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1.
The influence of angiostatin K1-4.5--a fragment of the heavy chain of plasmin and a powerful inhibitor of angiogenesis--on kinetic parameters (k(Pg) and K(Pg)) of human Glu-plasminogen activation under the action of urokinase (uPA) not having affinity for fibrin and fibrin-specific tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) was investigated. Angiostatin does not affect the k(Pg) value, but increases the value K(Pg) urokinase plasminogen activation. A decrease in the k(Pg) value and an increase in the K(Pg) value were found for fibrin-stimulated plasminogen activation by tPA with increasing concentrations of angiostatin. The obtained results show that angiostatin is competitive inhibitor of the uPA activator activity, while it inhibits the activator activity of tPA by mixed type. Such an influence ofangiostatin on the kinetic constants ofthe urokinase plasminogen activation suggests that angiostatin dose dependent manner replaces plasminogen in the binary enzyme-substrate complex uPA-Pg. In case of fibrin-stimulated plasminogen activation by tPA, both zymogen and tPA are bound to fibrin with formation of the effective triple tPA-Pg-fibrin complex. Angiostatin replaces plasminogen both from the fibrin surface and from the enzyme-substrate tPA-Pg complex that leads to a decrease in k(Pg) and an increase in K(Pg) of plasminogen activation. Inhibition constants by angioststin (Ki) of plasminogen-activator activities of uPA and tPA determined by Dixon method were found to be 0.59 +/- 0.04 and 0.12 +/- 0.05 microM, respectively.  相似文献   

2.
The influence of angiostatin K1-4.5, a fragment of the heavy chain of plasmin and a powerful inhibitor of angiogenesis, on kinetic parameters (k Pg and K Pg) of human Glu-plasminogen activation under the action of urokinase (uPA) not having affinity for fibrin and fibrin-specific tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) was investigated. Angiostatin does not affect on the k Pg value, but increases the value of K Pg plasminogen activation by urokinase. A decrease in the k Pg value and an increase in the K Pg value were found for fibrin-stimulated plasminogen activation by tPA with increasing concentrations of angiostatin. The obtained results show that angiostatin is a competitive inhibitor of the uPA activator activity, while it inhibits the activator activity of tPA with a mixed type. Such an influence of angiostatin on the kinetic constants of the plasminogen activation by urokinase suggests that angiostatin dose-dependent manner replaces plasminogen in the binary enzyme-substrate complex uPA-Pg. In the case of fibrin-stimulated plasminogen activation by tPA, both zymogen and tPA are bound to fibrin with the formation of the effective triple tPA-Pg-fibrin complex. Angiostatin replaces plasminogen both from the fibrin surface and from the enzyme-substrate tPA-Pg complex, which leads to a decrease in k Pg and an increase in K Pg of the plasminogen activation. Inhibition constants by angiostatin (K i) of plasminogen-activator activities of uPA and tPA determined by the Dixon method were found to be 0.59 ± 0.04 and 0.12 ± 0.05 μM, respectively.  相似文献   

3.
The vampire bat salivary plasminogen activator (BatPA) is virtually inactive toward Glu-plasminogen in the absence of a fibrin-like cofactor, unlike human tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) (the kcat/Km values were 4 and 470 M-1 s-1, respectively). In the presence of fibrin II, tPA and BatPA activated Glu-plasminogen with comparable catalytic efficiencies (158,000 and 174,000 M-1 s-1, respectively). BatPA's cofactor requirement was partially satisfied by polymeric fibrin I (54,000 M-1 s-1), but monomeric fibrin I was virtually ineffective (970 M-1 s-1). By comparison, a variety of monomeric and polymeric fibrin-like species markedly enhanced tPA-mediated activation of Glu-plasminogen. Fragment X polymer was 2-fold better but 9-fold worse as cofactor for tPA and BatPA, respectively, relative to fibrin II. Fibrinogen, devoid of plasminogen, was a 10-fold better cofactor for tPA than fibrinogen rigorously depleted of plasminogen, Factor XIII, and fibronectin; the enhanced stimulatory effect of the less-purified fibrinogen was apparently due to the presence of Factor XIII. By contrast, the two fibrinogen preparations were equally poor cofactors of BatPA-mediated activation of Glu-plasminogen. BatPA possessed only 23 and 4% of the catalytic efficiencies of tPA and two-chain tPA, respectively, in hydrolyzing the chromogenic substrate Spectrozyme tPA. However in the presence of fibrin II, BatPA and tPA exhibited similar kcat/Km values for the hydrolysis of Spectrozyme tPA. Our data revealed that BatPA, unlike tPA, displayed a strict and fastidious requirement for polymeric fibrin I or II. Consequently, BatPA may preferentially promote plasmin generation during a narrow temporal window of fibrin formation and dissolution.  相似文献   

