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Query: UNIPROT:P00750 (PLA)
16,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The binding, internalization, and degradation of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) were studied in a rat hepatoma (Novikoff) cell line. Binding of t-PA to specific saturable high affinity binding sites (Kd = 12 nM, 54,000 sites/cell) was followed by internalization and degradation and did not require a functional active site. The catabolism of t-PA was not inhibited by an excess of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA), and t-PA bound to Novikoff membranes was not complexed to PAI-1, suggesting a mechanism independent of PAI-1. Additionally, a mannose receptor is not involved since t-PA binding was not influenced by an excess of mannose, galactose, ovalbumin, or EDTA. Furthermore, the degradation of t-PA was not influenced by 10 mM 6-aminohexanoic acid, a lysine analogue. The t-PA receptor binds to and can be eluted from wheat germ agglutinin-Sepharose. Cross-linking of t-PA with partially purified receptor and ligand blot analysis, suggest that t-PA binds to two proteins, a principal one of 55 kDa and a minor one of 43 kDa. Novikoff cells are able also to bind (Kd = 1.4 nM, 25,000 sites/cell) and degrade u-PA. The binding was inhibited by pro-u-PA and the amino-terminal fragment of u-PA, but not by an excess of t-PA. The u-PA receptor, but not the t-PA receptor, was removed by treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. Our results show that the clearance receptor for t-PA on Novikoff cells is different from the mannose receptor and the PAI-1-dependent receptor described in other cells. The rat hepatoma cells are thus a good model to study the PAI-1 independent hepatocyte-specific clearance of t-PA.
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PMID:Demonstration of a specific clearance receptor for tissue-type plasminogen activator on rat Novikoff hepatoma cells. 131 32

The interaction of 125I-labelled tissue-type plasminogen activator (125I-t-PA) with freshly isolated rat parenchymal and endothelial liver cells was studied. Binding experiments at 4 degrees C with parenchymal cells and endothelial liver cells indicated the presence of 68,000 and 44,000 high-affinity t-PA-binding sites, with an apparent Kd of 3.5 and 4 nM respectively. Association of 125I-t-PA with parenchymal cells was Ca(2+)-dependent and was not influenced by asialofetuin, a known ligand for the galactose receptor. Association of 125I-t-PA with liver endothelial cells was Ca(2+)-dependent and mannose-specific, since ovalbumin (a mannose-terminated glycoprotein) inhibited the cell association of t-PA. Association of 125I-t-PA with liver endothelial cells was inhibited by anti-(human mannose receptor) antiserum. Anti-(galactose receptor) IgG had no effect on 125I-t-PA association with either cell type. Degradation of 125I-t-PA at 37 degrees C by both cell types was inhibited by chloroquine or NH4Cl, indicating that t-PA is degraded lysosomally. in vitro experiments with three monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) demonstrated that anti-t-PA MAb 1-3-1 specifically decreased association of 125I-t-PA with the endothelial cells, and anti-t-PA Mab 7-8-4 inhibited association with the parenchymal cells. Results of competition experiments in rats in vivo with these antibodies were in agreement with findings in vitro. Both antibodies decreased the liver uptake of 125I-t-PA, while a combination of the two antibodies was even more effective in reducing the liver association of 125I-t-PA and increasing its plasma half-life. We conclude from these data that clearance of t-PA by the liver is regulated by at least two pathways, one on parenchymal cells (not galactose/mannose-mediated) and another on liver endothelial cells (mediated by a mannose receptor). Results with the MAbs imply that two distinct sites on the t-PA molecule are involved in binding to parenchymal cells and liver endothelial cells.
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PMID:Characterization of the interaction both in vitro and in vivo of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) with rat liver cells. Effects of monoclonal antibodies to t-PA. 131 35

