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)

Conditioned medium (CM) derived from co-cultures of bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAECs) and bovine smooth muscle cells (BSMCs) contains transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) formed via a plasmin-dependent activation of latent TGF-beta (LTGF beta), which occurs in heterotypic but not in homotypic cultures (Sato, Y., and D. B. Rifkin. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 107: 1199-1205). The TGF-beta formed is able to block the migration of BSMCs or BAECs. We have found that the simultaneous addition to heterotypic culture medium of plasminogen and the atherogenic lipoprotein, lipoprotein (a) (Lp(a)), which contains plasminogen-like kringles, inhibits the activation of LTGF-beta in a dose-dependent manner. The inclusion of LDL in the culture medium did not show such an effect. Control experiments indicated that Lp(a) does not interfere with the basal level of cell migration, the activity of exogenous added TGF-beta, the release of LTGF-beta from cells, the activation of LTGF-beta either by plasmin or by transient acidification, or the activity of plasminogen activator. The addition of Lp(a) to the culture medium decreased the amount of plasmin found in BAECs/BSMCs cultures. Similar results were obtained using CM derived from cocultures of human umbilical vein endothelial cells and human foreskin fibroblasts. These results suggest that Lp(a) can inhibit the activation of LTGF-beta by competing with the binding of plasminogen to cell or matrix surfaces. Therefore, high plasma levels of Lp(a) might enhance smooth muscle cell migration by decreasing the levels of the migration inhibitor TGF-beta thus contributing to generation of the atheromatous lesions.
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PMID:Lipoprotein (a) inhibits the generation of transforming growth factor beta: an endogenous inhibitor of smooth muscle cell migration. 182 68

Endothelial cells play a critical role in thromboregulation by virtue of a surface-connected fibrinolytic system. Cultured endothelial cells synthesize and secrete tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) which can bind to at least two discrete sites on the cell surface. These binding sites preserve the catalytic activity of t-PA and protect it from its physiological inhibitor (PAI-1). N-terminal glutamic acid plasminogen (Glu-PLG), the main circulating fibrinolytic zymogen, also interacts specifically with the endothelial cell surface. Binding is associated with a 12-fold increase in catalytic efficiency of plasmin generation by t-PA which may reflect conversion of Glu-PLG to its plasmin-modified form, N-terminal lysine plasminogen (Lys-PLG). Lipoprotein(a) is an atherogenic lipoprotein particle which contains the plasminogen-like apolipoprotein(a) bound to low density lipoprotein. We report here that lipoprotein(a) interferes with endothelial cell fibrinolysis by inhibiting plasminogen binding and hence plasmin generation. In addition, we demonstrate lipoprotein(a) accumulation in atherosclerotic lesions. These findings may provide a link between impaired cell surface fibrinolysis and progressive atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Lipoprotein(a) modulation of endothelial cell surface fibrinolysis and its potential role in atherosclerosis. 252 66

Plasminogen activation at the surface of fibrin or of cell membranes is a sophisticated specialized system for localized extracellular proteolysis implicated in a large variety of biological functions (fibrinolysis, cell migration and extracellular matrix degradation). Assembly of plasminogen and/or activators at specific binding sites induces conformational changes that make accessible the scissile peptide bond of plasminogen and exposes the active centre of the tissue-type plasminogen activator. The mechanism of activation by pro-urokinase, a second type of activator that binds to cell membrane but not to fibrin, is far from being understood. It may be able, however, in contrast to urokinase, to specifically activate plasminogen bound to partially degraded fibrin. An extremely low Km and high catalytic rate are characteristic of the process of activation at surfaces. In contrast, activation in liquid phase by tissue-type plasminogen activator proceeds at an extremely low catalytic rate. The initiation and amplification of plasminogen activation depend on specific interactions between the modular constitutive units of these proteins and binding sites present on cell or fibrin surfaces. Thus, the most important mechanism for the acceleration of fibrinolysis and pericellular proteolysis is the unveiling of carboxy-terminal lysine residues on these surfaces, to which plasminogen may bind. Since plasminogen bound to carboxy-terminal lysines of progressively degraded fibrin or membranes is readily transformed into plasmin by fibrin-bound t-PA, this mechanism represents the most important pathway for the acceleration and amplification of fibrinolysis. Alpha-2-antiplasmin, by inhibiting plasmin release from surfaces, regulates the extent and rate of this process but has no effect on fibrin-bound or membrane-bound plasmin. Lipoprotein(a), a particle possessing a plasminogen-like apolipoprotein, apo(a), may interfere with this mechanism by inhibiting the specific binding of plasminogen to lysine residues in membrane or fibrin surfaces.
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PMID:Overview on fibrinolysis: plasminogen activation pathways on fibrin and cell surfaces. 818 35

