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)

To investigate the effect of blood glucose concentration on thrombin generation and fibrinolytic activity, six Type 1 patients had the blood glucose concentration maintained for 1 h at 5, 15, and 25 mmol l-1, and 8 patients underwent hypoglycaemia of 20 min duration after the blood glucose had been kept at 8 mmol l-1 for 1 h. During hyperglycaemia plasminogen activator activity rose from 214 (11-625) (median, range) to 478 (18-772) units (p less than 0.05) at a blood glucose of 5 mmol l-1 and to 511 (89-816) (p less than 0.05) and 535 (33-976) (p less than 0.05) units at a blood glucose of 15 and 25 mmol l-1, respectively. Cross-linked fibrin degradation products (FDP) were 45 and 53 micrograms l-1 at a blood glucose of 5 mmol l-1 and remained unchanged at higher glucose levels. Fibrinopeptide A was 1.3 (0.6-2.8) nmol l-1 at a blood glucose of 5 mmol l-1, and remained unchanged with hyperglycaemia, being 1.3 (0.9-1.3) nmol l-1 after 1h at 25 mmol l-1. During hypoglycaemia, plasminogen activator activity rose from 155 to 745 units (p less than 0.05) while both fibrinopeptide A and cross-linked FDP remained unchanged. The results indicate that acute fluctuations in blood glucose concentration do not lead to thrombin generation. Additionally, increased fibrinolytic activity measured in vitro is not associated with an increase in cross-linked FDP. This suggests that short-term hyper- and hypoglycaemia do not affect the end-products of the coagulation and fibrinolytic pathways.
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PMID:Acute changes in blood glucose concentration do not promote thrombin generation or fibrin breakdown in type 1 diabetes. 297 49

This study was undertaken to obtain further information on the mechanism by which blood fibrinolytic activity, a balance between plasminogen activators and inhibitors, is lowered in obese subjects. Fasting blood samples were collected from 35 subjects, aged 15 to 45 years, with normal glucose tolerance and a Body Mass Index (BMI) varying widely between 16 and 45 (normal, 19 to 25). Euglobulin Fibrinolytic Activity (EFA) did not correlate with the level of tissue type plasminogen activator (t-PA) related antigen but exhibited a negative correlation with the level of PA inhibitor (r = -.609, P less than 0.01). EFA was negatively and PA inhibitor positively correlated with both BMI (r = -.381, P less than 0.02 and .664, P less than 0.01, respectively) and plasma insulin level (r = .410, P less than 0.02 and .521, P less than 0.01, respectively). Stepwise analysis showed that these correlations were independent. As expected, plasma insulin was correlated with BMI (r = .512, P less than 0.01) and triglyceride level (r = .38, P less than 0.02), total cholesterol with age (r = .379, P less than 0.02). Ten obese subjects were submitted to a 24-hour fast. While body weight did not change appreciably, plasma insulin decreased from 22.3 +/- 2.2 to 16.3 +/- 1.1 microU/ml, EFA increased from 3.6 +/- .8 to 4.9 +/- .67 mm, and PA inhibitor decreased from 4.52 +/- .76 to 3.44 +/- .63 IU/mL. All these differences were significant. T-PA-related antigen did not change.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Correlation between blood fibrinolytic activity, plasminogen activator inhibitor level, plasma insulin level, and relative body weight in normal and obese subjects. 308 78

Kinetics of activation of plasminogen purified from the plasma of 3 uncontrolled diabetic patients by tissue type plasminogen activator revealed substrate inhibition in the fibrin-stimulated system. After improvement of metabolic parameters activation of plasminogen was found to be normal in 1 of these patients and partially improved in another patient. Studies performed to investigate a possible nonenzymatic glucosylation of plasminogen showed that purified control plasminogen incorporates 14C-glucose in a dose- and time-dependent manner and that in vitro glucosylation of control plasminogen results in functional abnormalities of plasminogen, which resemble those observed with plasminogen from diabetic patients as far as substrate inhibition in the fibrin-stimulated system is concerned.
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PMID:Nonenzymatic glucosylation as a contributing factor to defective fibrinolysis in diabetes mellitus. 310 4