In the liver, tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) is endocytosed by hepatic parenchymal (PC), endothelial (EC) and Kupffer (KC) cells. Although the endocytosis is receptor-mediated, it remains a matter of discussion which receptors are involved in this catabolic process. To evaluate the role of a protein-specific receptor, as well as the possible involvement of the galactose receptor on PC and the mannose receptor on EC, we have employed different glycosylation variants of t-PA in biochemical and immunocytochemical studies. Partial or total removal of carbohydrate side-chains by endoglycosidases did not prevent clearance and hepatic endocytosis of t-PA by either of the liver cell types. Blockade of the galactose and mannose receptors by co-application of a large excess of the glycoprotein ovalbumin remained without effect on the binding and uptake of t-PA by hepatic cells. However, the contribution of different liver cell types to the hepatic clearance of t-PA was to a certain extent dependent on the type of oligosaccharide chains removed. The mannose receptor on EC is partially responsible for the clearance of t-PA by this cell type, whereas the galactose receptor does not seem to be involved in this process. The results obtained in this study further demonstrate that the major portion of the hepatic catabolism of t-PA is independent of its carbohydrate side-chains.
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PMID:Evidence for carbohydrate-independent endocytosis of tissue-type plasminogen activator by liver cells. 132 74

The formation of N-linked oligosaccharides of eukaryotic glycoproteins starts with the attachment of a common precursor at the recognition site Asn-X-Ser/Thr. Subsequent processing, by yet unknown controlling factors, leads to the formation of three different glycans: the high mannose type, the complex type and the hybrid type. In order to gain insight into the processing mechanisms, we studied the glycan pattern of a panel of related molecules constructed by insertion, duplication or deletion of the domains encoded by the cDNA of a fibrinolytic glycoprotein, tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA). These variant molecules are identical in regard to the glycosylation sites originally situated in particular domains, but differ with respect to the sequential alignment of the domains. The variant and native t-PA genes were transfected into mouse C127 cells and their carbohydrate structures analyzed by the susceptibility to specific endoglycosidases and by reaction with sugar-specific lectins. We found that with one exception, all mutant activators lack the high mannose glycan found at asn 117 of native t-PA. The exception was a molecule that retains the original domain arrangement up to and through the glycosylation site at asn 117. These results demonstrate for the first time that structural alterations in the primary sequence distal to the actual glycosylation site can result in altered processing of N-linked oligosacharides.
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PMID:Alterations in the domain structure of tissue-type plasminogen activator change the nature of asparagine glycosylation. 136 33

The binding of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) to membranes prepared from human liver was investigated, and a specific, saturable, high-affinity binding site (Kd = 3.4 nM) was identified. The binding of t-PA to liver membranes was not affected by an excess of D-mannose or D-galactose, or by active urokinase (u-PA), whereas binding of t-PA to membranes prepared from human HepG2 hepatoma cells was inhibited by u-PA. HepG2-membrane-bound t-PA was fully complexed to PA inhibitor 1 (PAI-1), whereas liver-membrane-bound t-PA was not complexed. Gel filtration on Sephacryl S300 of membrane proteins solubilized in deoxycholate revealed that high-affinity t-PA binding activity elutes at an apparent molecular mass of 40 kDa. Monoclonal antibodies specific for the growth factor and the kringle 2 domains inhibited the binding of t-PA to liver membranes and the catabolism of t-PA by rat hepatoma cells. Human liver membranes also bound u-PA; binding was inhibited by pro-u-PA, the N-terminal fragment of u-PA, but not by the 33 kDa form of u-PA or by t-PA. Our results show that human liver membranes contain a specific 40 kDa binding protein for t-PA that is different from the PAI-1-dependent receptor described on HepG2 cells and the mannose receptor isolated from human liver.
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PMID:Characterization of the binding of plasminogen activators to plasma membranes from human liver. 144 49

