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)

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

The effect of extracellular matrix composition on the location, amount, and activity of cell-associated urokinase-type plasminogen activator was tested using HT-1080 cells adherent to either fibronectin or vitronectin. Specific immunoprecipitation of newly synthesized urokinase indicated that cells adherent to fibronectin synthesized 2-3-fold more urokinase than cells adherent to vitronectin. Complexes of urokinase and plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) were detected in cell layers of vitronectin-adherent but not fibronectin-adherent cells. Inhibition of PAI-1 using a neutralizing monoclonal antibody resulted in a 3-fold increase in urokinase enzymatic activity on vitronectin adherent cells. Urokinase activity on fibronectin adherent cells was only slightly increased following PAI-1 neutralization. Examination of both HT-1080 and normal human fibroblast cells by immunofluorescent microscopy localized urokinase-type plasminogen activator to discrete, focal areas underneath cells adherent to vitronectin. Urokinase was not detectable by immunofluorescence on cells adherent to fibronectin. The addition of exogenous prourokinase to locate urokinase receptors on adherent HT-1080 cells indicated that the focal localization of cell-surface urokinase resulted from the clustering of urokinase receptors following adhesion to vitronectin but not fibronectin-coated substrates. These results suggest that vitronectin can contribute to the control of cell-surface plasmin activity by regulating the synthesis of urokinase and directing the localization of urokinase receptors.
...
PMID:Vitronectin regulates the synthesis and localization of urokinase-type plasminogen activator in HT-1080 cells. 137 87

Hyperthermia is a clinical sign of inflammation and constitutes in itself an adaptive defense mechanism. The fibrinolytic system, a highly regulated proteolytic system, is involved in inflammatory processes. Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) is the principal inhibitor of the two activators of the fibrinolytic system: tissue- and urokinase-type PAs (t-PA and u-PA). Our present paper provides the first evidence that hyperthermia can directly induce PAI-1. A moderate heat stress, sufficient to induce heat shock protein 70 mRNA approximately 100-fold, resulted in a two- to three-fold increase in functionally active PAI-1 in the conditioned medium of human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma and Hep G2 hepatoma cells. Exposure of these cells to 42 degrees C led to a similar two-fold and two- to five-fold induction of PAI-1 mRNA expression in HT-1080 and Hep G2 cells, respectively, as has been determined by using both oligo d(T) selected and total RNA preparations. These results suggest that the observed increase in PAI-1 accumulation is due to an induction of PAI-1 biosynthesis. Run-on transcription analysis indicates that the induction of PAI-1 biosynthesis by hyperthermia is mediated by a stimulation of PAI-1 gene transcription. No significant effect of hyperthermia was found on t-PA or u-PA at the level of antigen accumulation, mRNA, and gene transcription in human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells. These results point to an additional regulatory mechanism of fibrinolysis in the context of inflammation.
...
PMID:Induction of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 biosynthesis by hyperthermia. 165 90

Polyclonal antibodies against plasminogen activator inhibitor type-I (PAI-1) caused rapid retraction and rounding of substrate-attached HT-1080 cells. The kinetics and extent of antibody-mediated cell rounding were not dependent on either urokinase or plasmin activity. Cells adherent to vitronectin-coated substrates detached within 2 h of antibody addition. Cells adherent to fibronectin were unaffected by the antibodies. Immunoblotting of substrate-attached material indicated that HT-1080 cells deposited PAI-1 into vitronectin, but not fibronectin, dependent contacts. These data suggest that the antibody-mediated cell rounding resulted from a steric disruption of vitronectin-dependent adhesions, indicating that the binding site on vitronectin for PAI-1 is near, but does not overlap, the binding site for vitronectin receptor. The accumulation of PAI-1 into vitronectin-dependent adhesion sites correlated temporally with the preferential degradation of fibronectin from the substrate. HT-1080 cells adherent to either fibronectin or vitronectin were able to activate exogenous plasminogen to plasmin. Plasmin levels were increased 200% on cells adherent to fibronectin and 100% on cells adherent to vitronectin. In the presence of a neutralizing antibody against PAI-1, vitronectin adherent cells activated plasminogen to the same extent as fibronectin adherent cells. Plasmin levels of 200% above baseline were associated with retraction of cells from the substrate. The ability of vitronectin adherent cells to activate exogenous plasmin was completely blocked in the presence of neutralizing antibodies against urokinase. These data represent the first demonstration that vitronectin-associated PAI-1 regulates urokinase in focal contact areas.
...
PMID:Plasminogen activator inhibitor type I stabilizes vitronectin-dependent adhesions in HT-1080 cells. 169 54

