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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)
A method is described by which the heavy chain of human plasmin, obtained by partial reduction of
urokinase
-activated plasminogen with 2-mercaptoethanol, is adsorbed on lysine coupled to polyacrylamide. The heavy chain is recovered from the adsorbent by elution with 6-aminohexanoic acid (yield 60-65%). Sulfhydryl titrations of the heavy chain showed that the partial reduction involved primarily the cleavage of the sole interchain disulfide bridge of plasmin. Dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis gave essentially a single band corresponding to a component of about 60000 molecular weight. The NH2-terminal amino acid was predominantly
threonine
. 6-Aminohexanoic acid at different concentrations caused significant variations of the sedimentation and diffusion constants of the heavy chain indicating inhibitor-induced conformational alterations of the protein. The present results suggest that in plasmin only the heavy chain is capable of interacting with 6-aminohexanoic acid, and it appears that it is primarily this chain which plays an important role in the inhibition of the enzyme by 6-aminohexanoic acid.
...
PMID:A new method of isolation and some properties of the heavy chain of human plasmin. 12 54
A blood coagulation factor, Factor XIII, was highly purified from bovine fresh plasma by a method similar to those used for human plasma Factor XIII. The isolated Factor XIII consisted of two subunit polypeptides, a and b chains, with molecular weights of 79,000 +/- 2,000 and 75,000 +/- 2,000, respectively. In the conversion of Factor XIII to the active enzyme, Factor XIIIa, by bovine thrombin [EC 3.4.21.5], a peptide was liberated. This peptide, designated tentatively as "activation peptide," was isolated by gel-filtration on a Sephadex G-75 column. It contained a total of 37 amino acid residues with a masked N-terminal residue and C-terminal arginine. The whole amino acid sequence of "Activation peptide" was established by the dansyl-Edman method and standard enzymatic techniques, and the masked N-terminal residue was identified as N-acetylserine by using a rat liver acylamino acid-releasing enzyme. This enzyme specifically cleaved the N-acetylserylglutamyl peptide bond serine and the remaining peptide, which was now reactive to 1-dimethylamino-naphthalene-5-sulfonyl chloride. A comparison of the sequences of human and bovine "Activation peptide" revealed five amino acids replacements, Ser-3 to
Thr
; Gly-5 to Arg; Ile-14 to Val;
Thr
-18 to Asn, and Pro-26 to Leu. Another difference was the deletion of Leu-34 in the human peptide. Adsorption chromatography on a hydroxylapatite column in the presence of 0.1% sodium dodecyl sulfate was developed as a preparative procedure for the resolution of the two subunit polypeptides, a or a' chain and b chain, constituting the protein molecule of Factor XIII or Factor XIIIa. End group analyses on the isolated pure chains revealed that the structural change of Factor XIII during activation with thrombin occurs only in the N-terminal portion of the a chain, not in the N-terminal end of the b chain or in the C-terminal ends of the a and b chains. From these results, it was concluded that the activation of bovine plasma Factor XIII by thrombin must be accompanied by a limited proteolysis of the arginyl-glycyl bond located in the N-terminal region of the a chain, liberating the "Activation peptide." The possibility of activating Factor XII with other porteinases was examined using Factor Xa [EC 3.4.21.6], Factor XIIa, kallikreins [EC 3.4.21.8],
urokinase
[EC 3.4.99.26], trypsin [EC 3.4.21.4], ficin [EC 3.4.22.3], papain [EC 3.4.22.2], and bromelain [EC 3.4.22.4]. Among these enzymes, only bromelain and trypsin showed clear activating effects.
...
PMID:On the activation of bovine plasma factor XIII. Amino acid sequence of the peptide released by thrombin and the terminal residues of the subunit polypeptides. 122 22
The potential contribution of serine/
threonine
-specific protein phosphatases in the transcriptional regulation of plasminogen activator and plasminogen activator inhibitor gene expression was explored in human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma and U-937 monocyte-like cells using okadaic acid, a potent and specific inhibitor of phosphatases 1 and 2A (PP1 and PP2A). In both cell types okadaic acid induced plasminogen activator type 2 (PAI-2) gene transcription and mRNA and potentiated induction mediated by phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate and tumor necrosis factor. Okadaic acid-mediated induction of PAI-2 was inhibited by 8-bromo-cAMP in HT-1080 cells but not in U-937 cells. Okadaic acid had opposite effects on
urokinase
(u-PA) gene expression in the two cell lines; u-PA mRNA and gene transcription was suppressed in HT-1080 cells but transiently induced in U-937 cells. Tissue-type PA (t-PA) mRNA, although undetectable in U-937 cells, was also suppressed by okadaic acid in HT-1080 cells. This effect was selective, as constitutive and phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate-mediated expression of plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 mRNA was not modulated by okadaic acid in either cell type. These results indicate that PP1 and PP2A protein phosphatases are involved in signal transduction pathways modulating PAI-2, u-PA, and t-PA, and furthermore, that okadaic acid interaction with the protein kinase C and A pathways are gene- and cell type-specific.
