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)

Effects of sex steroids (estradiol-17 beta, E2; progesterone, Prog) and growth factors (epidermal growth factor, EGF; transforming growth factor-alpha, TGF-alpha) on invasive activity and 5'-deoxy-5-fluorouridine (5'-dFUrd) sensitivity of ovarian adenocarcinoma OMC-3 cells were investigated. Tumor cell migration along a gradient of substratum-bound fibronectin and invasion into reconstituted basement membrane were inhibited by 10 microM Prog, but stimulated by 0.1-10 nM EGF and TGF-alpha in a concentration-dependent manner. E2 did not have any effect on tumor cell migration or invasion. The zymography of tumor conditioned medium showed that the treatment of OMC-3 cells with EGF and TGF-alpha resulted in increases of type IV collagenase, stromelysin and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). EGF and TGF-alpha up-regulated thymidine phosphorylase (dThdPase) expression of tumor cells and consequently enhanced the antiproliferative action of 5'-dFUrd, which is converted to 5-fluorouracil by dThdPase. E2 and Prog did not have significant effects on the expression of proteolytic enzymes and dThdPase, or on the 5'-dFUrd sensitivity of tumor cells. The inhibitory effect of Prog on tumor cell invasion may depend on its inhibitory action on the motility of tumor cells. These results suggest that EGF and TGF-alpha simultaneously up-regulate the potential of ovarian adenocarcinoma cells to invade extracellular matrices and their dThdPase expression, both of which are associated with the specific action of 5'-dFUrd selectively to kill tumor cells with high invasive and metastatic potential.
...
PMID:Effects of sex steroids and growth factors on invasive activity and 5'-deoxy-5-fluorouridine sensitivity in ovarian adenocarcinoma OMC-3 cells. 1008 95

Proteolytic enzymes, postulated to create an avenue for cell migration by digestion of host extracellular matrix molecules, have been implicated in neoplastic glial cell migration. A similar process is likely to occur in the developing brain. Fetal rabbit brain fragments transplanted into the striatum of the neonatal Shiverer mouse give rise to cells which migrate from the graft site and differentiate into astrocytes and oligodendrocytes. Proteinase expression by transplanted brain cells was studied using immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization. Immature donor cells expressed the mRNAs for matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) 1 (collagenase) and 3 (stromelysin). Northern blot analysis of rabbit brain showed that MMP-1 in particular is expressed in the immature rabbit cerebrum and down-regulated during maturation. Immature donor cells exhibited immunoreactivity for urokinase plasminogen activator. However, immunoreactivity was also present in maturing neurons. Donor and host astroglia in the vicinity of grafts were immunoreactive for MMP-2 and tissue-type plasminogen activator. This expression may represent a reactive phenomenon, not specifically related to cell migration, by mature astrocytes. Based upon our findings, MMP-1 appears to be a candidate for involvement in migration of immature brain cells in the cerebrum.
...
PMID:Expression of extracellular matrix degrading enzymes during migration of xenografted brain cells. 1019 76

Matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) may play a critical catalytic role in tissue remodeling in vivo, but it is secreted by cells as a stable, inactive zymogen, pro-MMP-9, and requires activation for catalytic function. A number of proteolytic enzymes activate pro-MMP-9 in vitro, but the natural activator(s) of MMP-9 is unknown. To examine MMP-9 activation in a cellular setting we employed cultures of human tumor cells (MDA-MB-231 breast carcinoma cells) that were induced to produce MMP-9 over a 200-fold concentration range (0.03-8.1 nM). The levels of tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinase (TIMPs) in the induced cultures remain relatively constant at 1-4 nM. Quantitation of the zymogen/active enzyme status of MMP-9 in the MDA-MB-231 cultures indicates that even in the presence of potential activators, the molar ratio of endogenous MMP-9 to TIMP dictates whether pro-MMP-9 activation can progress. When the MMP-9/TIMP ratio exceeds 1.0, MMP-9 activation progresses, but through an interacting protease cascade involving plasmin and stromelysin 1 (MMP-3). Plasmin, generated by the endogenous urokinase-type plasminogen activator, is not an efficient activator of pro-MMP-9, neither the secreted pro-MMP-9 nor the very low levels of pro-MMP-9 associated with intact cells. Although plasmin can proteolytically process pro-MMP-9, this limited action does not yield an enzymatically active MMP-9, nor does it cause the MMP-9 to be more susceptible to activation. Plasmin, however, is very efficient at generating active MMP-3 (stromelysin-1) from exogenously added pro-MMP-3. The activated MMP-3 becomes a potent activator of the 92-kDa pro-MMP-9, yielding an 82-kDa species that is enzymatically active in solution and represents up to 50-75% conversion of the zymogen. The activated MMP-9 enhances the invasive phenotype of the cultured cells as their ability to both degrade extracellular matrix and transverse basement membrane is significantly increased following zymogen activation. That this enhanced tissue remodelling capability is due to the activation of MMP-9 is demonstrated through the use of a specific anti-MMP-9 blocking monoclonal antibody.
...
PMID:Activation of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) via a converging plasmin/stromelysin-1 cascade enhances tumor cell invasion. 1022 58