Factor VIII (FVIII) and plasminogen activator activity (PAA) rise during hypoglycaemia, and this might contribute to the vascular complications of diabetes. Similar changes in haemostasis accompany raised plasma levels of vasopressin (aVP) and adrenaline. To investigate the effects of these hormones on haemostasis during hypoglycaemia and the role of plasma insulin concentrations, eight insulin-dependent diabetic patients underwent controlled hypoglycaemia for 20 min and 13 diabetic patients were investigated during hyperinsulinaemia with blood glucose maintained at 8.0 mmol/l. During hypoglycaemia, insulin levels increased to median values of 114 mU/l, a VP rose from 0.5 to 4.4 (p less than 0.005) pg/ml and adrenaline from 0.4 to 4.4 nmol/l (p less than 0.005). FVIII coagulant activity (FVIII:C) rose from 0.75 to 1.09 IU/ml (p less than 0.01) and the ristocetin co-factor (FVIIIR:Co) and von Willebrand factor antigen (vWF:Ag) showed similar responses. PAA increased from 156 to 745 units (p less than 0.005). During hyperinsulinaemia, insulin rose following infusion from 24 to 52 and 118 mU/l, maintained for an hour at each level. Despite this, plasma aVP, FVIII:C, FVIIIR:Co, vWF:Ag and PAA remained unchanged. This study indicates that the marked changes in FVIII, vWF and PAA concentrations which accompany hypoglycaemia depend on low blood glucose and not raised plasma insulin. The response in probably mediated by increases in adrenaline and aVP, which are part of the physiological response to hypoglycaemia.
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PMID:Hormonal control of haemostasis during hypoglycaemia in diabetes mellitus. 311 5

Nonenzymatic glycation of fibrinogen is species independent and depends only on the glucose concentration in the incubation mixture under selected in vitro conditions. An increased fibrin monomer aggregation in the presence of Ca2+ ions and a decreased proteolytic susceptibility of nonenzymatically glycated fibrinogens may favour the development of thrombophilic states. Blocking of lysine residues as well as restricted conformational changes induced by glucose attachment may be responsible for these effects. Fibrin stabilization by factor XIII is not impaired by nonenzymatic glycation of fibrinogen. Attachment of aortic endothelial cells to fibrin films from glycated fibrinogens is diminished. This phenomenon may be the result of blocked plasminogen activator binding sites in fibrin by nonenzymatic glycation. These effects may contribute in vivo to the accumulation of fibrin in those tissues most frequently affected by diabetic complications.
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PMID:Properties of in vitro nonenzymatically glycated plasma fibrinogens. 366 59

Newborn rat cerebellum microexplants cultured in Minimal Essential Medium with glucose and insulin released plasminogen activator (PA), which was detected in living cultures by a substrate overlay assay. Gel electrophoresis of cerebellum-conditioned medium followed by zymography resolved PA activity in two separate bands of 48,000 and 75,000 daltons apparent mol. wt. Using specific antisera, these bands were shown to be respectively urokinase and tissue-type PA. Cerebellum conditioned medium as well as purified human urokinase induced the proliferation and outgrowth of glial fibrillary acid protein-positive cells from newborn cerebellar microexplants. The effect was suppressed by the serine protease inhibitor phenyl methanesulfonylfluoride. Since PAs are most likely of neuronal origin, we suggest that at least one of these proteases acts as a neuronoglial mitogenic signal during development.
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PMID:Plasminogen activator is a mitogen for astrocytes in developing cerebellum. 403 64

