CEP-1347 are highly potent astrocyte immune modulators with a novel spectrum of activity.
...
PMID:Specific modulation of astrocyte inflammation by inhibition of mixed lineage kinases with CEP-1347. 1529 95

AML patients may suffer from a disseminated coagulopathy, which can aggravate a pre-existing bleeding tendency due to thrombocytopenia and platelet dysfunction. The cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying this coagulopathy, however, are not completely understood. Indeed, the broad and increasing therapeutic use of cytotoxic drugs and growth factors is likely to contribute to the complexity of hemostatic abnormalities encountered in this hematologic malignancy. The nature of coagulation activation in AML was therefore investigated in vitro using the human leukemic cell line, HL60. Tissue factor (TF) was almost entirely located on the cell surface and bound factor VIIa, but only 15-25% of this TF was primarily functionally active. Treatment with increasing concentrations of daunorubicin or cytosine-beta-D-arabinofuranoside, two cytotoxic drugs commonly used in AML therapy, induced apoptosis and secondary necrosis of HL60 cells and resulted in marked decryption of TF PCA independent of de novo protein synthesis. This PCA-modulating effect was concomitant with and functionally dependent on the exposure of phosphatidylserine on the outer membrane leaflet. Similar observations were made in analogous ex vivo studies on patient-derived myeloblasts. Incubation of HL60 cells with GM-CSF, a cytokine expressed in the bone marrow microenvironment and used as an adjunct to AML treatment, evoked a cellular response, which included both enhanced TF production and release of VEGF-A and uPA into the culture medium. We conclude that both decryption of pre-formed TF PCA by chemotherapeutic drugs and de novo induction of TF by cytokines such as GM-CSF can regulate the pro-coagulant phenotype of HL60 cells in vitro.
...
PMID:An in vitro study on the mechanisms of coagulation activation in acute myelogenous leukemia (AML): role of tissue factor regulation by cytotoxic drugs and GM-CSF. 1554 44

Using thrombopoietin (TPO), as selective pressure, several TPO-dependent clones were isolated from the murine multipotential IL-3-dependent cell line 32D. Four of them were fully characterized. They depended on TPO for survival and proliferation and, although retaining the capacity to grow in IL-3, did not respond to either EPO, G-CSF or GM-CSF. 32D TPO cells were heterogeneous in morphology and ranged from small cells, with a DNA content nearly tetraploid and a modal chromosome no. 66, to cells 50-75 microm in diameter containing multiple (up to 5-6) interconnected nuclei with a clear megakaryocyte (Mk) morphology by electron microscopy. Cell sorter isolation and single cell cloning experiments indicated that the small cells were those capable to proliferate in TPO and to generate the larger ones over time. 32D TPO cells expressed Mk-specific markers by FACS (CD41, CD61 and 2D5) and RT-PCR (acetyl cholinesterase E and platelet factor 4) and their unique profile, by gene array analysis, included expression of urokinase plasminogen activator surface receptor (CD87 or uPAR), plasminogen activator inhibitor and coagulation factor II (thrombin) receptor (Cf2r). In addition, by quantitative RT-PCR, 32D TPO clones expressed levels of Gata1 similar to those expressed by freshly isolated Mks (DeltaCt approximately 4.7 in both cases). In conclusion, the 32D TPO subclones described here are among the few pure Mk cell lines isolated so far and, for their unique properties, may prove themselves as a useful model to study Mk differentiation.
...
PMID:Isolation of TPO-dependent subclones from the multipotent 32D cell line. 1605 57

Rearrangements of the RET receptor tyrosine kinase gene generating RET/PTC oncogenes are specific to papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), the most frequent thyroid tumor. Here, we show that the RET/PTC1 oncogene, when exogenously expressed in primary normal human thyrocytes, induces the expression of a large set of genes involved in inflammation and tumor invasion, including those encoding chemokines (CCL2, CCL20, CXCL8, and CXCL12), chemokine receptors (CXCR4), cytokines (IL1B, CSF-1, GM-CSF, and G-CSF), matrix-degrading enzymes (metalloproteases and urokinase-type plasminogen activator and its receptor), and adhesion molecules (L-selectin). This effect is strictly dependent on the presence of the RET/PTC1 Tyr-451 (corresponding to RET Tyr-1062 multidocking site). Selected relevant genes (CCL20, CCL2, CXCL8, CXCR4, L-selectin, GM-CSF, IL1B, MMP9, UPA, and SPP1/OPN) were found up-regulated also in clinical samples of PTC, particularly those characterized by RET/PTC activation, local extrathyroid spread, and lymph node metastases, when compared with normal thyroid tissue or follicular thyroid carcinoma. These results, demonstrating that the RET/PTC1 oncogene activates a proinflammatory program, provide a direct link between a transforming human oncogene, inflammation, and malignant behavior.
...
PMID:Induction of a proinflammatory program in normal human thyrocytes by the RET/PTC1 oncogene. 1620 90

Plasminogen activators are used in thrombolytic stroke therapy. However, it is increasingly recognized that they have other actions besides fibrinolysis. In this study, we assess potential pro-inflammatory effects of tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) in rat cortical astrocytes. Both uPA and tPA induced rapid dose-dependent upregulation in MMP-2 and MMP-9, as demonstrated by zymography of conditioned media. In addition, a multiplex ELISA array demonstrated that patterned responses in chemokines and cytokines were also evoked. Exposure to tPA induced elevations in secreted MIP-2, MCP-1 and GRO/KC. Exposure to uPA induced elevations in secreted IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, GMCSF, MIP-1alpha, MIP-2, MIP-3alpha, MCP-1, RANTES and fractalkine. These data suggest that plasminogen activators may trigger selected pro-inflammatory responses at the neurovascular interface. Whether these effects influence thrombolytic stroke therapy warrants further investigation.
...
PMID:Induction of matrix metalloproteinase, cytokines and chemokines in rat cortical astrocytes exposed to plasminogen activators. 1738 75


1 2 Next >>