...
PMID:Cell- and gene-specific interactions between signal transduction pathways revealed by okadaic acid. Studies on the plasminogen activating system. 131 13
Urokinase (
u-PA
) proteolytically cleaves both human plasma (pFn) and cellular (cFn) dimeric fibronectin (M(r) 440,000) into four major polypeptides of approximately M(r) 210,000, 200,000, 25,000, and 6,000. Amino acid sequence analysis of the polypeptide fragments indicated that the enzymatic cleavage of Fn occurs at two sites: 1) between an arginine/alanine peptide bond located C-terminal to residue 259; this cleavage liberates the N-terminal M(r) 25,000 fragment and the M(r) 210,000 and M(r) 200,000 polypeptides derived from the A and B chains of Fn, respectively; and 2) between an arginine/
threonine
peptide bond located C-terminal to residue 2,299, thereby yielding an M(r) 6,000 dimeric fragment containing the C-terminal interchain disulfide bonds. Predigestion of Fn with
u-PA
increased the molecule's vulnerability to further attack by the enzymes plasmin and cathepsin D. These data provide further biochemical evidence for the proteolytic cleavage of fibronectin by plasminogen activators and substantiate that
u-PA
digestion of Fn may be an initial event in the local degradation of the extracellular matrix by malignant cells, possessing elevated levels of these enzymes.
...
PMID:Localization of the cleavage sites on fibronectin following digestion by urokinase. 146 74
Immunoblotting analysis of purified human
urokinase plasminogen activator
(
u-PA
), gives a positive signal when reacted with anti-phosphotyrosine monoclonal antibodies (MoAb anti-P-Tyr); competition with o-phospho-DL-tyrosine (P-Tyr) but not o-phospho-DL-
threonine
or serine (P-Treo, P-Ser) completely suppresses this signal. Either the 55 kDa
u-PA
form and the lower Mw form (33 kDa) derived from the 55 kDa
u-PA
are Tyr-phosphorylated also the
u-PA
secreted in the culture media of human fibrosarcoma cells (HT-1080) is phosphorylated in tyrosine as well as
u-PA
present in tissue extracts of tumors induced in nude mice by HT-1080 cells. These data show that urine purified human
u-PA
and
u-PA
produced by human fibrosarcoma cells, in vitro and in vivo, are phosphorylated in tyrosine; furthermore our data show that
u-PA
is the major Tyr-phosphorylated protein present in these human tumor cells.
...
PMID:Tyrosine phosphorylation of human urokinase-type plasminogen activator. 190
A posttranslational modification site in natural and recombinant urinary-type plasminogen activators (urokinases; EC 3.4.21.31) has been localized to
Thr
-18, in the growth factor domain of the molecule. This is the region of
urinary plasminogen activator
responsible for its specific receptor binding. An unusual carbohydrate-protein linkage, a single monosaccharide, fucose, covalently attached directly to
threonine
in the peptide, is described here. The glycan moiety and the site of modification have been identified with mass spectrometry and confirmed by carbohydrate composition analysis, Edman degradation, and one- and two-dimensional NMR studies. This type of modification is normally not detected without mass spectrometry because the fucose-
threonine
bond is hydrolyzed under standard acidic conditions of the amino acid analysis and Edman sequencing. This modification may be widely found in other proteins.
...
PMID:Characterization of a posttranslational fucosylation in the growth factor domain of urinary plasminogen activator. 202 47
The highly specific plasminogen activator inhibitor of placental type, PAI-2, occurs in the placenta in a low molecular mass form of 46.6 kDa, and in pregnancy plasma in a (possibly glycosylated) high molecular mass form of 60 kDa. Extensive knowledge is available about the functional properties of PAI-2 as a plasminogen activator inhibitor and about its molecular biology and regulation. Of the several placenta proteins (PP) isolated, one of them, PP10, has a molecular mass of 48 kDa and its occurrence in malignancy and in complications during pregnancy has been the topic of a number of studies, though its properties and physiological significance are unknown. The present findings constitute evidence of immunological identity between PP10 and PAI-2. The sections of the amino acid sequence of PP10 analysed here were found to have identical counterparts in the sequence of the low molecular mass form of PA1-2, but in several preparations PP10 was found to occur in an inactive two-chain form due to cleavage of an Arg-
Thr
bond, the two peptide chains being linked to each other by a disulphide bridge. The cleavage site is identical to that observed in the reaction between PAI-2 and
urokinase
. The results make it possible to coordinate and correlate the findings of many separate studies and our own observations on PP10 and PAI-2.
...