4.
The increased levels of extracellular DNA found in a number of disorders involving dysregulation of the fibrinolytic system may affect interactions between fibrinolytic enzymes and inhibitors. Double-stranded (ds) DNA and oligonucleotides bind tissue-(tPA) and urokinase (uPA)-type plasminogen activators, plasmin, and plasminogen with submicromolar affinity. The binding of enzymes to DNA was detected by EMSA, steady-state, and stopped-flow fluorimetry. The interaction of dsDNA/oligonucleotides with tPA and uPA includes a fast bimolecular step, followed by two monomolecular steps, likely indicating slow conformational changes in the enzyme. DNA (0.1-5.0 μg/ml), but not RNA, potentiates the activation of Glu- and Lys-plasminogen by tPA and uPA by 480- and 70-fold and 10.7- and 17-fold, respectively, via a template mechanism similar to that known for fibrin. However, unlike fibrin, dsDNA/oligonucleotides moderately affect the reaction between plasmin and α(2)-antiplasmin and accelerate the inactivation of tPA and two chain uPA by plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), which is potentiated by vitronectin. dsDNA (0.1-1.0 μg/ml) does not affect the rate of fibrinolysis by plasmin but increases by 4-5-fold the rate of fibrinolysis by Glu-plasminogen/plasminogen activator. The presence of α(2)-antiplasmin abolishes the potentiation of fibrinolysis by dsDNA. At higher concentrations (1.0-20 μg/ml), dsDNA competes for plasmin with fibrin and decreases the rate of fibrinolysis. dsDNA/oligonucleotides incorporated into a fibrin film also inhibit fibrinolysis. Thus, extracellular DNA at physiological concentrations may potentiate fibrinolysis by stimulating fibrin-independent plasminogen activation. Conversely, DNA could inhibit fibrinolysis by increasing the susceptibility of fibrinolytic enzymes to serpins.  相似文献   

5.
An elastase-dependent pathway of plasminogen activation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
R Machovich  W G Owen 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4517-4522
In reaction mixtures containing Glu-plasminogen, alpha 2-antiplasmin, and tissue plasminogen activator or urokinase, either pancreatic or leukocyte elastase enhances the rate of plasminogen activation by 2 or more orders of magnitude. This effect is the consequence of several reactions. (a) In concentrations on the order of 100 nM, elastase degrades plasminogen within 10 min to yield des-kringle1-4-plasminogen (mini-plasminogen), which is 10-fold more efficient than Glu-plasminogen as a substrate for plasminogen activators. Des-kringle1-4-plasminogen is insensitive to cofactor activities of fibrin(ogen) fragments or an endothelial cell cofactor. (b) Des-kringle1-4-plasmin is one-tenth as sensitive as plasmin to inhibition by alpha 2-antiplasmin: k" = 10(6) M-1 s-1 versus 10(7) M-1 s-1. (c) alpha 2-Antiplasmin is disabled efficiently by elastase, with a k" of 20,000 M-1 s-1. The elastase-dependent reactions are not influenced by 6-aminohexanoate. In diluted (10-fold) blood plasma, the capacity of endogenous inhibitors to block plasmin expression is suppressed by 30 microM elastase. It is proposed that elastases provide an alternative pathway for Glu-plasminogen activation and a mechanism for controlling initiation of fibrinolysis by urokinase-type plasminogen activators.  相似文献   

