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1.
Employing agarose gel electrophoresis, physiological concentrations of plasmin have been shown to degrade purified proteoglycan monomers and aggregates isolated from bovine articular cartilage. Proteoglycan degradation was (1) proportional to plasmin concentration, (2) dependent on the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin by plasminogen activator, (3) not displayed by plasminogen or plasminogen activator alone, and (4) inhibited by a serine proteinase inhibitor. These results, coupled with other findings, provide further support for a possible role of plasmin/plasminogen activator in cartilage destruction associated with rheumatoid arthritis.  相似文献   

2.
Agents such as retinol, interleukin 1 and catabolin stimulate resorption of cultured cartilage. This process seems to be mediated by chondrocytes, but the mechanism by which breakdown occurs remains unknown. We have found that (10(-6)-10(-8) M) retinoic acid and (1 X 10(-6) M) retinol, in the presence or absence of a factor derived from cultured synovium (synovial factor), stimulate the degradation of fibrin by human chondrocytes in culture. Plasminogen was required for the enhancement of fibrinolysis, suggesting that the breakdown depended upon the production of plasminogen activators and subsequent liberation of plasmin. However, the chondrocytes did not release significant amounts of plasminogen activator, and the effects of the synovial factor and retinoids resulted from augmentation of the production or activity of enzymes which remained bound to the cell layer. The role of plasminogen in the resorption of cultured cartilage was also investigated. In the presence of plasminogen, (1 X 10(-8) M) retinoic acid or synovial factor stimulated the breakdown of cultured bovine nasal cartilage, but in the absence of plasminogen, the effect of synovial factor was abolished and that of retinoic acid reduced. However, in cultures containing both retinoic acid and synovial factor the resorption process was not affected by removal of plasminogen. Thus, the resorption of cartilage matrix in vitro may be partially mediated by plasminogen activators and plasmin.  相似文献   

3.
Plasminogen activator production by ovine embryos and the effects of plasminogen on ovine embryo development and zona pellucida integrity were evaluated. Eight-cell to sixteen-cell embryos were cultured in Whitten's medium containing 0, 60, or 120 micrograms/ml plasminogen. Plasmin and plasminogen activator concentrations in the medium were determined by a caseinolytic assay. More blastocysts hatched in medium containing 60 and 120 micrograms/ml plasminogen (33 and 21%, respectively) than 0 microgram/ml plasminogen (0%; p less than 0.05). Zona pellucida dissolution time in acidified phosphate-buffered saline was less after incubation in medium with 60 and 120 micrograms/ml plasminogen (7.2 and 5.9 min, respectively) than 0 microgram/ml plasminogen (9.4 min; p less than 0.05). Plasminogen activator production was low until the morula stage, increased during morula-blastocyst transition, and remained elevated through blastocoelic expansion and hatching. Zona pellucida solubility, plasminogen activator production, and plasminogen conversion to plasmin increased as embryonic stage advanced; however, plasminogen activator production and plasmin conversion to plasmin were poorly correlated with zona pellucida solubility. The results indicate that ovine embryos produce plasminogen activator, and plasmin can increase zona pellucida solubility; however, other factors may also be involved in altering zona pellucida integrity prior to hatching.  相似文献   

4.
Activated macrophages secrete a variety of neutral proteinases, including plasminogen activator. Since macrophages are implicated in primary demyelination in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) in Guillain-Barré syndrome and experimental allergic neuritis, we have investigated the ability of plasmin and of conditioned media from cultured macrophages, in the presence of plasminogen, to degrade the proteins in bovine and rat PNS myelin. The results indicate that (a) the major glycoprotein P0 and the basic P1 and Pr proteins in PNS myelin are extremely sensitive to plasmin, perhaps more so than is the basic protein in CNS myelin; (b) the initial product of degradation of P0 by plasmin has a molecular weight higher than that of the "X" protein; (c) large degradation products of P0 are relatively insensitive to further degradation; and (d) the neuritogenic P2 protein in PNS myelin is quite resistant to the action of plasmin. Results similar to those with plasmin were obtained with conditioned media from macrophages and macrophage-like cell lines together with plasminogen activator, and the degradation of the PNS myelin proteins, Po and P1, under these conditions was inhibited by p-nitrophenylguanidinobenzoate, an inhibitor of plasmin and plasminogen activator. The results suggest that the macrophage plasminogen activator could participate in inflammatory demyelination in the PNS.  相似文献   