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.
...
PMID:Temporal and topographic matrix metalloproteinase expression after vascular injury in mice. 1036 56

During progesterone-induced decidualization of estradiol (E2)-primed human endometrial stromal cells (HESCs), the interstitial-type extracellular matrix (ECM) of the follicular phase endometrium is transformed in the luteal phase to a mixture of residual interstitial- and new basal laminar-type components. This transformation is accelerated by reduced proteolytic activity of HESCs undergoing decidualization (DZ). In cultured HESCs, progestins, but not E2, induce the expression of several DZ markers, and E2 enhances these effects despite the lack of response to E2 alone. Using this well-characterized in vitro DZ model we evaluated the expression of plasminogen activators (PAs), which degrade ECM components that undergo rapid turnover, and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), which degrade the bulk of ECM components. Medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) inhibited the catalytic activity of urokinase-type PA (uPA) and tissue-type PA (tPA) as well as the expression of such MMPs as interstitial collagenase (MMP-1) and stromelysin-1 (MMP-3). Moreover, E2 + MPA elicited greater inhibitory effects on the expression of all of these proteases. Progestin inhibition of PA activities reflected reciprocal upregulation in the output of the PA inhibitor PAI-1, which produced large molar excesses of PAI-1 compared with the PAs in HESC-conditioned medium. By contrast, the tissue inhibitor of the MMPs, TIMP1, as well as gelatinase A (MMP-2), was constitutively expressed by the HESCs. In the absence of implantation, menstruation-associated degradation of the functional endometrial ECM is triggered by withdrawal of circulating ovarian steroids. This process was evaluated in cultured HESCs that were first decidualized during 10 days of exposure to E2 + MPA, and then withdrawn to steroid-free medium with and without the antiprogestin RU 486. As expected, steroid withdrawal reversed progestin-inhibited PA activity as well as the expression of MMP-1 and MMP-3 and progestin-enhanced PAI-1; much greater reversal was observed in medium supplemented with RU 486. Unlike the changes in PAI-1, neither TIMP1, nor MMP-2 expression was affected by withdrawal to steroid-free or to RU 486-medium. By altering the composition of the ECM of the luteal phase endometrium, progestin-elicited inhibition of the PAs, uPA and tPA, as well as that of the MMPs, MMP-1 and MMP-3, modulates trophoblast adhesion, migration and differentiation. Conversely, steroid withdrawal elicited increases in uPA, MMP-1 and MMP-3 activities would promote endometrial sloughing by degrading the mixture of decidual cell-derived basement membrane-like proteins and interstitial components that comprise the stromal ECM of the perimenstrual endometrium.
...
PMID:Implications of decidualization-associated protease expression in implantation and menstruation. 1040 70

Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) cells are considered to be of endothelial origin. KS lesions are characterized by hyperproliferation and an invasive phenotype. We have determined that KS cell cultures constitutively secrete multiple forms of several matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and an altered form of urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) by zymogram and Western analysis of the culture media. MMPs are a family of secreted endoproteinases which degrade components of the extracellular matrix. Their enhanced expression and activity are strongly correlated with cellular processes involving tissue remodeling and invasion. The KS cells secrete increased levels of gelatinase A and B and a high molecular weight uPA in vitro when compared with non-KS endothelial or epithelial cells. Multiple forms of gelatinases A and B were observed on gelatin zymograms. Caseinolytic bands observed were confirmed by Western blot analysis to be due to stromelysin activity, whereas matrilysin was not detected by casein zymography. Western blot analysis also detected secretion of interstitial collagenase and high molecular weight uPA. Gelatinolytic activity with the mobility of gelatinase B was detected on gelatin zymograms, but not by Western analysis. This unusual constitutive expression pattern of MMPs and uPA by KS cells in vitro is characterized by elevated levels of gelatinase A, gelatinase B, interstitial collagenase, stromelysin and a high molecular weight form of uPA, and the lack of expression of matrilysin. These secreted MMPs, taken together, are capable of digesting a broad range of components of the extracellular matrix. This unusual pattern is likely to contribute to the characteristic hyperproliferative and invasive phenotype of KS lesions.
...
PMID:Expression of multiple matrix metalloproteinases and urokinase type plasminogen activator in cultured Kaposi sarcoma cells. 1044 93

