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Query: UNIPROT:P00750 (
PLA
)
16,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The sequences of urokinase (UK) and
tissue-type plasminogen activator
(TPA) were aligned with those of chymotrypsin, trypsin, and elastase according to their 'structurally conserved regions'. In spite of its trypsin-like specificity UK was model-built on the basis of the chymotrypsin structure because of a corresponding disulfide pattern. The extra disulfide bond falls to cysteines 50 and 111d. Insertions can easily be accommodated at the surface. As they occur similarly in both, UK and TPA, a role in plasminogen recognition may be possible. Of the functional positions known to be involved in substrate or inhibitor binding, Asp 97, Lys 143 and Arg 217 (Leu in TPA) may contribute to plasminogen activating specificity.
PTI
binding may in part be impaired by structural differences at the edge of the binding pocket.
...
PMID:Adaptation of plasminogen activator sequences to known protease structures. 634 97
Achieving early, complete, and sustained reperfusion after acute myocardial infarction does not occur in approximately 50% of patients, even with the most potent established thrombolytic therapy. Bleeding is observed with increased concentrations of thrombolytics as well as with adjunctive antithrombotic and antiplatelet agents. A novel approach to enhance thrombolytic therapy is to inhibit the activated form of thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI), which attenuates fibrinolysis in clots formed from human plasma. Identification of TAFI in rabbit plasma facilitated the development of a rabbit arterial thrombolysis model to compare the thrombolytic efficacy of tissue-
plasminogen activator
(tPA) alone or with an inhibitor, isolated from the potato tuber (
PTI
), of activated TAFI (TAFIa). Efficacy was assessed by determining the time to patency, the time the vessel remained patent, the maximal blood flow achieved during therapy, the percentage of the original thrombus, which lysed, the percentage change in clot weight, the net clot accreted, and the release of radioactive fibrin degradation products into the circulation. The results indicate that coadministration of
PTI
and tPA significantly improved tPA-induced thrombolysis without adversely affecting blood pressure, activated partial thromboplastin time, thrombin clotting time, fibrinogen, or alpha-2-antiplasmin concentrations. The data indicate that inhibitors of TAFIa may comprise novel and very effective adjuncts to tPA and improve thrombolytic therapy to achieve both clot lysis and vessel patency.
...
PMID:A novel approach to arterial thrombolysis. 1051 77
TAFI (thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor) is a plasma procarboxypeptidase that upon activation inhibits the fibrinolytic process by removing the C-terminal lysines from partially degraded fibrin. The generation of activated TAFI (TAFIa) has been suggested to represent a mechanism of thrombus resistance to thrombolytic therapy. However, the ability of TAFI to inhibit fibrinolysis by pharmacological concentrations of
t-PA
has not been properly investigated. We used an in vitro model consisting of 125I-fibrin blood clots submerged in autologous defibrinated plasma. Upon addition of
t-PA
(125-5,000 ng/ml) and CaCl2 (25 mM), samples were incubated at 37 degrees C, and clot lysis was measured at intervals from the radioactivity released into solution. The role of TAFI was assessed either by neutralizing the generated TAFIa with the specific inhibitor
PTI
(50 microg/ml) or by enhancing TAFI activation through the addition of recombinant soluble thrombomodulin (solulin, 1 microg/ml). In our clot lysis model, activation of TAFI amounted to about 20% of inducible carboxypeptidase activity. Addition of
PTI
, however, produced a significant increase in the extent of lysis only at concentrations of
t-PA
equal to or lower than 250 ng/ml. When solulin was added to the plasma surrounding the clot, about 70% of TAFI was activated within 15 min. Under these conditions, inhibition of clot lysis was very marked in samples containing 125 or 250 ng/ml of
t-PA
, but negligible in those containing pharmacological concentrations of the activator (1,000 and 5,000 ng/ml). Additional experiments suggest that loss of fibrin-dependence by elevated concentrations of
t-PA
may be one of the mechanisms explaining the lack of effect of TAFIa. Our data indicate that, under our experimental conditions, clot lysis by pharmacological concentrations of
t-PA
is not influenced by TAFIa even after maximal activation of this procarboxy-peptidase.
...
PMID:Thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor (TAFI) does not inhibit in vitro thrombolysis by pharmacological concentrations of t-PA. 1134 2
Heparin has been proposed to enhance thrombolysis by inhibiting thrombin-dependent generation of activated TAFI (thrombin activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor), a carboxypeptidase that inhibits fibrinolysis. We evaluated the effect of heparin in an in vitro thrombolysis model consisting of a radiolabelled blood clot submerged in defibrinated plasma. Fibrinolysis was induced by adding
t-PA
(250 ng/ml) and calcium to the plasma bath. Control experiments indicated that thrombin generation induced by recalcification caused significant TAFI activation and inhibited clot lysis. Heparin (up to 1 U/ml), added to the plasma bath, failed to enhance clot lysis. Thrombin generation in the fluid phase was totally inhibited by heparin at concentrations > 0.5 U/ml. In contrast, thrombin generation on the clot surface was not inhibited by heparin (1 U/ml). TAFIa generation did occur in heparin-containing samples (1 U/ml) and amounted to about 10% of TAFIa formed in control samples. This low amount of TAFIa did exert antifibrinolytic activity as indicated by the observation that the addition of a specific TAFIa inhibitor (
PTI
) along with heparin enhanced clot lysis. Hirudin (10 micrograms/ml), at variance with heparin, inhibited clot-bound thrombin and enhanced clot lysis. These data show that heparin is unable to stimulate fibrinolysis through a TAFI-dependent mechanism, most likely because of its inefficiency in inhibiting thrombin generation on the clot surface. Moreover, they suggest that clot-bound thrombin plays a major role in TAFI-mediated inhibition of fibrinolysis through "localized" TAFIa generation.
...
PMID:Effect of heparin on TAFI-dependent inhibition of fibrinolysis: relative importance of TAFIa generated by clot-bound and fluid phase thrombin. 1287 66