6.
Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) is a serpin protease inhibitor that binds plasminogen activators (uPA and tPA) at a reactive center loop located at the carboxyl-terminal amino acid residues 320-351. The loop is stretched across the top of the active PAI-1 protein maintaining the molecule in a rigid conformation. In the latent PAI-1 conformation, the reactive center loop is inserted into one of the beta sheets, thus making the reactive center loop unavailable for interaction with the plasminogen activators. We truncated porcine PAI-1 at the amino and carboxyl termini to eliminate the reactive center loop, part of a heparin binding site, and a vitronectin binding site. The region we maintained corresponds to amino acids 80-265 of mature human PAI-1 containing binding sites for vitronectin, heparin (partial), uPA, tPA, fibrin, thrombin, and the helix F region. The interaction of "inactive" PAI-1, rPAI-1(23), with plasminogen and uPA induces the formation of a proteolytic protein with angiostatin properties. Increasing amounts of rPAI-1(23) inhibit the proteolytic angiostatin fragment. Endothelial cells exposed to exogenous rPAI-1(23) exhibit reduced proliferation, reduced tube formation, and 47% apoptotic cells within 48 h. Transfected endothelial cells secreting rPAI-1(23) have a 30% reduction in proliferation, vastly reduced tube formation, and a 50% reduction in cell migration in the presence of VEGF. These two studies show that rPAI-1(23) interactions with uPA and plasminogen can inhibit plasmin by two mechanisms. In one mechanism, rPAI-1(23) cleaves plasmin to form a proteolytic angiostatin-like protein. In a second mechanism, rPAI-1(23) can bind uPA and/or plasminogen to reduce the number of uPA and plasminogen interactions, hence reducing the amount of plasmin that is produced.  相似文献   

7.
R A Bok  W F Mangel 《Biochemistry》1985,24(13):3279-3286
The binding of human Glu- and Lys-plasminogens to intact fibrin clots, to lysine-Sepharose, and to fibrin cleaved by plasmin was quantitatively characterized. On intact fibrin clots, there was one strong binding site for Glu-plasminogen with a dissociation constant, Kd, of 25 microM and one strong binding site for Lys-plasminogen with a Kd of 7.9 microM. In both cases, the number of plasminogen binding sites per fibrin monomer was 1. Also, a much weaker binding site for Glu-plasminogen was observed with a Kd of about 350 microM. Limited digestion of fibrin by plasmin created additional binding sites for plasminogen with Kd values similar to the binding of plasminogen to lysine-Sepharose. This was predictable given the observations that plasminogen binds to lysine-Sepharose and can be eluted with epsilon-aminocaproic acid [Deutsch, D.G., & Mertz, E.T. (1970) Science (Washington, D.C.) 170, 1095-1096] and that plasmin preferentially cleaves fibrin at the carboxy side of lysyl residues [Weinstein, M.J., & Doolittle, R.F. (1972) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 258, 577-590], because the structures of the lysyl moiety in lysine-Sepharose and of epsilon-aminocaproic acid are identical with the structure of a COOH-terminal lysyl residue created by plasmin cleavage of fibrin. The Kd for the binding of Glu-plasminogen to lysine-Sepharose was 43 microM and for fibrin partially cleaved by plasmin 48 microM. The Kd for the binding of Lys-plasminogen to lysine-Sepharose was 30 microM. With fibrin partially cleaved by plasmin, there were two types of binding sites for Lys-plasminogen, one with a Kd of 7.6 microM and the other with a Kd of 44 microM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
The effect of tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) or urokinase on the specific binding of human Glu-plasminogen to fibrin I formed in plasma by clotting with Reptilase was studied using 125I-plasminogen and 131I-fibrinogen. In the absence of TPA, small amounts of plasminogen were bound to fibrin I. TPA induced binding of plasminogen to plasma fibrin I that was dependent upon the concentrations of TPA and plasminogen as well as upon the time of incubation. Plasminogen binding occurred in association with fibrin clot lysis and the formation in the clot supernatant of alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor-plasmin complexes. Urokinase also induced binding of plasminogen to plasma fibrin I that was concentration- and time-dependent. The molecular form of plasminogen bound to the fibrin I plasma clot was identified as Glu-plasminogen by dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by fast performance liquid chromatography. Further studies demonstrated that fibrin I formed from fibrinogen that had been progressively degraded by plasmin-bound Glu-plasminogen. The mole ratio of plasminogen bound increased with the time of plasmin digestion. Glu-plasminogen did not bind to fibrin I formed from fibrinogen progressively digested by human leukocyte elastase, thereby demonstrating the specificity of plasmin. These studies demonstrate that plasminogen activators regulate the binding of Glu-plasminogen to fibrin I by catalyzing plasmin-mediated modifications in the fibrin substrate.  相似文献   