Stromelysin-1 (MMP-3) cleaves a 55 kDa kringle 1-4 fragment, containing the lysine-binding site(s) involved in cellular binding, from 92 kDa plasminogen and removes a 17 kDa NH2-terminal fragment, containing the cellular receptor-binding site, from 45 kDa urokinase (u-PA), but a potential role of MMP-3 in the regulation of cellular fibrinolytic activity by affecting binding and/or activation of plasminogen and/or single-chain u-PA has not been established. Human plasminogen (input concentration 100 nM for 4x10(6) cells per ml) was shown to bind specifically to human monocytoid THP-1 cells, to murine MMP-3 deficient smooth muscle cells (SMC) and fibroblasts (1.9, 0.92 and 1.0x10(6) molecules per cell, respectively). Treatment with MMP-3 (final concentration 0-50 nM) of cells saturated with bound plasminogen (about 25 nM), overnight at 37 degrees C, resulted in a dose-dependent reduction of the amount of u-PA activatable plasminogen (reduction to 25-40% of the value in the absence of MMP-3). Immunoblotting with specific monoclonal antibodies and autoradiography of eluates of the cells treated with MMP-3 revealed cleavage of plasminogen into the 55 kDa fragment and miniplasminogen (kringle 5 plus the proteinase domain). Binding of human single chain u-PA (scu-PA) to human THP-1 and HT 1080 cells amounted to 2.5x10(6) and 7.1x10(6) molecules per cell, respectively. Treatment with MMP-3 (final concentration 0-25 nM) of cell-bound u-PA (about 17 nM for THP-1 and 47 nM for HT1080 cells), overnight at 37 degrees C, did not alter cell-associated u-PA activity, measured in a direct chromogenic substrate assay or in a plasminogen-coupled chromogenic substrate assay (residual u-PA activity always > or =85% of that without MMP-3 treatment). Autoradiography of 125I-labeled u-PA moieties, removed from the cells by treatment with acid or with phosphatidylinositol phospholipase C, confirmed that u-PA remained essentially intact after MMP-3 treatment. These data indicate that MMP-3 may downregulate cell-associated plasmin activity by decreasing the amount of activatible plasminogen, without affecting cell-bound u-PA activity.
...
PMID:Modulation of cell-associated plasminogen activation by stromelysin-1 (MMP-3). 1049 76

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.
...
PMID:Inhibition of plasminogen activators or matrix metalloproteinases prevents cardiac rupture but impairs therapeutic angiogenesis and causes cardiac failure. 1050 7

We investigated the effects of epidermal growth factor (EGF) and transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) on migration, invasion and proteinase expression of gynecological cultured cancer cells (SKG-IIIb cervical squamous cell carcinoma, OMC-4 cervical adenocarcinoma, SNG-M endometrial adenocarcinoma and OMC-3 ovarian adenocarcinoma), and whether these growth factors affect thymidine phosphorylase/platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor expression of tumor cells. Tumor cell migration along a gradient of substratum-bound fibronectin and invasion into reconstituted basement membrane were stimulated by 0.1-10 nM EGF and TGF-alpha in a concentration-dependent manner. The zymography of tumor-conditioned medium showed that the treatment of tumor cells with EGF and TGF-alpha resulted in the increase of type IV collagenases, stromelysin and urokinase-type plasminogen activator which was partly confirmed by immunoblot analysis. The expression of thymidine phosphorylase/platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor which has angiogenic activity, was also upregulated by these growth factors. These results suggest that EGF and TGF-alpha act as positive regulators on the invasion process of gynecological tumor cells which may be associated with their stimulatory action on the motility of tumor cells, the expression of proteinases secreted by tumor cells and the angiogenic phenotype.
...
PMID:Biological implications of growth factors on the mechanism of invasion in gynecological tumor cells. 1054 52

Angiosarcoma of the skin is a rare malignant tumor which is slow-growing but highly aggressive and often recurs following surgery and/or radiation therapy, finally metastasizing to the regional lymph nodes. The ets-1 protooncogene is shown to be transcribed in endothelial cells during angiogenesis in granulation tissue and in malignant cells during tumor invasion. Furthermore, it can regulate the expression of metalloproteinase genes such as collagenase-1 (MMP-1), stromelysin (MMP-3) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). In this study we investigated the ets-1 and MMP-1 expression in 7 angiosarcomas of the skin, compared with 7 hemangiomas and 7 granuloma pyogenicums of the skin, which are well known as benign vascular diseases. The ets-1 and MMP-1 mRNAs and their proteins were overexpressed in all angiosarcomas tested, and the localization of MMP-1 expression corresponded to that of ets-1. On the other hand, they were weakly or not at all expressed in hemangiomas and granuloma pyogenicums. These results suggest that the constitutive overexpression of ets-1 might be closely related with the malignant progression of angiosarcoma, possibly through the up-regulation of the transcription of MMP-1.
...
PMID:Overexpression of Ets-1 transcription factor in angiosarcoma of the skin. 1070 67


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>