We have isolated two temperature-sensitive Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants which exhibit a deficiency in mannose outer chain elongation of asparagine-linked oligosaccharide. The size of yeast glycoprotein, secretory form of invertase, of one mutant (och1) was slightly larger than that of the sec18 mutant at the non-permissive temperature, while that of the other mutant (och2) was almost the same as that of the sec18 mutant. Unlike sec mutants, the och mutants were not deficient in secretion of invertase. The och1 mutant showed a 2+:2- cosegregation with regard to the temperature sensitivity and mannose outer chain deficiency, suggesting that a single gene designated as OCH1 is responsible for these two phenotypes. The och1 mutant stopped its growth at the early stage of bud formation and rapidly lost its viability at the non-permissive temperature. The och1 mutation was mapped near the ole1 on the left arm of chromosome VII. The och1 mutant cells accumulated the external invertase containing a large amount of core-like oligosaccharides (Man9-10GlcNAc2) and a small amount of high mannose oligosaccharides (greater than Man50GlcNAc2) at the non-permissive temperature. Production of the active form of human tissue-type plasminogen activator was increased in the och1 mutant compared with the parental strain, suggesting the potential advantage of this mutant for the production of mammalian-type glycoproteins which lack mannose outer chains in yeast.
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PMID:Isolation of new temperature-sensitive mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae deficient in mannose outer chain elongation. 152 86

Various studies have shown that mannose receptors rapidly eliminate glycoproteins and microorganisms bearing high mannose-type carbohydrate chains from the blood circulation. The purpose of this study was to characterize the mannose receptor in the liver, which in vivo is involved in the rapid clearance of tissue-type plasminogen activator from the circulation. Human liver membranes were solubilized in Triton X-100, and the solution was applied to a tissue-type plasminogen activator Sepharose column. Bound proteins were eluted with ethylenediaminetetraacetate (10 mmol/L). A second, similar purification step rendered a single liver protein of 175,000 daltons. A combination of ligand blotting and a chromogenic assay for tissue-type plasminogen activator demonstrated that the identified liver protein is a mannose receptor because it bound tissue-type plasminogen activator, this tissue-type plasminogen activator binding being fully inhibited by 0.2 mol/L D-mannose. Western-blot analysis revealed that the isolated liver protein is immunologically identical to the human mannose receptor from placenta. Treatment of the liver protein and the placenta mannose receptor with trypsin yielded the same pattern of proteolytic degradation products as identified on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We conclude that the physiologically relevant mannose receptor for tissue-type plasminogen activator clearance isolated from human liver is immunologically and structurally similar to or identical with the human mannose receptor isolated from placenta.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the mannose receptor from human liver potentially involved in the plasma clearance of tissue-type plasminogen activator. 161 83

The plasma clearance and the interaction of high (HMW) and low (LMW) molecular weight single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator (scu-PA) with rat liver cells was determined. 125I-Labeled HMW- and LMW-scu-PA were rapidly cleared from plasma with a half-life of 0.45 min and a maximal liver uptake of 55% of the injected dose. Liver uptake of scu-PA was mediated by parenchymal cells. Excess of unlabeled HMW-scu-PA reduced the liver uptake of 125I-HMW-scu-PA strongly. In vivo liver degradation of scu-PA was reduced by inhibitors of the lysosomal pathway. A high affinity binding site (Kd 45 nM, Bmax 1.7 pmol/mg cell protein) for both HMW- and LMW-scu-PA was determined on isolated parenchymal liver cells. Cross-competition binding studies showed that LMW- and HMW-scu-PA bind to the same site. Tissue-type plasminogen activator, mannose- or galactose-terminated glycoproteins did not affect the scu-PA binding to parenchymal liver cells. It is concluded that LMW- and HMW-scu-PA are taken up in the liver by a common, newly identified recognition site on parenchymal liver cells and are subsequently degraded in the lysosomes. It is suggested that this site is important for the regulation of the turnover of scu-PA.
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PMID:In vivo and in vitro interaction of high and low molecular weight single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator with rat liver cells. 173 Jul 4

