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)

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.
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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

Low molecular weight heparin (LMW-heparin) enhanced the amidolytic activity of plasma when the chromogenic substrate, H-D-Ile-Pro-Arg-pNA (S-2288), was used. The amidolytic activity increased in a time-dependent manner as the LMW-heparin concentration increased and reached its peak at around 15 mu/ml. Factor XII-deficient plasma increased the S-2288 amidolytic activity by LMW-heparin. In order to clarify the mechanism of the heparin-induced enhancement of the amidolytic activity, a plasma factor was purified. The plasma factor was obtained from human normal plasma by ammonium sulfate fractionation, followed by successive column chromatography with heparin-Sepharose, zinc chelate-Sepharose, aprotinin-Sepharose and protein A-Sepharose. The plasma factor so purified revealed a major band (88% of total protein) at 80 kD with several minor bands on analysis by SDS-PAGE. The plasma factor exhibited an intrinsic amidolytic activity, which was enhanced by heparin. The plasma factor further enhanced the amidolytic activity of sct-PA and scu-PA, the enhancement of which was of much greater degree than that for LMW-heparin. However, when the two-chain form of t-PA or u-PA was reacted with the plasma factor and LMW-heparin, no enhancement of the amidolytic activity of these enzymes was observed. The plasma factor cleaved a peptide bond of sct-PA and scu-PA and induced a structural change from a single-chain to a two-chain form. The amidolytic activity of the plasma factor was not inhibited by anti-t-PA IgG, anti-u-PA IgG, anti-plasminogen IgG, anti-factor XII IgG or anti-plasma prekallikrein IgG. These findings suggest an important role for the plasma factor in the activation of sct-PA and scu-PA in heparin-dependent fibrinolysis.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of a plasma factor which cleaves single-chain form of t-PA and u-PA. 215 52

A computer-based statistical evaluation of the optimal alignments of the kringle domains of human plasminogen, human prothrombin, human tissue plasminogen activator, human urokinase, and human coagulation Factor XIIa, as well as the putative kringle of human haptoglobin, has been performed. A variety of different alignments has been examined and scores calculated in terms of the number of standard deviations (SD) of a given match from randomness. With the exception of human haptoglobin, it was found that very high alignment scores (8.9-23.0 SD from randomness) were obtained between each of the kringles, with the kringle 1 and kringle 5 regions of human plasminogen displaying the highest similarity, and the S kringle of human prothrombin and the human Factor XII kringle showing the least similarity. The relationships obtained were employed to construct an evolutionary tree for the kringles. The predicted alignments have also allowed nucleotide mutations in these regions to be evaluated more accurately. For those regions for which nucleotide sequences are known, we have employed the maximal alignments from the protein sequences to assess nucleotide sequence similarities. It was found that a range of approximately 40-55% of the nucleotide bases were placed at identical positions in the kringles, with the highest number found in the alignment of the two kringles of human tissue plasminogen activator and the lowest number in the alignment of the S kringle of prothrombin with the second kringle of tissue plasminogen activator. From both protein and nucleotide alignments, we conclude that haptoglobin is not statistically homologous to any other kringle. Secondary structural comparisons of the kringle regions have been predicted by a combination of the Burgess and Chou-Fasman methods. In general, the kringles display a very high number of beta-turns, and very low alpha-helical contents. From analysis of the predicted structures in relationship to the functional properties of these domains, it appears as though many of their functional differences can be related to possible conformational alterations resulting from amino acid substitutions in the kringles.
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PMID:The genetic relationships between the kringle domains of human plasminogen, prothrombin, tissue plasminogen activator, urokinase, and coagulation factor XII. 313 37

Two different plasmatic plasminogen activators (PA) can be demonstrated after sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of plasma freshly collected from resting volunteers, followed by transfer of the gels onto plasminogen-rich fibrin-agarose plates. These two PA are also present in plasmas deficient in coagulation Factor XI, Factor XII, prekallikrein, or high molecular weight-kininogen. The slower-moving PA has an apparent 85,000 Mr and is immunologically unrelated to urokinase (UK). The faster moving PA was isolated by immunoadsorption of plasma on anti-UK IgG coupled to Sepharose 4B and appears to be identical to urinary high molecular weight-UK.
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PMID:Isolation from human plasma of a plasminogen activator identical to urinary high molecular weight urokinase. 675 69

