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)

This recent study describes the growth characteristics of ACR skin fibroblasts in culture and their differential susceptibility to transformation by Kirsten murine sarcoma virus (Ki-MSV). The SF were derived from normal appearing subepidermoid biopsies of ACR individuals, their progeny and ocntrols. Normal SF were contact-inhibited and grew only in 15% FCS. SF of ACR subjects, and some asymptomatic ACR progeny were not contact inhibited, grew in both 1% and 15% FCS and were considerably more susceptible to transformation by Ki-MSV than were control SF. The virally transformed SF showed a loss of anchorage dependency in methylcellulose and formed tumors in athymic mice. The results suggest the presence of early and previously undetected metabolic lesions in SF from clinically asymptomatic subjects. These phenotype markers are currently evaluated for their utility in the clinical diagnosis of individuals with latent ACR and those at increased risk for colon cancer. SF from ACR individuals have been recently shown to contain significant alterations in the intracellular distribution of actin (R. Pollack and L. Kopelovich, in preparation), and elevated levels of plasminogen activator (L. Kopelovich).
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PMID:Recent studies on the identification of proliferative abnormalities and of oncogenic potential of cutaneous cells in individuals at increased risk of colon cancer. 1 61

Fibrinolysis triggered by t-PA bound to fibrin is one of the main antithrombotic mechanisms. Defects in the fibrinolytic system-decreased tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) activity and elevated levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1), in patients with SLE have been associated with an increased tendency to thrombosis. In the present study, 43 patients with SLE fulfilling the ACR criteria for the disease, were studied for the presence of autoantibodies to fibrin-bound t-PA, i.e. the physiological active form of this plasminogen activator. A solution of 200 IU/ml of t-PA was incubated with solid-phase fibrin prepared as previously described (Anal Biochem 1986; 153; 201-210). Sera diluted 1:50 were incubated with fibrin-bound t-PA, the plates were then washed, and bound immunoglobulins were detected using a polyvalent peroxidase-labeled goat anti-human Ig. Plates coated with fibrin alone were used as controls. Sera were considered positive when A490/630 obtained with normal human sera in two independent test was greater than the mean plus 2 SD. Eleven of 43 (26%) SLE sera demonstrated antibody reactivity against fibrin-bound t-PA. Within the anti-t-PA positive group there was a higher proportion of SLE patients with severe Raynaud's phenomenon and thrombotic events when compared to the anti-t-PA negative group: 36% vs 6% and 18% vs 6% respectively. These results suggest that autoantibodies to fibrin-bound t-PA could play a role in the pathogenesis of vascular disease in some SLE patients.
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PMID:Antibodies to fibrin-bound tissue-type plasminogen activator in systemic lupus erythematosus are associated with Raynaud's phenomenon and thrombosis. 886 98

Protein C inhibitor (PCI) is a nonspecific, heparin-binding serpin (serine protease inhibitor) that inactivates many plasmatic and extravascular serine proteases by forming stable 1:1 complexes. Proteases inhibited by PCI include the anticoagulant activated protein C, the plasminogen activator urokinase, and the sperm protease acrosin. In humans PCI circulates as a plasma protein but is also present at high concentrations in organs of the male reproductive tract. The biological role of PCI has not been defined so far. However, the colocalization of high concentrations of PCI together with several of its target proteases in the male reproductive tract suggests a role of PCI in reproduction. We generated mice lacking PCI by homologous recombination. Here we show that PCI(-/-) mice are apparently healthy but that males of this genotype are infertile. Infertility was apparently caused by abnormal spermatogenesis due to destruction of the Sertoli cell barrier, perhaps due to unopposed proteolytic activity. The resulting sperm are malformed and are morphologically similar to abnormal sperm seen in some cases of human male infertility. This animal model might therefore be useful for analyzing the molecular bases of these human conditions.
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PMID:Disruption of the protein C inhibitor gene results in impaired spermatogenesis and male infertility. 1112 Jul 60

The effect of tannic acid, a common flavonoid, on the acrosin and plasminogen activator activity and plasmin activity of human and ram spermatozoa was evaluated. Acrosin and plasminogen activator activity were determined by spectrophotometry using the chromogenic substrates N-alpha-benzoyl-DL-arginine para-nitroanilide-HCl (BAPNA) and H-D-valyl-L-leucyl-L-lysine-p-nitroanilide-2HCl (S-2251), respectively. In extracts from both human and ovine acrosomes, the activities of acrosin and plasminogen activators were susceptible to tannic acid inhibition. The inhibitory effect of tannic acid was observed at concentrations > 50 micromol l(-1) in a dose-dependent manner. In additional experiments, low concentrations of tannic acid significantly inhibited tissue-type plasminogen activator, urokinase-type plasminogen activator and plasmin activity in a concentration-dependent manner over the range 0.25-200 micromol l(-1). Tannic acid reduced the motility of ram spermatozoa at a concentration of 1000 micromol l(-1) after 2 and 3 h co-incubation with spermatozoa. The motility of human spermatozoa remained unchanged over the range 0.1-1000 micromol tannic acid l(-1) during 3 h co-incubation. These results indicate that tannic acid inhibited the activity of both acrosin and plasminogen activator and indicates a possible mechanism by which flavonoids exert their antifertility effects.
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PMID:Inhibition of human and ovine acrosomal enzymes by tannic acid in vitro. 1122 36