We have examined the phosphorylation state of five proteins known to become phosphorylated on tyrosine during transformation by Rous sarcoma virus by using cells infected with a panel of partially transforming mutant viruses. Situations of viral mutant and growth temperature were found in which phosphorylation of some proteins occurred more extensively than that of others, indicating that mutations in the src gene had affected the specificity of pp60src for some of its substrates as well as affecting the activity of the enzyme. To obtain insight into the biological functions of these phosphorylations, comparisons were made between the degree of phosphorylation of these proteins and the expression of various indicators of the transformed phenotype. The data suggest that phosphorylation of proteins l, p, and q (Mr of 46,000, 39,000 and 28,000, respectively) is not sufficient to induce changes in adhesiveness, hexose transport or morphology. The phosphorylation of protein p or l or total phosphotyrosine content correlated well with the production of plasminogen activator, and the phosphorylation of proteins l and q correlated well with increased hexose transport. However, even when good correlations were observed, significant exceptions were sometimes noted. It thus remains possible that some phosphorylations on tyrosine observed in Rous sarcoma virus-transformed cells are not causally related to the expression of the measured parameters of transformation.
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PMID:Phosphotyrosine-containing proteins and expression of transformation parameters in cells infected with partial transformation mutants of Rous sarcoma virus. 618 22

Conditioned media from Rous sarcoma virus transformed chicken embryo fibroblasts stimulate the uptake of 2-deoxyglucose in normal chicken fibroblasts. The factor responsible for this effect, which is also shed in very low amount by non-transformed fibroblasts, is destroyed by trypsin and not linked to the protease and plasminogen activator activities present in the media. Its apparent molecular weight, determined by gel filtration, is about 20,000 daltons. The factor released by transformed cells might be related to the monomeric form of a family of glucose binding and transport proteins recently reported by Lee and Lipmann ('78) to be detached by detergents from normal and transformed cells.
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PMID:Hexose uptake enhancing factor released from Rous sarcoma cells. 624 29

Fifteen transformation defective sensitive mutants of Rous sarcoma virus have been investigated to see if the expression of the pp60src-associated protein kinase activity correlated with other parameters of transformation such as altered growth control, morphological changes, increased hexose transport, and increased plasminogen activator protease synthesis. The expression of a protein kinase activity paralleled or preceded the onset of other parameters of transformation with but one exception: altered control of cell growth. The stability of the pp60src molecule in mutant-infected cells at the nonpermissive temperature was investigated with the finding that mutant pp60src did not show an increased turnover at the nonpermissive temperature as compared to wild type virus pp60src. Furthermore, it could be shown that pre-existing pp60src in mutant-infected cells maintained at the non-permissive temperature became activated after temperature shift to the permissive temperature. Temperature shift performed under conditions of inhibition of new protein synthesis with cycloheximide, puromycin, or emetine was followed by greatly increased protein kinase activity, and a parallel phosphorylation of pp60src itself in tyrosine residues. Morphological features of transformation could be demonstrated likewise under conditions of inhibition of protein synthesis.
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PMID:In vitro transformation with Rous sarcoma virus and the pp60src-associated protein kinase. 626 96

In order to investigate a possible correlation between in vitro transformation and tumorigenicity in ovo, a new temperature-sensitive class T mutant of Rous Sarcoma Virus was isolated with a lower (39 degrees 5C) restrictive temperature for morphological transformation. This lower restrictive temperature was compatible with the survival of chicken and duck eggs for the tumorigenicity studies. In chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF) infected by this new mutant, PA 17, and cultured at 39 degrees 5C, increase of hexose uptake, plasminogen activator production and anchorage-independent growth were only partially restricted, requiring incubation at 41 degrees 5C for a complete shut-off. Tumorigenicity in chicken and duck eggs inoculated with CEF infected and transformed by PA 17 was restricted at 39 degrees 5C, correlating well with the restriction of morphological transformation at this temperature. The kinase activity of the transforming protein pp60src in lysates of PA 17 infected cells cultured at permissive or restrictive temperatures was labile in RIPA buffer, as in the case of some previously examined ts T mutants. In the non-ionic detergent NP40 buffer, the kinase activity of PA17 infected cell lysates was better conserved and showed a moderate temperature dependence. These results suggest that, in spite of the correlations between the transformed cell phenotype in vitro and cell tumorigenicity in ovo, it is difficult to establish a quantitative relationship.
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PMID:A ts T mutant of Schmidt Ruppin strain of Rous sarcoma virus restricted at 39.5 degrees C for the morphological transformation and the tumorigenicity of chicken embryo fibroblasts. 627 5


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