In a previous study we have shown that monoclonal antibody F1 (MoAb F1), directed against an epitope on the heavy chain of factor XII distinct from the binding site for anionic surfaces, is able to activate factor XII in plasma (Nuijens JH, et al: J Biol Chem 264; 12941, 1989). Here, we studied in detail the mechanism underlying the activation of factor XII by MoAb F1 using purified proteins. Formation of factor XIIa was assessed by measuring its amidolytic activity towards the chromogenic substrate H-D-Pro-Phe-Arg-pNA (S-2302) in the presence of soybean trypsin inhibitor and by assessing cleavage on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Upon incubation with MoAb F1 alone, factor XII was auto-activated in a time-dependent fashion, activation being maximal after 30 hours. Factor XII incubated in the absence of MoAb F1 was hardly activated by kallikrein, whereas in the presence of MoAb F1, but not in that of a control MoAb, the rate of factor XII activation by kallikrein was promoted at least 60-fold. Maximal activation of factor XII with kallikrein in the presence of MoAb F1 was reached within 1 hour. This effect of kallikrein on the cleavage of factor XII bound to MoAb F1 was specific because the fibrinolytic enzymes plasmin, urokinase, and tissue-type plasminogen activator could not substitute for kallikrein. Also, trypsin could easily activate factor XII, but in contrast to kallikrein, this activation was independent of MoAb F1. SDS-PAGE analysis showed that the appearance of amidolytic activity correlated well with cleavage of factor XII. MoAb F1-induced activation of factor XII in this purified system was not dependent on the presence of high-molecular-weight kininogen (HK), in contrast to the activation of the contact system in plasma by MoAb F1. Experiments with deletion mutants revealed that the epitopic region for MoAb F1 on factor XII is located on the kringle domain. Thus, this study shows that binding of ligands to the kringle domain, which does not contribute to the proposed binding site for negatively charged surfaces, may induce activation of factor XII. Therefore, these findings point to the existence of multiple mechanisms of activation of factor XII.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibody F1 binds to the kringle domain of factor XII and induces enhanced susceptibility for cleavage by kallikrein. 749 70

Factor XII has long been implicated in the intrinsic pathway of fibrinolysis, but the mechanism by which it triggers plasminogen activation and targets fibrinolysis has not been established. In the present study, the assembly and function of activated Factor XII (F.XIIa), prourokinase (pro-u-PA), high molecular weight kininogen (H-kininogen), and prekallikrein on human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) was investigated. 125I-prekallikrein was shown to bind to HUVEC via receptor-bound H-kininogen in the presence of 50 microM ZnCl2. After the addition of F.XIIa, 78% of the 125I-prekallikrein initially bound to HUVEC was converted to 125I-kallikrein. However, only 6% of the HUVEC-bound 125I-pro-u-PA was thereby activated. This discrepancy was shown to be related to rapid dissociation (> 50% within 15 min) of prekallikrein/kallikrein, but not pro-u-PA, from HUVEC. Increasing the level of cell-bound kallikrein increased the portion of cell-bound pro-u-PA activated, indicating that their co-localization was important for this pathway. Finally, F.XIIa was shown to trigger plasminogen activation on HUVEC via this pathway. This assembly of reactants on the endothelium suggests a mechanism whereby local fibrinolysis may be triggered by blood coagulation.
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PMID:Assembly and activation of the intrinsic fibrinolytic pathway on the surface of human endothelial cells in culture. 858 9

The plasma bradykinin-forming cascade and the complement pathways share many elements, including cross-activation, common control mechanisms, and shared binding proteins. The C1 inhibitor (C1 INH) is not only the inhibitor of activated C1r and C1s, but it is the key control protein of the plasma bradykinin-forming cascade. It inhibits the autoactivation of Factor XII, the ability of Factor XIIa to activate prekallikrein and Factor XI, the activation of high molecular weight kininogen (HK) by kallikrein, and the feedback activation of Factor XII by kallikrein. Thus in the absence of C1 INH (hereditary angioedema or acquired C1 INH deficiency) there is unimpeded formation of bradykinin leading to angioedema. Activated Factor XII (Factor XIIa, 80,000 kDa) is further cleaved by kallikrein or plasmin to yield Factor XII fragment (Factor XIIf, 30,000 kDa) and Factor XIIf can activate the C1r subcomponent of C1, particularly when C1 INH (which inhibits Factor XIIf) is absent. Once bradykinin is formed, it causes vasodilatation and increased vascular permeability by interaction with constitutively expressed B-2 receptors. However degradation of bradykinin by carboxypeptidase N (in plasma) or carboxypeptidase M (on endothelial cells) yields des-arg-9 (Kerbiriou and Griffin, 1979) bradykinin which interacts with B-1 receptors. B-1 receptors are induced in inflammatory states by cytokines such as Interleukin 1 and its interaction with bradykinin may prolong or perpetuate the vascular response until bradykinin is completely inactivated by angiotensin converting enzyme or aminopeptidase P, or neutral endopeptidase. The entire bradykinin-forming cascade is assembled and can be activated along the surface of endothelial cells in zinc dependent reactions involving gC1qR, cytokeratin 1, and the urokinase plasminogen activated receptor (u-PAR). Although Factors XII and HK can be shown to bind to each one of these proteins, they exist in endothelial cells as two bimolecular complexes; gC1qR-cytokeratin 1, which preferentially binds HK, and cytokeratin 1-u-PAR which preferentially binds Factor XII. The gC1qR, which binds the globular heads of C1q is present in excess and can bind either Factor XII or HK however the binding sites for HK and C1q have been shown to reside at opposite ends of gC1qR. Activation of the bradykinin-forming pathway can be initiated at the cell surface by gC1qR-induced autoactivation of Factor XII or direct activation of the prekallikrein-HK complex by endothelial cell-derived heat-shock protein 90 (HSP 90) or prolylcarboxypeptidase with recruitment or Factor XII by the kallikrein produced.
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PMID:The plasma bradykinin-forming pathways and its interrelationships with complement. 2058 91

