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)

An exaggerated hemorrhagic syndrome is a characteristic in acute non-lymphoblastic leukemia (ANLL) and it determines the patient's outcome. Disseminated intravascular coagulation as a result of a procoagulant factor release and primary hyperfibrinolysis due to plasminogen activators also released by leukemic cells have been implicated in the development of this syndrome. The aim of this work was to evaluate urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and related parameters of the fibrinolytic system in 14 ANLL patients. Our results showed an increased u-PA concentration in ANLL patients compared to controls [2.63 (1.61-4.62) vs. 0.95 (0.77-1.48) ng/ml, p < 0.01]. u-PA levels correlated positively with tissue-type plasminogen activator. The relevance of the enhancement of u-PA in this clinical setting was supported by the fact that it was the only analytical parameter positively correlated with patient mortality (p < 0.05). Though u-PA levels do not seem to be the determining factor in the development of the hemorrhagic syndrome of ANLL patients, a contributory role of this plasminogen activator is suggested from our results.
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PMID:High plasma urokinase-type plasminogen activator levels are present in patients with acute nonlymphoblastic leukemia. 141 64

The activity of plasminogen activators and inhibitors in the synovial fluid and plasma of patients with various forms of chronic arthritis was characterised. Tissue-type plasminogen activator antigen (t-PA:Ag), urokinase-type plasminogen activator antigen (u-PA:Ag), the proenzyme single chain u-PA (scu-PA), and plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) were measured in the synovial fluid and plasma of 22 patients with seropositive rheumatoid arthritis (RA), 13 with seronegative RA, and 23 patients with various forms of arthritis. In all patient groups the levels of t-PA:Ag in synovial fluid were lower and the levels of u-PA:Ag and PAI higher than plasma levels. Synovial fluid u-PA was more activated than plasma u-PA. Comparison of the patient groups showed that the largest differences between fibrinolytic parameters in synovial fluid and plasma were present in patients with seropositive RA followed by patients with seronegative RA and patients with various forms of arthritis. This order paralleled the functional and radiological scores of joint destruction in the patient groups studied. The results of this study indicate that suppression of t-PA production and enhancement of u-PA synthesis and activation in arthritic joints are associated with the clinical severity of arthritis.
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PMID:Plasminogen activators in synovial fluid and plasma from patients with arthritis. 141 21

Urokinase-type (uPA) and tissue-type (tPA) plasminogen activators were identified by fibrinolytic autography in the sulcus epithelium of human gingival mucosa but not in the orthokeratinized gingival epithelium. Fibrinolytic activity was present only over blood vessels in frozen sections of oral squamous cell carcinomas, the malignant epithelial cells showing no plasminogen activator activity. Plasminogen activators could not be demonstrated in either the sulcus or gingival epithelium by immunofluorescence, but both uPA and tPA were found in occasional squamous carcinoma cells. Fibrinolytic activity of culture fluids from epithelial explants grown in vitro from human gingival mucosa showed marked variation, but activity was much higher in the culture supernatants than in the cell lysates. Fibrinolytic activity of culture fluids from epithelial explants of squamous cell carcinomas was low both in supernatants and lysates. Zymogram overlays of sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide electrophoretic gels from culture supernatants showed that the low fibrinolytic activity of culture supernatants of oral squamous cell carcinomas was due to the associated presence of plasminogen activator inhibitors. The fibrinolytic activity in the zymogram was due predominantly to uPA but some lysis was due also to tPA.
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PMID:Plasminogen activators in normal and malignant oral epithelium in vivo and in vitro. 141 24

The generation of the proteolytic enzyme plasmin from its inactive precursor plasminogen, mediated by so called plasminogen activators, is the essential step in thrombolytic therapy. Plasmin is responsible for the degradation of the insoluble fibrin, the major component of a thrombus, to soluble fibrin degradation products. So far, the use of the more recently developed thrombolytic agents single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator (scu-PA) and tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) were disappointing, mainly due to some of their negative properties in vivo, i.e., rapid inhibition and/or hepatic clearance. Besides some background information on the haemostatic balance; t-PA and scu-PA structure; and mechanisms of action, we here review some reported attempts to improve on these agents for thrombolytic therapy following various strategies. One of the more potential strategies, antibody-targeted thrombolytic therapy using bispecific monoclonal antibodies, is discussed somewhat more extensively, as are the several procedures that can be followed for bispecific antibody preparation.
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PMID:The potential improvement of thrombolytic therapy by targeting with bispecific monoclonal antibodies: why they are used and how they are made. 141 66

The earliest tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) preparations prepared from melanoma cells were expressed in urinary-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) units of activity using the u-PA International Standard (66/46). This report describes a comparison between u-PA and t-PA units by various types of fibrin plate procedure using both human and bovine fibrin. Within the biometric limits of this procedure it was found that the potency ratio of u-PA/t-PA was 3.5 (human fibrin), 5.29 (enriched bovine fibrin) and 4.6 (crude bovine fibrin). Specific activity figures of approximately 100,000 IU/mg for pure t-PA using the urokinase standard (66/46) would convert to approximately 350,000-530,000 IU/mg using the International Standards for t-PA (83/517 and 87/670). This latter figure is compatible with the reported specific activity for purified preparations of recombinant t-PA.
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PMID:A comparison of the plasminogen activator activity units of urinary-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA). 142 Aug 25

