Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P00750 (PLA)
16,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The fibrinolytic response to 20 min of forearm venous occlusion was studied in patients undergoing major and minor operations. Fibrinolytic capacity, which is defined as the increase in fibrinolytic activity resulting from a period of venous occlusion, was significantly reduced on the first postoperative day after major operations, but not after minor operations. Since venous occlusion results in the release of plasminogen activator from the vascular endothelium into the blood, these findings suggest that the reduction in the level of spontaneous fibrinolytic activity after major operations is the result either of exhaustion of the vascular endothelium of plasminogen activator or defective synthesis and release of this enzyme from the endothelium.
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PMID:Alteration in fibrinolytic capacity after operation. 7 50

We measured levels of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen in 100 patients within six hours of the onset of acute myocardial infarction, in 34 patients with chronic angina but no recent infarction, and in 36 normal subjects. We also assayed von Willebrand factor in the acute patients and in the normal subjects. Measurements were repeated in 40 acute patients at three weeks after myocardial infarction. Although resting levels of t-PA antigen were not significantly different from normal during myocardial infarction, the capacity of the vascular endothelium to release t-PA after five minutes of venous occlusion was impaired (p less than 0.01). The acute phase vessel wall release of von Willebrand factor was increased during acute infarction (p less than 0.01). We conclude that impairment of t-PA production is associated with acute coronary thrombosis, although it is not possible to differentiate between a causative role or a secondary response due to exhaustion of the t-PA producing mechanism.
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PMID:Reduced synthesis of tissue plasminogen activator by vascular endothelium during acute myocardial infarction. 149 53

To determine whether exercise-induced increases in tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) were related to plasma epinephrine concentration during exercise, 14 healthy men (aged 24 to 62 years) were studied during epinephrine infusions (10, 25 and 50 ng/kg per min) and graded supine bicycle exercise, beginning at 33 W and increasing in 33-W increments until exhaustion. Plasma epinephrine, active and total t-PA, active plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) and t-PA/PAI-1 complex concentrations were measured at each exercise and infusion level. During epinephrine infusion, active and total t-PA levels increased linearly with the plasma epinephrine concentration (respective slopes [+/- SEM] of 0.062 +/- 0.003 and 0.076 +/- 0.003 pmol/ng epinephrine). During exercise, t-PA levels did not increase until plasma epinephrine levels increased, after which both active and total t-PA levels again increased linearly with the plasma epinephrine concentration, but at twice the rate observed with epinephrine infusion (0.131 +/- 0.005 and 0.147 +/- 0.005 pmol/ng, respectively). The t-PA level in blood was directly proportional to the plasma epinephrine concentration during both exercise and epinephrine infusion, suggesting that epinephrine release during exercise stimulates t-PA secretion. In these healthy subjects, active plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 and t-PA/PAI-1 complex levels were low (41 +/- 11 and 21 +/- 5 pmol/liter, respectively) and did not change significantly during exercise or epinephrine infusion. It is concluded that approximately 50% of the increase in t-PA during exercise is due to stimulated release of t-PA by epinephrine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Fibrinolytic response during exercise and epinephrine infusion in the same subjects. 159 33

The paper reviews data in the literature as well as the authors' own investigations, performed during the last seven years, concerning the hemostatic balance in nephrotic patients. The obviously increased plasma levels of fibrinogen, fibronectin, fibrin-stabilizing factor XIII, clotting factors V and VIII, von Willebrand factor as well as the enhanced platelet aggregability of such patients, associated with a decreased plasma antithrombin III, are compatible with a thrombotic tendency. On the other hand the increased plasma protein C may provide a compensative antithrombotic mechanism. A rather complex behaviour of the fibrinolytic system was noted in the nephrotic syndrome. Actually the enhanced release of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) from the endothelia of nephrotic patients is accompanied by an accelerated lysis of dilute blood clots, although the inhibitors of fibrinolysis such as alpha 2-macroglobulin and alpha 2-antiplasmin are increased. Failure or exhaustion of the compensative antithrombotic mechanisms would accentuate the hemostatic imbalance and favour the occurrence of thrombotic events. It is considered that increased urinary loss of antithrombin III and the enhanced hepatic synthesis of clotting factors would represent the main mechanisms involved in the production of this precarious hemostatic balance of nephrotic patients.
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PMID:Hemostatic variables in nephrotic patients. 184 91