5.
We established that plasmin (10(-10) M to 10(-6) M) caused neutrophils (PMN) to aggregate using an in vitro assay. Plasminogen had no PMN aggregatory activity even at a concentration of 2 microM. However, plasminogen caused PMN to aggregate when incubated with plasminogen activators [tissue plasminogen activator (25-200 U/ml) or urokinase (5-500 U/ml)]. Tissue plasminogen activator and urokinase alone had no PMN aggregatory activity. Analysis of these incubation mixtures indicated that plasmin was generated in the process and that the time course of plasmin generation correlated with the aggregation response. Active-site-inhibited plasmin did not induce PMN aggregation, indicating that a functional catalytic site was required for the response. Pretreatment of PMN with either active-site-inhibited plasmin or tranexamic acid prevented PMN aggregation by plasmin, indicating that both binding of plasmin to the cell surface via the lysine binding sites and catalysis were required for the response. The generation of plasmin during activation of fibrinolysis may play a pro-inflammatory role by mediating aggregation of PMN.  相似文献   

6.
Fibronectin is a dimeric glycoprotein (Mr 440,000) involved in many adhesive processes. During blood coagulation it is bound and cross-linked to fibrin. Fibrin binding is achieved by structures (type I repeats) which are homologous to the "finger" domain of tissue plasminogen activator. Tissue plasminogen activator also binds to fibrin via the finger domain and additionally via the "kringle 2" domain. Fibrin binding of tissue plasminogen activator results in stimulation of its activity and plays a crucial role in fibrinolysis. Since fibronectin might interfere with this binding, we studied the effect of fibronectin on plasmin formation by tissue plasminogen activator. In the absence of fibrin, fibronectin had no effect on plasminogen activation. In the presence of stimulating fibrinogen fragment FCB-2, fibronectin increased the duration of the initial lag phase (= time period until maximally stimulated plasmin formation occurs) and decreased the rate of maximal plasmin formation which occurs after that lag phase mainly by increasing the Michaelis constant (Km). These effects of fibronectin were dose-dependent and were similar with single- and two-chain tissue plasminogen activator. They were also observed with plasmin-pretreated FCB-2. An apparent Ki of 43 micrograms/ml was calculated for the inhibitory effect of fibronectin when plasminogen activation by recombinant single-chain tissue plasminogen activator was studied in the presence of 91 micrograms/ml FCB-2. When a recombinant tissue plasminogen activator mutant lacking the finger domain was used in a system containing FCB-2, no effect of fibronectin was seen, indicating that the inhibitory effect of fibronectin might in fact be due to competition of fibronectin and tissue plasminogen activator for binding to fibrin(ogen) via the finger domain.  相似文献   

7.
We have recently shown that Neovastat, an antiangiogenic extract from shark cartilage, stimulates the in vitro activation of plasminogen by facilitating the tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA)-dependent conversion of plasminogen to plasmin. In this report, we describe the purification and characterization of the stimulatory molecules. Neovastat was subjected to a three-step purification procedure including gel filtration, preparative isoelectric focusing, and preparative SDS-PAGE. Two 28-kDa proteins with pIs of approximately 4.5 and 6.5 were purified to apparent homogeneity and identified as immunoglobulin (Ig) kappa light chains by N-terminal microsequencing. Ig light chains do not directly stimulate the activity of tPA or plasmin, suggesting a mechanism of action involving an interaction with plasminogen. Kinetic analysis showed that both Ig light chains accelerate the in vitro tPA-dependent conversion of plasminogen in plasmin by increasing the affinity of tPA for plasminogen by 32- and 38-fold (Km decrease from 456 nM to 12-14 nM). Shark Ig light chains also stimulated the degradation of fibrin by the tPA/plasminogen system in an in vitro assay. A direct interaction between Ig light chains and plasminogen (KA=4.0-5.5 x 10(7) M(-1); KD=18-25 nM) and with tPA (KA=2.8 x 10(7) M(-1); KD=36 nM) was demonstrated using real time binding measured by surface plasmon resonance. Ig light chain is the first molecule associated with the antiangiogenic activity of Neovastat to be purified and identified.  相似文献   

8.
Human HT-1080 fibrosarcoma cells produce urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and type 1 plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1). We found that after incubation of monolayer cultures with purified native human plasminogen in serum-containing medium, bound plasmin activity could be eluted from the cells with tranexamic acid, an analogue of lysine. The bound plasmin was the result of plasminogen activation on the cell surface; plasmin activity was not taken up onto cells after deliberate addition of plasmin to the serum-containing medium. The cell surface plasmin formation was inhibited by an anticatalytic monoclonal antibody to u-PA, indicating that this enzyme was responsible for the activation. Preincubation of the cells with diisopropyl fluorophosphate-inhibited u-PA led to a decrease in surface-bound plasmin, indicating that a large part, if not all, of the cell surface plasminogen activation was catalyzed by surface-bound u-PA. In the absence of plasminogen, most of the cell surface u-PA was present in its single-chain proenzyme form, while addition of plasminogen led to formation of cell-bound two-chain u-PA. The latter reaction was catalyzed by cell-bound plasmin. Cell-bound u-PA was accessible to inhibition by endogenous PAI-1 and by added PAI-2, while the cell-bound plasmin was inaccessible to serum inhibitors, but accessible to added aprotinin and an anticatalytic monoclonal antibody. A model for cell surface plasminogen activation is proposed in which plasminogen binding to cells from serum medium is followed by plasminogen activation by trace amounts of bound active u-PA, to form bound plasmin, which in turn serves to produce more active u-PA from bound pro-u-PA. This exponential process is subject to regulation by endogenous PAI-1 and limited to the pericellular space.  相似文献   