The low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) is a large multifunctional clearance receptor that has been implicated in the hepatic uptake of chylomicron remnants and in the removal of protease-inhibitor complexes from the circulation and from the extracellular space. Disruption of the LRP gene in mice blocks development of LRP-/- embryos around the implantation stage. The expression pattern of LRP in the postimplantation stage embryo is identical to that of urokinase, a plasminogen activator that confers invasive properties to migrating cells. We demonstrate that LRP mediates uptake and degradation of urokinase-type plasminogen activator-plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 complexes and propose that the inability of the giant cells to remove the inactive protease complexes from their surfaces interferes with implantation of the embryo.
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PMID:LDL receptor-related protein internalizes and degrades uPA-PAI-1 complexes and is essential for embryo implantation. 849 Sep 61

The study of the plasminogen-plasmin system has, in the past, contributed much to the understanding of fibrinolysis and thrombolysis. Attention is now focused on the role of the components of this system in many biologic functions. Findings of uPA, its receptor and its inhibitor in many tumor tissues and tumor cell lines, strongly implicate their involvement in tumor invasion, tumor cell proliferation and metastasis. The characteristics of the plasminogen activators, the uPA receptor and the plasminogen activator inhibitors as well as their expression and regulation in tumors and tumor cell lines are reviewed.
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PMID:The plasminogen-plasmin system in malignancy. 142 20

Soluble chromium (VI) compounds either alone or in combination with 3-methylcholanthrene (MC) were used to transform non-tumorigenic osteoblast-like human osteosarcoma cells (HOS TE85). The Cr(VI) compounds were highly toxic to these cells with LC50 values in the range of approximately 0.5-1.0 microM. Continuous passaging of the treated cells resulted in sustained increase in anchorage-independent (AI) colony formation. Treatment with Cr(VI) and MC resulted in substantial increase in AI growth. At the XVth passage, a number of individual AI colonies were expanded in culture and used for further studies. The cells are refractory in appearance and grow as 'nests' rather than as monolayers. The cell lines have relatively high plating efficiency (PE) in soft agar and respond to promotional effect of phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate by an increase in PE and in the size and number of AI colonies. While the isolated cells are not tumorigenic when tested in athymic nude mice, most of the lines possess higher levels of plasminogen activator (PA) activity, considered as one of the markers of transformation. This is also reflected in the increase in the steady state level of urokinase type PA mRNA. These results show that Cr(VI) compounds are capable of promoting human cells to an altered phenotype characteristic of a stage in the carcinogenesis cascade.
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PMID:Transformation of non-tumorigenic osteoblast-like human osteosarcoma cells by hexavalent chromates: alteration of morphology, induction of anchorage-independence and proteolytic function. 142 71

The effect of ultrasound on the rate of fibrinolysis has been investigated using an in vitro system. Plasma or blood clots containing a trace label of 125I fibrin were suspended in plasma containing plasminogen activator and intermittently exposed to continuous wave 1-MHz ultrasound at intensities up to 8 W/cm2. Plasma clot lysis at 1 h with 1 microgram/ml recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) was 12.8 +/- 1.2% without ultrasound and was significantly (P = 0.0001) increased by exposure to ultrasound with greater lysis at 1 W/cm2 (18.0 +/- 1.4%), 2 W/cm2 (19.3 +/- 0.7%), 4 W/cm2 (22.8 +/- 1.8%), and 8 W/cm2 (58.7 +/- 7.1%). Significant increases in lysis were also seen with urokinase at ultrasound intensities of 2 W/cm2 and above. Exposure of clots to ultrasound in the absence of plasminogen activator did not increase lysis. Ultrasound exposure resulted in a marked reduction in the rt-PA concentration required to achieve an equivalent degree of lysis to that seen without ultrasound. For example, 15% lysis occurred in 1 h at 1 microgram/ml rt-PA without ultrasound or with 0.2 microgram/ml with ultrasound, a five-fold reduction in concentration. Ultrasound at 1 W/cm2 and above also potentiated lysis of retracted whole blood clots mediated by rt-PA or urokinase. The maximum temperature increase of plasma clots exposed to 4 W/cm2 ultrasound was only 1.7 degrees C, which could not explain the enhancement of fibrinolysis. Ultrasound exposure did not cause mechanical fragmentation of the clot into sedimentable fragments, nor did it alter the sizes of plasmic derivatives as demonstrated by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We conclude that ultrasound at 1 MHz potentiates enzymatic fibrinolysis by a nonthermal mechanism at energies that can potentially be applied and tolerated in vivo to accelerate therapeutic fibrinolysis.
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PMID:Enhancement of fibrinolysis in vitro by ultrasound. 143 Feb 29

The pattern of expression of urokinase type plasminogen activator (PA) in granulocyte-macrophage-CSF transgenic mice and their normal littermates was studied using RNAse protection assays and a plasminogen-dependent fibrinolytic assay for PA. Urokinase type PA mRNA was expressed at a high level in transgenic peritoneal cells and at a lower level in transgenic eye tissue and spleen, but not in equivalent tissue from the normal mice. Enzymically active PA was detectable in protein extracts from peritoneal cells taken from transgenic mice of less than 8 wk of age (young mice) but not from normals. Paradoxically, extracts from transgenic mice of more than 12 wk of age (old mice) showed little detectable PA activity despite continuing transcription in some mice of this age. The production of PA by peritoneal cells may be responsible for the spontaneous i.p. bleeding which is a feature of the transgenic mice and production in other tissues may help explain the local pathologic changes.
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PMID:Plasminogen activator in granulocyte-macrophage-CSF transgenic mice. 143 Nov 38


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