9.
A fine-tuned activation and deactivation of proteases and their inhibitors are involved in the execution of the inflammatory response. The zymogen/proenzyme plasminogen is converted to the serine protease plasmin, a key fibrinolytic factor by plasminogen activators including tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA). Plasmin is part of an intricate protease network controlling proteins of initial hemostasis/coagulation, fibrinolytic and complement system. Activation of these protease cascades is required to mount a proper inflammatory response. Although best known for its ability to dissolve clots and cleave fibrin, recent studies point to the importance of fibrin-independent functions of plasmin during acute inflammation and inflammation resolution. In this review, we provide an up-to-date overview of the current knowledge of the enzymatic and cytokine-like effects of tPA and describe the role of tPA and plasminogen receptors in the regulation of the inflammatory response with emphasis on the cytokine storm syndrome such as observed during coronavirus disease 2019 or macrophage activation syndrome. We discuss tPA as a modulator of Toll like receptor signaling, plasmin as an activator of NFkB signaling, and summarize recent studies on the role of plasminogen receptors as controllers of the macrophage conversion into the M2 type and as mediators of efferocytosis during inflammation resolution.  相似文献   

10.
The enzyme tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and its substrate Glu-plasminogen can both bind to fibrin. The assembly of these three components results in about a 1000-fold acceleration of the conversion of Glu-plasminogen into plasmin. Fibrin binding of t-PA is mediated both by its finger (F) domain and its kringle-2 domain. Fibrin binding of Glu-plasminogen involves its kringle structures (K1-K5). It has been suggested that particular kringles contain lysine-binding sites and/or aminohexyl-binding sites, exhibiting affinity for specific carboxyl-terminal lysines and intrachain lysines, respectively. We investigated the possibility that t-PA and Glu-plasminogen kringles share common binding sites in fibrin, limitedly digested with plasmin. For that purpose we performed competition experiments, using conditions that exclude plasmin formation, with Glu-plasminogen and either t-PA or two deletion mutants, lacking the F domain (t-PA del.F) or lacking the K2 domain (t-PA del.K2). Our data show that fibrin binding of t-PA, mediated by the F domain, is independent of Glu-plasminogen binding. In contrast, partial inhibition by Glu-plasminogen of t-PA K2 domain-mediated fibrin binding is observed that is dependent on carboxyl-terminal lysines, exposed in fibrin upon limited plasmin digestion. Half-maximal competition of fibrin binding of both t-PA and t-PA del.F is obtained at 3.3 microM Glu-plasminogen. The difference between this value and the apparent dissociation constant of Glu-plasminogen binding to limitedly digested fibrin (12.1 microM) under these conditions is attributed to multiple, simultaneous interactions, each having a separate affinity. It is concluded that t-PA and Glu-plasminogen can bind to the same carboxyl-terminal lysines in limitedly digested fibrin, whereas binding sites composed of intrachain lysines are unique both for the K2 domain of t-PA and the Glu-plasminogen kringles.  相似文献   

11.
This study deals with the effect of fibrin on the transformation of Glu-plasminogen to Glu-plasmin during fibrinolysis. It focuses particularly on changes in fibrin effector function caused by plasmin-catalysed fibrin degradation. Conversion of 125I-labelled Glu-plasminogen to Glu-plasmin was catalysed by urokinase or tissue plasminogen activator, in the presence of different preparations of progressively degraded fibrin. Plasmin catalysis of Glu-plasminogen and the fibrin (derivative) effector was inhibited by aprotinin. The presence of intact fibrin enhanced the rate of Glu-plasmin formation catalysed by tissue plasminogen activator, but not by urokinase. The presence of initially plasmin-cleaved fibrin, however, increased the rates of Glu-plasmin formation with both activators, as compared to those found with intact fibrin. The rate enhancements induced by initial plasmin degradation of the fibrin effector were associated with an increase in its affinity to both Glu-plasminogen and tissue plasminogen activator, suggesting causal relationships. The weak binding of urokinase was unaffected by fibrin degradation, indicating that effector function was solely exerted on the Glu-plasminogen moiety of urokinase-activated systems. Further degradation of fibrin decreased the stimulating effect on Glu-plasmin formation. This decrease occurred at an earlier stage of degradation with tissue plasminogen activator than with urokinase, indicating that greater integrity of the fibrin effector is necessary for its optimal interaction with the tissue plasminogen activator than with Glu-plasminogen. Concentrations of tranexamic acid that saturate low-affinity lysine-binding sites nearly completely dissociated the binding of Glu-plasminogen to degraded fibrin, but not to intact fibrin. In analogy with the binding of lysine analogues to these sites, the conformation of Glu-plasminogen may be altered by binding to degraded fibrin, thus giving rise to the increased activation rate.  相似文献   