Plasminogen activation on the cell surface is regulated by a variety of modulators which balance surface-bound plasminogen activators (PAs) and plasminogen activator inhibitors (PAIs). In this study, we developed as assay system to assess modulation of cell-associated plasminogen activation. Plasmin generation by endogenous plasminogen activators was measured with a combination of exogenously added plasminogen and a chromogenic substrate, S-2251, in the presence of living cells. A cell surface PA activity was quantitated by adopting a rate of plasmin generation. We used HT-1080, a human fibrosarcoma cell line, as representative of cells which have both PAs and PAIs on their cell surface. A basal level of cell surface PA activity was specifically reduced by anti-urokinase-type PA IgG and enhanced by anti-PAI-1 IgG, suggesting that the basal level is determined by a balance between uPA and PAI-1 on the cell surface. We examined effects of dexamethasone and thrombin on cell surface PA activity in the assay system. Dexamethasone appeared to suppress the cell surface PA activity by enhancing de novo synthesis of PAI-1, whereas thrombin suppressed it by inactivating single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activators. These results indicate that our assay system can be adapted for the screening of various types of PA modulators.
...
PMID:An assay system for the modulators of plasminogen activation on the cell surface. 189 67

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

Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) was found to induce type-1 plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) antigen in the human fibrosarcoma cell line HT-1080, and PAI-1 and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) antigens in the human carcinoma cell line T-CAR1; tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen was not affected or slightly decreased. The effects in HT-1080 and T-CAR1 cells were preceded by increases in the cellular levels of the corresponding mRNAs. Cycloheximide caused an increase of PAI-1 mRNA in T-CAR1 cells, but not in HT-1080 cells; during this increase the relative abundance of the two PAI-1 mRNA species, of 2.3 kb and 3.4 kb, respectively, changed strongly in favor of the longer transcript. We conclude that TNF-alpha may affect proteolytic activity in the microenvironment of cells in malignant tumors by affecting gene expression of u-PA and PAI-1.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha regulates mRNA for urokinase-type plasminogen activator and type-1 plasminogen activator inhibitor in human neoplastic cell lines. 250 Nov 20

A cosmid (cos pUK0322) harboring the complete human urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) gene and Geneticin resistance as a selectable marker was isolated from a human genomic library and characterized. After transfection of cos pUK0322 into mouse L cells and selection, several plasminogen activator (PA)-expressing clones were obtained and one (LuPA) was chosen for additional study. The PA expressed was identical to human pro-u-PA in enzymatic, electrophoretic, and antigenic properties. The expression of PA was stable over 50 population doublings. The regulation of the transfected gene was studied by treatment of the cells with various hormones and other effectors. Expression of PA activity was inhibited fivefold by dexamethasone and stimulated two- to threefold by agonists of the adenylate cyclase dependent pathway of signal transduction, such as dibutyryl cyclic AMP and cholera and pertussis toxins. The modulation of PA activity was associated with corresponding changes in mRNA steady-state levels. The phenotypic changes associated with pro-u-PA expression were analyzed in vitro by degradation of 3H-labeled extracellular matrix (ECM), invasion of a matrigel basement membrane analogue, and by light and electron microscopy. LuPA cells and reference HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells, in contrast to control Lneo cells transfected with the neomycin resistance gene, degraded the ECM and invaded the matrigel basement membrane. Matrix degradation correlated with the modulation of pro-u-PA gene expression as it was inhibited by dexamethasone and promoted by dibutyryl cyclic AMP. Inhibition of PA or plasmin using anti-u-PA IgG or aprotinin prevented ECM degradation and invasion. These results demonstrate that u-PA expression alone is sufficient to confer to a cell an experimental invasive phenotype.
...
PMID:Mouse L cells expressing human prourokinase-type plasminogen activator: effects on extracellular matrix degradation and invasion. 250 27