Matrix metalloproteinase-3 (MMP-3 or stromelysin-1) specifically binds to tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), without however, hydrolyzing the protein. Binding affinity to proMMP-3 is similar to single chain t-PA, two chain t-PA and active site mutagenized t-PA (Ka of 6.3 x 106 to 8.0 x 106 M-1), but is reduced for t-PA lacking the finger and growth factor domains (Ka of 2.0 x 106 M-1). Activation of native Glu-plasminogen by t-PA in the presence of proMMP-3 obeys Michaelis-Menten kinetics; at saturating concentrations of proMMP-3, the catalytic efficiency of two chain t-PA is enhanced 20-fold (kcat/Km of 7.9 x 10-3 vs. 4.1 x 10-4 microM-1.s-1). This is mainly the result of an enhanced affinity of t-PA for its substrate (Km of 1.6 microM vs. 89 microM in the absence of proMMP-3), whereas the kcat is less affected (kcat of 1.3 x 10-2 vs. 3.6 x 10-2 s-1). Activation of Lys-plasminogen by two chain t-PA is stimulated about 13-fold at a saturating concentration of proMMP-3, whereas that of miniplasminogen is virtually unaffected (1.4-fold). Plasminogen activation by single chain t-PA is stimulated about ninefold by proMMP-3, whereas that by the mutant lacking finger and growth factor domains is stimulated only threefold. Biospecific interaction analysis revealed binding of Lys-plasminogen to proMMP-3 with 18-fold higher affinity (Ka of 22 x 106 M-1) and of miniplasminogen with fivefold lower affinity (Ka of 0.26 x 106 M-1) as compared to Glu-plasminogen (Ka of 1.2 x 106 M-1). Plasminogen and t-PA appear to bind to different sites on proMMP-3. These data are compatible with a model in which both plasminogen and t-PA bind to proMMP-3, resulting in a cyclic ternary complex in which t-PA has an enhanced affinity for plasminogen, which may be in a Lys-plasminogen-like conformation. Maximal binding and stimulation require the N-terminal finger and growth factor domains of t-PA and the N-terminal kringle domains of plasminogen.
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PMID:Prostromelysin-1 (proMMP-3) stimulates plasminogen activation by tissue-type plasminogen activator. 1102 80

Apolipoprotein(a) [apo(a)] is the distinctive glycoprotein of lipoprotein Lp(a), which is disulfide linked to the apo B100 of a low density lipoprotein particle. Apo(a) possesses a high degree of sequence homology with plasminogen, the precursor of plasmin, a fibrinolytic and pericellular proteolytic enzyme. Apo(a) exists in several isoforms defined by a variable number of copies of plasminogen-like kringle 4 and single copies of kringle 5, and the protease region including the backbone positions for the catalytic triad (Ser, His, Asp). A lysine-binding site that is similar to that of plasminogen kringle 4 is present in apo(a) kringle IV type 10. These kringle motifs share some amino acid residues (Asp55, Asp57, Phe64, Tyr62, Trp72, Arg71) that are key components of their lysine-binding site. The spatial conformation and the function of this site in plasminogen kringle 4 and in apo(a) kringle IV-10 seem to be identical as indicated by (i) the ability of apo(a) to compete with plasminogen for binding to fibrin, and (ii) the neutralisation of the lysine-binding function of these kringles by a monoclonal antibody that recognises key components of the lysine-binding site. In contrast, the lysine-binding site of plasminogen kringle 1 contains a Tyr residue at positions 64 and 72 and is not recognised by this antibody. Plasminogen bound to fibrin is specifically recognised and cleaved by the tissue-type plasminogen activator at Arg561-Val562, and is thereby transformed into plasmin. A Ser-Ile substitution at the activation cleavage site is present in apo(a). Reinstallation of the Arg-Val peptide bond does not ensure cleavage of apo(a) by plasminogen activators. These data suggest that the stringent specificity of tissue-type plasminogen activator for plasminogen requires molecular interactions with structures located remotely from the activation disulfide loop. These structures ensure second site interactions that are most probably absent in apo(a).
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PMID:Apolipoprotein(a): structure-function relationship at the lysine-binding site and plasminogen activator cleavage site. 1192 26

In the search for new ligands for the plasminogen kringle 4 binding-protein tetranectin, it has been found by ligand blot analysis and ELISA that tetranectin specifically bound to the plasminogen-like hepatocyte growth factor and tissue-type plasminogen activator. The dissociation constants of these complexes were found to be within the same order of magnitude as the one for the plasminogen-tetranectin complex. The study also revealed that tetranectin did not interact with the kindred proteins: macrophage-stimulating protein, urokinase-type plasminogen activator and prothrombin. In order to examine the function of tetranectin, a kinetic analysis of the tPA-catalysed plasminogen activation was performed. The kinetic parameters of the tetranectin-stimulated enhancement of tPA were comparable to fibrinogen fragments, which are so far the best inducer of tPA-catalysed plasminogen activation. The enhanced activation was suggested to be caused by tetranectin's ability to bind and accumulate tPA in an active conformation.
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PMID:Tetranectin binds hepatocyte growth factor and tissue-type plasminogen activator. 1269 98

The aim of this review is to summarize present evidence of a causal association of lipoprotein(a) with risk of ischemic heart disease (IHD). Evidence for causality includes reproducible associations of a proposed risk factor with risk of disease in epidemiological studies, evidence from in vitro and animal studies in support of pathophysiological effects of the risk factor, and preferably evidence from randomized clinical trials documenting reduced morbidity in response to interventions targeting the risk factor. Elevated and in particular extreme lipoprotein(a) levels have in prospective studies repeatedly been associated with increased risk of IHD, although results from early studies are inconsistent. Data from in vitro and animal studies implicate lipoprotein(a), consisting of a low density lipoprotein particle covalently bound to the plasminogen-like glycoprotein apolipoprotein(a), in both atherosclerosis and thrombosis, including accumulation of lipoprotein(a) in atherosclerotic plaques and attenuation of t-PA mediated plasminogen activation. No randomized clinical trial of the effect of lowering lipoprotein(a) levels on IHD prevention has ever been conducted. Lacking evidence from randomized clinical trials, genetic studies, such as Mendelian randomization studies, can also support claims of causality. Levels of lipoprotein(a) are primarily determined by variation in the LPA gene coding for the apolipoprotein(a) moiety of lipoprotein(a), and genetic epidemiologic studies have documented association of LPA copy number variants, influencing levels of lipoprotein(a), with risk of IHD. In conclusion, results from epidemiologic, in vitro, animal, and genetic epidemiologic studies support a causal association of lipoprotein(a) with risk of IHD, while results from randomized clinical trials are presently lacking.
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PMID:Lipoprotein(a) and ischemic heart disease--a causal association? A review. 2010 78