12.
Tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) regulates fibrin clot lysis by stimulating the conversion of plasminogen into the active protease plasmin. Fibrin is required for efficient tPA-mediated plasmin generation and thereby stimulates its own proteolysis. Several fibrin regions can bind to tPA, but the structural basis for this interaction is unknown. Amyloid beta (Abeta) is a peptide aggregate that is associated with neurotoxicity in brains afflicted with Alzheimer's disease. Like fibrin, it stimulates tPA-mediated plasmin formation. Intermolecular stacking of peptide backbones in beta sheet conformation underlies cross-beta structure in amyloid peptides. We show here that fibrin-derived peptides adopt cross-beta structure and form amyloid fibers. This correlates with tPA binding and stimulation of tPA-mediated plasminogen activation. Prototype amyloid peptides, including Abeta and islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP) (associated with pancreatic beta cell toxicity in type II diabetes), have no sequence similarity to the fibrin peptides but also bind to tPA and can substitute for fibrin in plasminogen activation by tPA. Moreover, the induction of cross-beta structure in an otherwise globular protein (endostatin) endows it with tPA-activating potential. Our results classify tPA as a multiligand receptor and show that cross-beta structure is the common denominator in tPA binding ligands.  相似文献   

13.
alpha 2-antiplasmin (alpha 2-AP) exerts its inhibitory effect on fibrinolysis by rapidly inhibiting the plasmin evolved; in addition, it has been suggested that interference with the binding of plasminogen to fibrin, a function shared with histidine-rich glycoprotein (HRGP), may also be significant in inhibition of fibrinolysis. To elucidate if plasminogen binding by these two alpha 2-globulins may decrease the generation of plasmin by tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) at the surface of fibrin, a system mimicking the fibrin/plasma interface was used. Attempts were made to differentiate the plasminogen binding from the plasmin inhibitory function of alpha 2-AP. The activation of human Glu-plasminogen (native plasminogen with NH2-terminal glutamic acid) by fibrin-bound t-PA was performed in a plasma environment using either normal plasma, alpha 2-AP- or HRGP-depleted plasmas supplemented with increasing amounts of the lacking protein, or in a reconstituted system with purified plasminogen and various concentrations of alpha 2-AP and HRGP. The activation of Glu-plasminogen in alpha 2-AP-depleted plasma containing a normal concentration of HRGP produced a time-dependent increase in the generation of plasmin. The addition of 1 microM-alpha 2-AP to this plasma prevented the formation of Lys-derivatives and produced a marked decrease (42%) in the number of plasminogen-binding sites. In contrast, the addition of 1.5 microM-HRGP to HRGP-depleted plasma containing a normal amount of alpha 2-AP produced only a modest (17%) decrease in the amount of plasmin(ogen) bound. Moreover, in a purified system the amount of plasminogen-binding sites and thereby of plasmin generated at the surface of fibrin in the presence of both alpha-2 globulins was similar to the amount generated in the presence of alpha 2-AP alone. These results indicate clearly that the formation of reversible complexes between plasminogen and alpha 2-AP does not interfere with the binding and activation of plasminogen at the fibrin surface. In contrast, the inhibition of plasmin by alpha 2-AP decreases importantly the number of plasminogen-binding sites (carboxyl-terminal lysines) and inhibits thereby the accelerated phase of fibrinolysis. It can be concluded that interference of the binding of plasminogen to fibrin by alpha 2-AP during plasminogen activation, does not play a significant role in inhibition of fibrinolysis, and that the plasminogen-binding effect of HRGP, if any, is obscured by the important inhibitory effect of alpha 2-AP.  相似文献   