Human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells produce urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and type 1 plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1). We found that after incubation of monolayer cultures with purified native human plasminogen in serum-containing medium, bound plasmin activity could be eluted from the cells with tranexamic acid, an analogue of lysine. The bound plasmin was the result of plasminogen activation on the cell surface; plasmin activity was not taken up onto cells after deliberate addition of plasmin to the serum-containing medium. The cell surface plasmin formation was inhibited by an anticatalytic monoclonal antibody to u-PA, indicating that this enzyme was responsible for the activation. Preincubation of the cells with diisopropyl fluorophosphate-inhibited u-PA led to a decrease in surface-bound plasmin, indicating that a large part, if not all, of the cell surface plasminogen activation was catalyzed by surface-bound u-PA. In the absence of plasminogen, most of the cell surface u-PA was present in its single-chain proenzyme form, while addition of plasminogen led to formation of cell-bound two-chain u-PA. The latter reaction was catalyzed by cell-bound plasmin. Cell-bound u-PA was accessible to inhibition by endogenous PAI-1 and by added PAI-2, while the cell-bound plasmin was inaccessible to serum inhibitors, but accessible to added aprotinin and an anticatalytic monoclonal antibody. A model for cell surface plasminogen activation is proposed in which plasminogen binding to cells from serum medium is followed by plasminogen activation by trace amounts of bound active u-PA, to form bound plasmin, which in turn serves to produce more active u-PA from bound pro-u-PA. This exponential process is subject to regulation by endogenous PAI-1 and limited to the pericellular space.
...
PMID:Activation of pro-urokinase and plasminogen on human sarcoma cells: a proteolytic system with surface-bound reactants. 252 91

After incubation of confluent monolayer cultures of human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells with purified native human plasminogen in plasminogen-depleted serum-containing medium, bound plasmin activity could be specifically eluted from the cells with tranexamic acid, an analogue of lysine. Dexamethasone reduced the amount of recoverable bound plasmin activity in a dose-dependent manner. Dexamethasone was also found to induce a time- and dose-dependent decrease in the ability of the cells to bind added plasmin. Untreated HT-1080 cells bound added plasmin with a high capacity (600,000 molecules bound per cell), and this decreased to an undetectable level after treatment with 100 nM dexamethasone. The kinetics of the loss of plasmin binding by the dexamethasone-treated sarcoma cells, a clear decrease after 4 h, correlated with those for the loss of cell-bound urokinase (u-PA) activity. Plasmin was not, however, bound to the active site of u-PA: an anti-catalytic monoclonal antibody to u-PA had no effect on plasmin binding. Other glucocorticoids, such as hydrocortisone and corticosterone, had a similar effect to dexamethasone on plasmin binding to HT-1080 cells. The effect of glucocorticoids on the plasmin receptor seemed to occur at least partly via a decrease in the affinity for plasmin, since the Kd for plasmin with untreated cells was 5.4 x 10(-9) M, and with cells treated with 5 nM dexamethasone, the Kd value for plasmin was 1.2 x 10(-7) M. These results show that glucocorticoids induce down-regulation of plasmin receptors on the surface of HT-1080 cells: a novel mechanism, in addition to the known effects of glucocorticoids on u-PA and PA inhibitors, by which human tumor cells may be disarmed of their pericellular proteolytic activity.
...
PMID:Down-regulation of plasmin receptors on human sarcoma cells by glucocorticoids. 253 25


1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>