Eleven patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) were studied for plasma and cutaneous fibrinolytic activity, residual (potential fibrinolysis) fibrinolytic activity (FA) fo the dermal vessels that is related to the endothelial storage of plasminogen activators that become available due to particular stimuli such as intradermic injection of histamine, and the serum levels of circulating von Willebrand antigen, antithrombin III, plasminogen, beta-thromboglobulin, and platelet aggregate ratio (PAR). Cutaneous FA (autohistographic fibrin film method) appeared normal or increased in non-affected skin, normal in lesional skin, and increased after intradermal (i.d.) injection of 0.1 ml of 0.01% histamine. Monoclonal antibodies directed against the catalytic site of tissue type plasminogen activator completely blocked the fibrinolytic activity, while anti-urokinase antibodies did not abolish the lysis areas. Plasmatic FA, euglobulin lysis time test, (ELT) and the levels of beta-thromboglobulin resulted similar to the controls. A significant increase in von Willebrand Factor VIII antigen (but not of Factor VIII coagulant) was observed in the patients (p less than 0.01). Platelet aggregate ratio, levels of plasma plasminogen and Antithrombin III showed a significant difference (p less than 0.01) when compared with the control subjects. Data suggest that primary injured microvessels in SSc are likely to be arteriolae while venulae could be affected by secondary hypoxia due to the arteriolar damage with consequent release of tissue type plasminogen activator. Therefore, the authors suggest that the fibrinolytic potential is maintained in SSc and that the fibrinolytic therapy should not be used in all patients with SSc but only in those cases with documented exhaustion of plasmatic and/or cutaneous FA.
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PMID:Cutaneous and plasma fibrinolytic activity in systemic sclerosis. Evidence of normal plasminogen activation. 212 82

Exercise to exhaustion was associated with the appearance in plasma of plasminogen activator (PA) in several mol wt forms, as identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) with zymography. A number of active bands, all immunologically identified as tissue-type PA (t-PA), were observed. The major form had an apparent mol wt of approximately 60,000 and is due to free t-PA. The other strong bands had apparent mol wts of approximately 110,000 and 180,000. The 110,000 band, also present in pre-exercise samples, represents t-PA complexed with its major inhibitor (PAI-1), and the 180,000 band is due to t-PA complexed with C1 inhibitor. The released forms of t-PA were cleared rapidly after cessation of exercise at exhaustion. Urokinase-type PA (u-PA) activity was also identified in pre- and postexercise samples at an apparent mol wt of approximately 50,000. This is consistent with its being free u-PA; no complexed forms of u-PA were observed. Qualitatively similar changes in plasma PA were observed after venous occlusion. Small quantities of plasmin were generated after strenuous exercise, as observed by detection of plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complex by two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis in three of five subjects. This complex was cleared rapidly after cessation of exercise. Plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complex was not detected in any of the subjects after venous occlusion.
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PMID:Plasminogen activator in normal subjects after exercise and venous occlusion: t-PA circulates as complexes with C1-inhibitor and PAI-1. 295 96

This report describes a plasmatic, fast-acting, specific inhibitor (antiactivator) of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and urokinase (UK). After addition of t-PA to human plasma, biexponential decay of activity occurred. The initial rapid inhibition of t-PA activity (half-life of approximately one minute) was correlated with the formation of a complex of a molecular weight of 110,000, suggesting a molecular weight in the order of 40,000 for the antiactivator. Diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP)-inactivated t-PA did not form complexes with antiactivator. The second-order rate constant for the interaction of t-PA with antiactivator is in the order of 10(7) mol/L-1 sec-1. In plasma, UK added at low concentrations rapidly formed complexes of a mol wt of 95,000. Preincubation of the plasma with t-PA prevented complex formation of UK, and vice versa, suggesting that the same inhibitor inactivates both t-PA and UK. After exhaustion of the antiactivator, t-PA and UK formed complexes with alpha 2-antiplasmin and C1'-inhibitor at a low rate.
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PMID:Demonstration of a fast-acting inhibitor of plasminogen activators in human plasma. 643 6

