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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.23.5 (
cathepsin D
)
4,130
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
The production of metastasis appears to involve a number of different proteases including the
urokinase
form of plasminogen activator, cathepsin B,
cathepsin D
and various metalloproteases. Early data implicating these proteases in metastasis were mostly indirect and based on correlation studies in animal models. More recent work, using specific protease inhibitors and antibodies against proteases to block experimental metastasis, have provided more direct evidence that proteases play a role in cancer spread. In addition, transfection of genes encoding certain proteases increases the metastatic phenotype of the recipient cells. In human tumours, a number of different proteases also correlate with metastatic potential. It is concluded that certain proteases may be new prognostic markers in cancer as well as new targets for anti-metastatic therapy.
...
PMID:The role of proteolytic enzymes in cancer invasion and metastasis. 158 84
Tumor cell invasion and metastasis is a multifactorial process, which at each step may require the action of proteolytic enzymes such as collagenases, cathepsins, plasmin, or plasminogen activators. An enzymatically inactive proenzyme form of the
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
(pro-uPA) is secreted by tumor cells which may be converted to an enzymatically active two-chain
uPA
-molecule (HMW-uPA) by plasmin-like enzymes. Action of proteases on pro-
uPA
may generate the enzymatically active or inactive high-molecular-weight form of
uPA
(HMW-uPA). Some proteases (plasmin, cathepsin B and L, kallikrein, trypsin or thermolysin) activate pro-
uPA
by cleaving the peptide bond Lys158 and IIe159. Other proteases (elastase, thrombin) cleave pro-
uPA
at different positions to yield enzymatically inactive HMW-
uPA
. HMW-
uPA
may be split into the enzymatically active LMW-
uPA
and the enzymatically inactive ATF (amino terminal fragment). ATF may be cleaved between peptide sequence 20 and 40 within the receptor binding domain of
uPA
(GFD). Such impaired ATF does not bind to
uPA
-receptors. Action of the bacterial endoproteinase Asp-N from Pseudomonas fragi mutant on pro-
uPA
or HMW-
uPA
, however, generates intact ATF which efficiently competes for binding of HMW-
uPA
or pro-
uPA
to receptors on tumor cells. High
uPA
-antigen content (pro-uPA, HMW-uPA, or LMW-uPA) in breast cancer tissue (not in plasma) indicates an elevated risk for the patient of recurrences and shorter overall survival. Thus pro-
uPA
/
uPA
-antigen content in breast cancer tissue serves as an independent prognostic parameter for the outcome of the disease. Cathepsin D is also an independent prognostic factor for recurrences and overall survival. High content of
cathepsin D
in breast cancer tumors is, however, not correlated with elevated levels of pro-
uPA
/
uPA
indicating that synthesis and release of
cathepsin D
and pro-
uPA
/
uPA
are independent events.
...
PMID:Biological and clinical relevance of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) in breast cancer. 180 51
Action of purified human cathepsin B on recombinant single-chain
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
(pro-uPA) generated enzymatically active two-chain
uPA
(HMW-uPA), which was indistinguishable by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blot from plasmin-generated HMW-
uPA
and from elastase- or thrombin-generated inactive two-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator. Preincubation of cathepsin B with E-64 (transepoxysuccinyl-L-leucylamino- (4-guanidino)butane, a potent inhibitor for cathepsin B) prior to the addition of pro-
uPA
prevented the activation of pro-
uPA
. The cleavage site within the cathepsin B-treated
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
(
uPA
) molecule, determined by N-terminal amino acid sequence analysis, is located between Lys158 and Ile159. Pro-
uPA
is cleaved by cathepsin B at the same peptide bond that is cleaved by plasmin or kallikrein. Binding of cathepsin B-activated pro-
uPA
to the
uPA
receptor on U937 cells did not differ from that of enzymatically inactive pro-
uPA
, indicating an intact receptor-binding region within the growth factor-like domain of the cathepsin B-treated
uPA
molecule. Not only soluble but also tumor cell receptor-bound pro-
uPA
could be efficiently cleaved by cathepsin B to generate enzymatically active two-chain
uPA
. Thus, cathepsin B can substitute for plasmin in the proteolytic activation of pro-
uPA
to enzymatically active HMW-
uPA
. In contrast, no significant activation of pro-
uPA
by
cathepsin D
was observed. As tumor cells may produce both pro-
uPA
and cathepsin B, implications for the activation of tumor cell-derived pro-
uPA
by cellular proteases may be considered.