14.
A new spectrophotometric solid-phase fibrin-tissue plasminogen activator activity assay (SOFIA-tPA), specific for the quantitation of tissue plasminogen activators, is described. The method is based on (1) the high-affinity binding (Kp = 1.4 +/- 2 nM) of tPA to a solid-phase fibrin network constructed by thrombin proteolysis of fibrinogen covalently coupled to polyglutaraldehyde-activated polyvinyl chloride microtiter plates, and (2) the subsequent development of PA activity by the fibrin-tPA complex and its measurement with a coupled assay using a chromogenic substrate highly selective for plasmin. Conditions were chosen such that the rate of para-nitroaniline release from the substrate is directly proportional to the concentration of tPA. The support is able to isolate tPA from the bulk of proteins present in any biological fluid allowing the assay to specifically detect tPA activity (range: 0.01 to 50 IU/ml) even in the presence of other activators, proteases, and inhibitors. Since the assay is done in a well-defined reaction mixture (the fibrin-tPA complex, plasminogen, and the synthetic substrate), kinetics studies using pure or crude tPA can be performed. Standard curves (rate measurement and endpoint methods) were made using the international standard (preparation 83/517) for tPA.  相似文献   

15.
The amidolytic plasmin activity of a mixture of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and plasminogen is enhanced by heparin at therapeutic concentrations. Heparin also increases the activity in mixtures of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and plasminogen but has no effect on streptokinase or plasmin. Direct analyses of plasminogen activation by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrate that heparin increases the activation of plasminogen by both tPA and uPA. Binding studies show that heparin binds to various components of the fibrinolytic system, with tight binding demonstrable with tPA, uPA, and Lys-plasminogen. The stimulation of tPA activity by fibrin, however, is diminished by heparin. The ability of heparin to promote plasmin generation is destroyed by incubation of the heparin with heparinase, whereas incubation with chondroitinase ABC or AC has no effect. Also, stimulation of plasmin formation is not observed with dextran sulfate or chondroitin sulfate A, B, or C. Analyses of heparin fractions after separation on columns of antithrombin III-Sepharose suggest that both the high-affinity and the low-affinity fractions, which have dramatically different anticoagulant activity, have similar activity toward the fibrinolytic components.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of purified soluble fibrin and of fibrinogen fragments (fibrin mimic) on the activation of Lys-plasminogen (i.e. plasminogen residues 77-790) to plasmin by streptokinase.plasminogen activator complex and by tissue-type plasminogen activator were studied. Dissociation constants of both activators were estimated to lie in the range 90-160 nM (fibrin) and 16-60 nM (CNBr-cleavage fragments of fibrinogen). The kinetic mechanism for both types of activator comprised non-essential enzyme activation via a Rapid Equilibrium Ordered Bireactant sequence. In order to relate the fibrin affinity of plasminogen activators to their fibrinolytic potency, the rate of lysis of supported human plasma clots formed in the presence of unmodified or active-centre-acylated precursors of plasminogen activators was studied as a function of the concentration of enzyme derivative. The concentrations of unmodified enzyme giving 50% lysis/h in this assay were 0.9, 2.0 and 11.0 nM for tissue-type plasminogen activator, streptokinase.plasmin(ogen) and urokinase respectively. However, the potencies of active-centre-acylated derivatives of these enzymes suggested that acylated-tissue plasminogen activator and streptokinase.plasminogen complexes of comparable hydrolytic stability were of comparable potency. Both types of acyl-enzyme were significantly more potent than acyl-urokinases.  相似文献   

17.
Biological control of tissue plasminogen activator-mediated fibrinolysis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
M R?nby  A Br?ndstr?m 《Enzyme》1988,40(2-3):130-143
Fibrinolysis, the body's ability to degrade fibrin, is an integrated part of hemostasis. Overactivity in the fibrinolytic system causes bleeding and underactivity causes thrombosis. Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1), alpha 2-antiplasmin (alpha 2-AP) and plasminogen are definitely involved in fibrinolysis because: (1) these components can be assigned a fibrinolytic role in purified systems, i.e. in vitro, and (2) abnormal structural variants and abnormal levels of these components give rise to bleeding or to thrombosis. The biological control of tPA-mediated fibrinolysis is both cellular and humoral. The cellular regulation compasses synthesis of tPA and PAI-1 and release/uptake of these components. The humoral regulation involves: (1) the reaction between tPA and PAI-1; (2) the fibrin-stimulated plasminogen activation; (3) the reaction between plasmin and alpha 2-AP and (4) plasmin degradation of fibrin. The highly developed biological control of tPA-mediated fibrinolysis is indicative of its physiological importance.  相似文献   