Factor XII (FXII) is a protease that is mainly produced in the liver and circulates in plasma as a single chain zymogen. Following contact with negatively charged surfaces, FXII is converted into the two-chain active form, FXIIa. FXIIa initiates the intrinsic blood coagulation pathway via activation of factor XI. Furthermore, it converts plasma prekallikrein to kallikrein (PK), which reciprocally activates FXII and liberates bradykinin from high molecular weight kininogen. In addition, FXIIa initiates fibrinolysis via PK-mediated urokinase activation and activates the classical complement pathway. Even though the main function of FXII seems to relate to the activation of the intrinsic coagulation pathway and the kallikrein-kinin system, a growing body of evidence suggests that FXII may also directly regulate cellular responses. In this regard, it has been found that FXII/FXIIa induces the expression of inflammatory mediators, promotes cell proliferation, and enhances the migration of neutrophils and lung fibroblasts. In addition, it has been reported that genetic ablation of FXII protects against neuroinflammation, reduces the formation of atherosclerotic lesions in Apoe-/- mice, improves wound healing, and inhibits postnatal angiogenesis. Although the aforementioned effects can be partially explained by the downstream products of FXII activation, the ability of FXII/FXIIa to directly regulate cellular responses has recently emerged as an alternative hypothesis. These direct cellular reactions to FXII/FXIIa will be discussed in the review.
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PMID:Factor XII in coagulation, inflammation and beyond. 3011 59

The contact system initiates the intrinsic pathway of coagulation and is started by Factor XII activation, which then activates prekallicrein to kallicrein and Factor XI to Factor XIa and, in the presence of high molecular weight kininogen, forms a "contact phase activation loop", that amplifies Factor XII activation. FXII deficiency is not associated with bleeding tendencies, but when the blood clots, the thrombus is less dense, thus favoring antithrombotic protection. Activated Factor XII inhibition emerges as an efficient target for preventing thrombo-embolic diseases without inducing a hemorrhagic risk. Activated Factor XII exhibits other activities, in that it can activate complement and provoke inflammation, contributing to innate immunity. It also stimulates fibrinolysis through uPA activation from scu-PA. Among the other components of the contact phase, Factor XI has a more important role in coagulation pathways and can directly activate FX, FVIII and FV, in a FIX independent pathway. Its deficiency is associated with a mild bleeding diathesis ("pseudo-hemophilia" or hemophilia C), with a variable incidence among kindreds. Recently, the occurrence of thrombotic events the same day following infusion of immunoglobulin concentrates has been demonstrated to be caused by the presence of trace amounts of activated Factor XI, pointing out the key role of this factor for thrombogenicity. Prekallicrein can be activated at the endothelial surface in the presence of high molecular weight kininogen, whose cleavage generates bradykinins and contributes to vessel tonicity and inflammation. The contact phase, through its activation loop, is then an important physiological system, which can initiate and regulate various biological functions and is at the crossroads of various biological activities. Many of the body's physiological functions are intimately linked between them, making the global approach of special usefulness for understanding the interactions which can result from any abnormality of one of them. New pharmaceutical drugs targeting a defined activity need to be investigated for all the possible interferences or side effects. In this article we aim to present and summarize the present understanding of contact phase system activation and regulation, its involvement in various physiological functions, and the laboratory tools for its exploration.
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PMID:The contact system at the crossroads of various key patho- physiological functions: Update on present understanding, laboratory exploration and future perspectives. 3095 79