...
PMID:Cathepsin B efficiently activates the soluble and the tumor cell receptor-bound form of the proenzyme urokinase-type plasminogen activator (Pro-uPA). 190 May 15
The concentrations of
cathepsin D
(Cath D),
urokinase
(
uPA
) and two plasminogen activator inhibitors (PAI-1 and PAI-2) were analysed in the cytosols of 130 human mammary tumours (43 benign tumours and 87 primary and unilateral breast carcinomas).
uPA
, PAI-1 and PAI-2 levels were measured by antigenic immunoassays and Cath D by immunoradiometric assay. The median levels of the four parameters were significantly higher in the malignant tumours than in the benign ones. Cath D and
uPA
increases were 4-fold and 5-fold respectively. PAI-1 and PAI-2 increases were much more important, 74-fold and 29-fold respectively. In malignant tumours, median levels of Cath D and
uPA
did not vary according to classical prognostic factors (histologic grade, presence or absence of axillary lymph nodes, steroid receptors, UICC stage, tumour size, age, and menopausal status). However, PAI-1 decreased in ER+ and PR+ tumours and PAI-2 increased in menopausal women's tumours. When Cath D,
uPA
, PAI-1 and PAI-2 levels in malignant tumours were compared, positive correlations were found for all combinations. The implication of plasminogen activator inhibitors in the phenomenon was surprising and merits further investigation using tools other than global antigen measurements in tumours.
...
PMID:Relationship between cathepsin D, urokinase, and plasminogen activator inhibitors in malignant vs benign breast tumours. 193 18
The capacity of solid tumours to invade the surrounding tissue and to metastasize, is correlated with the formation and degradation of structural elements in the vicinity of the tumour cells. Substances with both procoagulant activity and fibrinolytic activity are important factors in the formation or degradation of a "fibrin-fibronectin-gel matrix". This gel is subsequently transformed into the extracellular matrix, which, together with cells, will form the tumour stroma. When analyzing tumour stroma degradation products, it is obvious that the protease plasmin catalyses the disintegration of fibrin and fibronectin. Additional compounds of the tumour stroma and of the basal membrane are also, at least in part, broken down by plasmin or other proteases, such as collagenase IV and
cathepsin D
. The plasminogen activator
urokinase
(
uPA
) seems to play a central role as it was shown that elevated content of
uPA
is correlated with a high risk of early relapse and shorter overall survival, at least in breast cancer. It has been shown, that by means of quantifying
uPA
, patients with a relative high or low risk can even be selected within the classical risk groups, which so far are defined by the locoregional extension of the tumour and the hormone receptor status only. Evidently, as
uPA
content in human breast cancer tissue is an independent prognostic factor, one may speculate, that those experimental or in vitro data, which correlated increase in
uPA
-synthesis with malignancy, may be of direct relevance for human tumour biology. Moreover, due to these recent observations on the prognostic significance of tumour-associated proteases, new aspects for the selection of risk collectives within the node-negative breast cancer patients for adjuvant therapy have to be considered. It may well be possible, that one may affect tumour invasion and metastasis by inhibiting protease action of solid tumours by disturbing the binding of proteases to tumour cell surface receptors. As it is only a quantitative aspect, which separates benign physiological processes from tumour cell pathophysiology, experimental evidence suggests, that less drastic forms of palliative therapy can be proposed.
...