A novel triple-kringle plasminogen activator protein, PK1 delta FE1X, has been produced which is a genetic chimera between the fibrin binding kringle 1 domain of plasminogen and the two kringles and serine protease domains of naturally occurring wild-type tissue plasminogen activator (wt t-PA). This chimera also contains a modification to prevent high mannose type N-linked glycosylation on kringle 1 of t-PA. PK1 delta FE1X is biochemically and fibrinolytically similar to wt t-PA in vitro but retains the decreased plasma clearance rate characteristic of other t-PA variants which lack fibronectin finger-like and epidermal growth factor domains. The serine protease domain of PK1 delta FE1X exhibits the amidolytic activity characteristic of wt t-PA. In an indirect coupled plasminogen activator assay, the specific activity of PK1 delta FE1X is approximately 1.4 times greater than that of wt t-PA. In a fibrin film-binding assay, greater binding to untreated fibrin is observed with wt t-PA than with PK1 delta FE1X. However, following limited plasmin digestion of the fibrin film, PK1 delta FE1X binding increases to the level observed with wt t-PA. The incremental binding to plasmin-digested fibrin observed with PK1 delta FE1X is eliminated if plasmin digestion of the fibrin film is followed by carboxypeptidase B treatment. This result suggests that plasminogen kringle 1 binds plasmin-digested fibrin even after recombination with a heterologous protein. The fibrinolytic activity of PK1 delta FE1X in human plasma clot lysis assays was similar to that of wt t-PA at activator concentrations of approximately 1 microgram/ml. At substantially lower concentrations, approximately 0.1 microgram/ml, PK1 delta FE1X was only slightly less active than wt t-PA. Pharmacokinetic analysis showed that wt t-PA activity is cleared approximately 15 times as rapidly as PK1 delta FE1X following intravenous bolus injection. In a rabbit jugular vein clot lysis model, intravenous bolus injection of 0.06 mg/kg of PK1 delta FE1X showed greater thrombolytic potency than a similar administration of 0.5 mg/kg of wt t-PA. Thus it appears that in vitro exon shuffling techniques can be used to generate novel fibrinolytic agents which biochemically and pharmacologically represent the combination of individual domains of naturally occurring proteins.
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PMID:Replacement of finger and growth factor domains of tissue plasminogen activator with plasminogen kringle 1. Biochemical and pharmacological characterization of a novel chimera containing a high affinity fibrin-binding domain linked to a heterologous protein. 184 87

The glycoprotein tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA, alteplase, CAS 105857-23-6) is a serine protease consisting of 527 amino acids and can activate plasminogen to plasmin, which subsequently dissolves the fibrin network of a thrombus. This activation occurs selectively on the thrombus, making recombinant t-PA a very effective agent in the treatment of thromboembolic disorders. t-PA has a short in vivo half-life and is rapidly removed from the circulation by the liver. The catabolism of t-PA involves receptor-mediated endocytosis and intracellular degradation in several cell types of the liver namely hepatic endothelial, parenchymal and Kupffer cells. Liver endothelial cells have been reported to possess a specific uptake system for t-PA based on the recognition of the high mannose carbohydrate structures on Asn117. To further elucidate the involvement of the mannose receptor on sinusoidal endothelial cells in the hepatic catabolism of t-PA and to identify the mechanisms involved, biochemical as well as electron microscopic studies were performed. The biochemical studies revealed that the removal of the mannose side chain in t-PA significantly reduced its clearance and degradation in isolated perfused livers. The binding of t-PA to preparations of primary hepatocytes and liver cell membranes could not be competed for by various sugars and glycoproteins, and was not dependent on the presence of carbohydrates on the molecule. This ruled out a major relevance of the sugar moieties of t-PA in its recognition by liver cells that were not of endothelial origin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Endocytosis of the recombinant tissue plasminogen activator alteplase by hepatic endothelial cells. 190 31


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