PMID:Identity between the placental protein PP10 and the specific plasminogen activator inhibitor of placental type PAI-2. 204 83
Secretion of
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
(
uPA
) by chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF) is increased approximately 50-fold following transformation by Rous sarcoma virus (RSV). Using a cloned and fully sequenced chicken
uPA
cDNA probe, we have established that this increase in plasminogen activator production can be largely accounted for by an increase in cellular
uPA
mRNA. CEF contained on average less than 1 molecule of
uPA
mRNA/cell, whereas RSV-CEF contained 25-60 molecules/cell. The increase in cellular
uPA
mRNA levels was dependent on the activity of the RSV-encoded transforming protein, protein-tyrosine kinase pp60v-src. Cells infected with an RSV mutant encoding a temperature-sensitive form of the src protein (ts-NY68) contained low
uPA
mRNA levels when cultured at the nonpermissive temperature and high
uPA
mRNA levels when maintained at the permissive temperature. Temperature shift studies with tsNY68-CEF demonstrated that changes in pp60v-src activity rapidly altered
uPA
mRNA levels; the
uPA
mRNA content of total RNA extracts increased and decreased with half-time kinetics of 3-5 h. Serine/
threonine
-specific protein kinases also appear to modulate
uPA
mRNA levels in CEF cultures. Exposure of CEF and RSV-CEF for 24 h to the protein kinase C activating agent phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) increased cellular
uPA
mRNA levels to 20 and 260 molecules/cell, respectively. These data are consistent with the previously observed synergism between RSV and PMA in increasing plasminogen activator secretion. Nuclear run-on transcription analyses established that both RSV and PMA increase cellular
uPA
mRNA levels by way of increased
uPA
gene expression.
...
PMID:Plasminogen activator gene expression is induced by the src oncogene product and tumor promoters. 215 28
Complexes between tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and its rapidly acting inhibitor plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) are bound, internalized, and degraded by HepG2 cells. The mechanism involves endocytosis mediated by a specific high-affinity receptor. However, the particular domains of the complex that are recognized by the receptor have not been elucidated. To identify the determinants involved in ligand binding to the receptor, several variants of t-PA were assessed for their ability to form complexes with PAI-1 and thereby to inhibit specific cellular binding of complexes between structurally unmodified 125I-t-PA and PAI-1. Catalytically active variants lacking selected structural domains form complexes with PAI-1 and inhibit 125I-t-PA.PAI-1 binding to HepG2 cells. In addition, several forms of the plasminogen activator
urokinase
(
u-PA
), which shares partial structural homology with t-PA, were evaluated as competitors of cellular binding. The catalytically active two-chain forms of
u-PA
, but not the inactive proenzyme single-chain form, complex with PAI-1 and inhibit specific binding of 125I-t-PA.PAI-1, suggesting that the serine protease domain, rather than other domains, may confer the determinants required for cellular binding. However, a mutant t-PA with markedly reduced catalytic activity, resulting from replacement of the active site serine with
threonine
, not only forms complexes with PAI-1 but also inhibits specific cellular binding of unmodified 125I-t-PA.PAI-1. These data indicate that specific binding of t-PA.PAI-1 to HepG2 cells does not require a serine-containing catalytic site in the protease domain. To determine whether binding of the complex is mediated through other components of t-PA or through structural elements of PAI-1, both t-PA and PAI-1 were examined separately for capacity to bind directly to HepG2 cells. To exclude potential interactions with components of the extracellular matrix which contains binding sites for PAI-1, ligand binding to HepG2 cells in suspension was assessed. Although neither t-PA nor PAI-1 alone binds specifically to HepG2 cells, the preformed t-PA.PAI-1 complexes do. These findings suggest that specific binding of t-PA.PAI-1 requires elements of the PAI-1 moiety and/or parts of the protease domain of t-PA.
...
PMID:Identification of determinants involved in binding of tissue-type plasminogen activator-plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 complexes to HepG2 cells. 216 6
Mutant
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
(
u-PA
) genes and hybrid genes between tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and
u-PA
have been designed to direct the synthesis of new plasminogen activators and to investigate the structure-function relationship in these molecules. The following classes of constructs were made starting from cDNA encoding human t-PA or
u-PA
: 1)
u-PA
mutants in which the Arg156 and Lys158 were substituted with
threonine
, thus preventing cleavage by thrombin and plasmin; 2) hybrid molecules in which the NH2-terminal regions of t-PA (amino acid residues 1-67, 1-262, or 1-313) were fused with the COOH-terminal region of
u-PA
(amino acids 136-411, 139-411, or 195-411, respectively); and 3) a hybrid molecule in which the second kringle of t-PA (amino acids 173-262) was inserted between amino acids 130 and 139 of
u-PA
. In all cases but one, the recombinant proteins, produced by transfected eukaryotic cells, were efficiently secreted in the culture medium. The translation products have been tested for their ability to activate plasminogen after in situ binding to an insolubilized monoclonal antibody directed against
urokinase
. All recombinant enzymes were shown to be active, except those in which Lys158 of
u-PA
was substituted with
threonine
. Recombination of structural regions derived from t-PA, such as the finger, the kringle 2, or most of the A-chain sequences, with the protease part or the complete
u-PA
molecule did not impair the catalytic activity of the hybrid polypeptides. This observation supports the hypothesis that structural domains in t-PA and
u-PA
fold independently from one to another.
...
PMID:Mutant and chimeric recombinant plasminogen activators. Production in eukaryotic cells and preliminary characterization. 311 52
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