18.
A one-chain recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator (EC 2.4.31.-) (tPA) analogue was constructed in which Arg-275 of the activation site was changed to Gly by site-directed mutagenesis. This analogue, tPA-Gly275, was very resistant to plasmin (EC 2.4.21.5) cleavage. It has been used to gain information about the activity of the uncleaved one-chain tPA form, also when plasmin is generated as a result of a plasminogen activation reaction. The amidolytic activity of tPA-Gly275 with less than Glu-Gly-Arg-pNA was investigated and compared to that of one-chain and two-chain wild-type recombinant tPA. A small but significant intrinsic amidolytic activity was observed with the analogue as well as the wild-type one-chain tPA form. However, it was much lower than that of two-chain tPA. Polymerised fibrin enhanced the amidolytic activity of both one-chain tPA forms but not of two-chain tPA. Measurements of the plasminogen activation kinetics in the absence of fibrin revealed that tPA-Gly275 possessed a significant intrinsic activity. However, it was 30-fold lower than that of two-chain tPA. Addition of polymerised fibrin profoundly enhanced the plasminogen activation rate of both tPA-Gly275 and wild-type one- and two-chain tPA to approximately the same maximal level. The results were interpreted to mean that fibrin binding can induce an activated state of the intact tPA one-chain form.  相似文献   

19.
Mechanisms of plasminogen activation by mammalian plasminogen activators   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
H R Lijnen  D Collen 《Enzyme》1988,40(2-3):90-96
Plasminogen activators convert the proenzyme plasminogen to the active serine protease plasmin by hydrolysis of the Arg560-Val561 peptide bond. Physiological plasminogen activation is however regulated by several additional molecular interactions resulting in fibrin-specific clot lysis. Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) binds to fibrin and thereby acquires a high affinity for plasminogen, resulting in efficient plasmin generation at the fibrin surface. Single-chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator (scu-PA) activates plasminogen directly but with a catalytic efficiency which is about 20 times lower than that of urokinase. In plasma, however, it is inactive in the absence of fibrin. Chimeric plasminogen activators consisting of the NH2-terminal region of t-PA (containing the fibrin-binding domains) and the COOH-terminal region of scu-PA (containing the active site), combine the mechanisms of fibrin specificity of both plasminogen activators. Combination of t-PA and scu-PA infusion in animal models of thrombosis and in patients with coronary artery thrombosis results in a synergic effect on thrombolysis, allowing a reduction of the therapeutic dose and elimination of side effects on the hemostatic system.  相似文献   

20.
Hydrolysis of plasminogen permits obtaining its nine fragments. The method of differential scanning microcalorimetry reveals seven domains in plasminogen, and the affinity chromatography--three lysin- and three arginyl-binding sites. The lysin-binding sites of domains (Kringles) K1 and K4 differ in ligand specificity. Benzamidine-binding sites of domain K5 and of plasmin light chain are simultaneously arginine-binding ones. The third arginyl-binding site differing from the benzamidine-binding one is found in fragment K1-3. In the plasminogen-fibrin interaction only lysin-binding sites of plasminogen take part; in the plasminogen fragments-fibrinogen fragments interaction both types of plasminogen sites participate. The heavy chain of plasmin interacts with the E-fragment of fibrinogen by the lysin-binding sites, and the light chain of plasmin interacts with D-fragment of fibrinogen by arginyl-binding sites. Sites complementary to arginyl binding sites of plasminogen are located on the DH-fragment and sites of interaction with lysin- and arginyl-binding sites--on the DL-fragment. The plasmin-fibrin interaction mediated by sites of the first four cringles is not associated with changes in the catalytic function of the active centre. Interaction of Lys-plasminogen with fibrin accelerates polymerization of the latter. The effect of Lys-plasminogen is conditioned by the lysin-binding sites. Glu-plasminogen has no effect on the polymerization process.  相似文献   

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