PMID:[Clinical and prognostic significance of tumor-associated proteases in gynecologic oncology]. 204 Apr 18
Prognostic variables in breast cancer are urgently needed to individualize adjuvant cytotoxic therapy, especially in those patients where metastases in the lymph nodes have not been detected (node-negative disease). So far histomorphological criteria, the determination of receptors for steroid hormones or EGF (epidermal growth factor), the protease
cathepsin D
or DNA-ploidy are used to distinguish between low- and high-risk patients. High-risk patients have a higher incidence of recurrences and/or shorter overall survival after surgery of the primary tumour than low-risk patients. High-risk patients (node-positive; hormone-receptor-negative) would receive adjuvant hormone therapy or chemotherapy. In the node-negative patient, adjuvant therapy is only recommended if a high content of
cathepsin D
and aneuploidy of the tumour (or high S-phase in diploid tumours) has been diagnosed. Determination of
cathepsin D
in tumour extracts as a variable in breast cancer patients is based on the fact that invasion and metastasis is correlated with elevated levels of tumour-associated proteases such as cathepsins B and D, collagenase IV and plasminogen activators. The
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
(
uPA
) which is secreted by tumour cells as an enzymatically inactive proenzyme (pro-
uPA
) seems to play a key role in mediating tumour cell invasion in cancer tissues. Receptor-bound
uPA
converts enzymatically inactive plasminogen into the serine protease plasmin which then degrades the extracellular matrix surrounding the tumour cells (tumour stroma). We localized pro-
uPA
/
uPA
immunohistochemically in paraffin-embedded formalin-fixed breast cancer tissue sections. Pro-
uPA
/
uPA
was detected in the cytoplasm and on the plasma membrane of the tumour cells reflecting receptor-bound pro-
uPA
/
uPA
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Tumour-associated fibrinolysis: the prognostic relevance of plasminogen activators uPA and tPA in human breast cancer. 213 50
S-S cross-linking enzyme, skin sulfhydryl oxidase (SSO), catalyzes the formation of disulfide bonds from sulfhydryl groups in skin. The activity of SSO was detected in differing amounts in each of the four layers--stratum corneum, stratum granulosum, stratum spinosum with basal cell layer, and dermis--of cow snout skin, with the highest specific activity being recorded in the stratum granulosum. SSO was stimulated to 130-150% of its initial activity by treatment with 1 mg/ml trypsin, chymotrypsin, or
urokinase
, but was not affected by plasmin or
cathepsin D
. These findings suggest that SSO may be activated by some kinds of serine proteases during the keratinocyte autolysis process in the stratum granulosum. SSO showed the highest activity with the addition of 5 microM of Cu2+. The atomic absorptive analysis of purified SSO showed 0.5 atoms of Cu in one molecule of SSO. From these findings, it was determined that Cu2+ was essential for the activity of SSO. The molar ratio of the disappearance of DTT, consumption of O2, and production of H2O2 during the enzyme reaction was 1:1.05:0.89. From these findings, the reactions catalyzed by SSO is suggested to be represented by the following equation: (table; see text).
...
PMID:[Localization in skin, activation and reaction mechanisms of skin sulfhydryl oxidase]. 258 80
Prokallikrein was activated by trypsin and by alpha-chymotrypsin, but not by proteases, such as plasmin, thrombin,
urokinase
, carboxypeptidase B, papain, elastase, pepsin, and
cathepsin D
. Moreover, rat fresh serum did not activate prokallikrein. Maximum activation of prokallikrein by trypsin was obtained at the concentration of 10 micrograms to 1 mg per ml in PBS and that by alpha-chymotrypsin was at the concentration of 5 mg per ml. The enzymic properties of trypsin-activated and alpha-chymotrypsin-activated kallikreins were identical with those of active kallikrein in the kidney.
...
PMID:Activation of prokallikrein in the rat kidney by proteases. 637 43
It has been shown that a 90-kDa protein (90K), with an as yet unknown function, is expressed in the majority of human breast-cancer tissues. In addition, the serum level of this 90K antigen is elevated in a certain proportion of breast-cancer patients, and high serum levels are associated with a poor overall survival. It was therefore of interest to determine whether levels of 90K in tumor tissues could be used as a prognostic variable in breast cancer. In the present study, the levels of 90K in primary breast tumor cytosols were studied with respect to the length of relapse-free or overall survival in 547 patients (median follow-up, 81.4 months), and the relationship with response to first-line tamoxifen therapy and the length of progression-free survival in 184 patients with recurrent disease (median follow-up, 59.8 months). 90K levels in tumor cytosols were determined with an immunoradiometric assay. The cytosolic contents of 90K were not significantly correlated with age, menopausal status, tumor size, nodal status or differentiation grade. On the other hand, the levels of 90K were positively correlated with those of cytosolic estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor,
urokinase-type plasminogen activator
, its inhibitor PAI-I,
cathepsin D
and PS2. The cytosolic tumor level of 90K was not associated with the rate of relapse or death in primary breast cancer, nor with response to first-line therapy with tamoxifen or the length of progression-free survival in recurrent disease.
...
PMID:Expression of tumor-associated 90K-antigen in human breast cancer: no correlation with prognosis and response to first-line therapy with tamoxifen. 761 55
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