The neutrophil granulocyte seems to be intimately involved in the destructive processes leading to myocardial damage observed in ischaemic/reperfusion injuries. The process may cause stress to the peripheral circulating neutrophils leading to exhaustion and decreased function. We conducted a study in which the function of peripheral neutrophil granulocytes was measured in 21 patients with an acute myocardial infarction 0-24 and 48-72 h after the onset of symptoms. Ten patients received thrombolytic treatment (streptokinase). Neutrophil function was judged by superoxide generating capacity and chemotactic ability. Compared to healthy controls neutrophil function was found to be preserved in patients with myocardial infarction. Furthermore, streptokinase treatment of the patients did not modulate neutrophil function. In-vitro studies demonstrated that low concentrations of streptokinase (12-300 U.ml-1) or recombinant plasminogen activator (0.12 micrograms.ml(-1)-3.0 micrograms.ml-1) did not influence neutrophil superoxide generation. However, at higher concentrations (100-10,000 U.ml-1 and 10-100 micrograms.ml-1 respectively) both thrombolytics induced a significant increase in phorbol myristate acetate-stimulated superoxide generation. Neither of the thrombolytics influenced neutrophil chemotaxis in vitro. It is concluded that neither myocardial infarction nor streptokinase treatment decrease superoxide generating capacity or chemotactic ability of circulating neutrophils.
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PMID:Preserved oxidative activity and chemotaxis of circulating neutrophils in patients with acute myocardial infarction. 839 84

The effect of chronic stress on tissue-type plasminogen activator (TPA) and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) antigens was studied in 69 healthy middle-aged men. Chronic stress, defined as feelings of fatigue, lack of energy, increased irritability, and demoralization, was positively associated with plasma concentrations of PAI-1 antigen but was unrelated to TPA. The association remained unaltered after controlling for age, smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical activity but became nonsignificant after further controlling for abdominal obesity, BMI, and serum insulin and triglyceride levels. This attenuated association implies that the relationship between vital exhaustion and PAI-1 may be secondary to the effects of the metabolic variables. Thus, the present study shows that long-term stress affects the fibrinolytic system and suggests that obesity and insulin and triglyceride concentrations, which are closely correlated with the fibrinolytic parameters, may mediate the association. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that chronic stress causes increased synthesis of PAI-1, thus promoting the risk for atherothrombotic disease by decreasing the likelihood of spontaneous fibrinolysis and increasing the likelihood of fibrin deposition.
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PMID:Association of chronic stress with plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 in healthy middle-aged men. 863 Jun 60

The increased risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) associated with depression is well documented. We hypothesized that impaired fibrinolysis is involved in this link. To explore the association of depressive mood and/or vital exhaustion with various measurements of fibrinolysis activity, 231 men (40 to 65 years old; 123 without CHD and taking no medication and 108 with documented CHD), completed the Center of Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale and the Maastricht Questionnaire for vital exhaustion. Using classic cut-off points (Center of Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale score >or=17, Maastricht Questionnaire score >or=8), 6.5% and 9.8% of subjects without CHD and 38% and 48.1% of those with CHD were classified as depressed and exhausted, respectively. Patients with CHD were older, had a higher body mass index, and higher levels of total cholesterol, glucose, plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen, and fibrinogen; 47% were treated for hypertension. Depressed subjects had higher levels of PAI-1 activity (p = 0.006) and exhausted patients had higher levels of PAI-1 activity (p = 0.011) and fibrinogen (p = 0.009). After adjusting for clinical condition (with or without CHD), smoking, hypertension, triglyceride concentration, and body mass index, PAI-1 activity remained higher in depressed subjects (p = 0.03). This association persisted after further adjustment for vital exhaustion or for t-PA antigen and fibrinogen levels. t-PA antigen and fibrinogen levels were not associated with depressive mood in multivariate analyses. No fibrinolytic variable was associated with vital exhaustion in multivariate analyses. In conclusion, depressive mood, but not vital exhaustion, is associated with higher levels of PAI-1 activity, suggesting a possible impairment of fibrinolysis and indicating a potential additional mechanism by which depressive mood may act as a cardiovascular risk factor.
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PMID:Relation of depressive mood to plasminogen activator inhibitor, tissue plasminogen activator, and fibrinogen levels in patients with versus without coronary heart disease. 1663 97


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