9.
Amyloid‐beta plaques are a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease. Several proteases are known to cleave/remove amyloid‐beta, including plasmin, the product of tissue plasminogen activator cleavage of the pro‐enzyme plasminogen. Although plasmin levels are lower in Alzheimer brain, there has been little analysis of the plasminogen activator/plasmin system in the brains of Alzheimer patients. In this study, zymography, immunocapture, and ELISAs were utilized to show that tissue plasminogen activator activity in frontal cortex tissue of Alzheimer patients is dramatically reduced compared with age‐matched controls, while tissue plasminogen activator and plasminogen protein levels are unchanged; suggesting that plasminogen activator activity is inhibited in the Alzheimer brain. Analysis of endogenous plasminogen activator inhibitors shows that while plasminogen activator inhibitor‐1 and protease nexin‐1 levels are unchanged, the neuroserpin levels are significantly elevated in brains of Alzheimer patients. Furthermore, elevated amounts of tissue plasminogen activator‐neuroserpin complexes are seen in the Alzheimer brain, and immunohistochemical studies demonstrate that both tissue plasminogen activator and neuroserpin are associated with amyloid‐beta plaques in Alzheimer brain tissue. Thus, neuroserpin inhibition of tissue plasminogen activator activity leads to reduced plasmin and may be responsible for reduced clearance of amyloid‐beta in the Alzheimer disease brain. Furthermore, decreased tissue plasminogen activator activity in the Alzheimer brain may directly influence synaptic activity and impair cognitive function.  相似文献   

10.
Annexin II tetramer (AIIt) is a major Ca(2+)-binding protein of the endothelial cell surface which has been shown to stimulate the tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA)-dependent conversion of plasminogen to plasmin. In the present report, we have examined the regulation of plasmin activity by AIIt. The incubation of plasmin with AIIt resulted in a 95% loss in plasmin activity. SDS-PAGE analysis established that AIIt stimulated the autoproteolytic digestion of plasmin heavy and light chains. The kinetics of AIIt-stimulated plasmin autoproteolysis were first-order, suggesting that binding of plasmin to AIIt resulted in the spontaneous autoproteolysis of the bound plasmin. AIIt did not affect the activity of other serine proteases such as t-PA or urokinase-type plasminogen activator. Furthermore, other annexins such as annexin I, II, V, or VI did not stimulate plasmin autoproteolysis. Increasing the concentration of AIIt on the surface of human 293 epithelial cells increased cell-mediated plasmin autoproteolysis. Thus, in addition to stimulating the formation of plasmin, AIIt also promotes plasmin inactivation. These results therefore suggest that AIIt may function to provide the cell surface with a transient pulse of plasmin activity.  相似文献   

11.
In inflammatory macrophages, plasminogen activator exists in two active forms, a soluble form released into the extracellular medium and a cell-associated form. This communication describes some properties of the cellular form of plasminogen activator, in intact macrophages and in cell lysates. Cellular plasminogen activator is a membrane protein, associated with the outer face of the plasma membrane; in intact macrophages, it participates in the activation of exogenous plasminogen and, thus, has to be considered as an ectoenzyme. A plasminogen activator activity can be detected in cell lysates (macrophage monolayers lysed in 0.1% Triton X-100) only when plasmin production is followed by the use of small synthetic substrates because a soluble inhibitor, released during extraction, blocks plasmin fibrinolytic activity. In these lysates, plasminogen activator molecules exist as high molecular weight unstable complexes exhibiting a high affinity for plasminogen.  相似文献   

12.
We present evidence that over-expression of human plasminogen, the precursor to the serine protease plasmin, can be cytotoxic to mammalian cells. When an expression vector containing plasminogen cDNA is transfected into baby hamster kidney cells, the number of drug-resistant colonies as well as the levels of plasminogen secreted by those colonies is lower than observed in similar transfections of other protease precursor genes. The recombinant plasminogen accumulates intracellularly as degraded NH2-terminal fragments. In contrast, a mutant of plasminogen that produces inactive plasmin (active site Ser740 changed to Ala) is synthesized by these cells as a full-length plasminogen molecule, and the colony numbers and expression levels are normal. Thus, the generation of plasmin activity is responsible for the cytotoxic phenomena and the degradation associated with plasminogen expression. In addition, experiments using a plasminogen mutant that cannot be activated to plasmin (activation cleavage site Arg560 to Gly) or using coexpression of antisense urokinase RNA indicate that an endogenous plasminogen activator is responsible for converting newly synthesized plasminogen to plasmin. Finally, coexpression of plasminogen with alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor, a serpin which is the physiologic inhibitor of plasmin, prevents the toxic effects of intracellular plasmin activity and allows the synthesis and secretion of native human plasminogen.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
A direct solid phase chromogenic assay has been developed for the detection of plasmin (EC 3.4.21.7), generated by the interaction of a nitrocellulose-bound plasminogen activator, using the plasmin specific tripeptide substrate, H-D-valyl-leucyl-lysine - p-nitroaniline. para-Nitroaniline released by the cleavage of the lysine - p-nitroaniline bound by plasmin was derivatized to its diazonium salt and subsequently coupled to N-1-napthylethylenediamine in situ to form a diazoamino of an intense red color at the site of the plasminogen activator. This method was used to assay for the streptococcal plasminogen activator, streptokinase, not only in crude bacterial supernatants, but also to detect streptokinase secreted by individual bacterial colonies. In addition, this solid phase assay was used to identify monoclonal antibodies specific for streptokinase which could inhibit the activation of human plasminogen by streptokinase. This method also permitted simultaneous immunological and biochemical identification of the plasminogen activator, thus permitting unequivocal comparative observations. This assay is quantitative and sensitive to nanogram amounts of activator comparable to those obtained with soluble assays. This method may also be applicable for the detection of other plasminogen activators, such as tissue plasminogen activator, urokinase, and staphylokinase, and also for the detection of immobilized proteases which can cleave other substrates derivatized with p-nitroaniline. The reagents used in this assay are inexpensive and easy to prepare.  相似文献   

15.
We have found that tissue plasminogen activator catalyzes the binding of plasminogen (Pg) to immunoglobulin G (IgG) immobilized on a surface. This enhancement is due to the formation of plasmin, since plasmin treatment of immobilized IgG produced a 20-fold increase in Pg binding. Pg binding is lysine site dependent and reversible. The augmentation of Pg binding by plasmin is specific as other proteases produced significantly less or no effect. Immobilized plasmin-treated IgG also specifically binds Pg in plasma. IgG-immobilized Pg is activated by tissue plasminogen activator, and a significant portion of the plasmin formed remains bound to the IgG. The Pg reactive species in a plasmin-treated IgG digest was identified as the Fab fragment by chromatography utilizing the immobilized high affinity lysine-binding site of plasminogen. Specificity of the interaction was further demonstrated by immunoblot-ligand analysis which demonstrated that the plasmin-derived Fab fragment bound Pg whereas papain-derived Fab or plasmin-derived Fc fragments did not. These data suggest that Pg binds to the new COOH-terminal lysine residue of the plasmin-derived Fab. Pg also binds to an immobilized immune complex following plasmin treatment. These findings indicate that surface-bound IgG localizes plasminogen thus extending the spectrum of activity of the plasmin system to immunologic reactions.  相似文献   

16.
A chromogenic tripeptide - H-D-Val-Leu-Lys-p-nitroanilide-substrate of plasmin, can be used to follow plasminogen activation by an activator such as urokinase or the activator secreted by mouse peritoneal macrophages (thioglycolate-elicited). The acceleration of p-nitroaniline production is proportional to the initial rate of plasmin formation from plasminogen. Thus, at a given plasminogen concentration, this acceleration is proportional to the activator concentration. The acceleration can be evaluated from the spectrophotometer trace recording at 405 nm the appearance of p-nitroaniline, either by means of a computer program or by a plot of delta A405 vs.t2. The sensitivity of this assay allows detection of 0.003 CTA units of urokinase. Thioglycollate-elicited mouse peritoneal macrophages secrete plasminogen activator into the extracellular medium during in vitro cultivation only after a contact with serum.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
We have previously demonstrated that plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) is associated with the extracellular matrix of cultured bovine smooth muscle cells (Knudsen, B.S., Harpel, P.C., Nachman, R.L. (1987) J. Clin. Invest. 80, 1082-1089). In this report we describe the physiologic role of PAI-1 during the interaction of the tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) secreting Bowes human melanoma cell line with endothelial extracellular matrices. In addition we have characterized the t-PA.PAI complexes formed during this interaction in the presence and absence of plasminogen. In the absence of plasminogen, a 104-kDa complex between Bowes t-PA and PAI-1 appears in the supernatant. In the presence of plasminogen, PAI initially prevents plasmin formation on the matrix and protects the matrix from degradation by plasmin. The 104-kDa t-PA.PAI complex is degraded into a 68 and a 47-kDa complex by small amounts of plasmin generated from secreted Bowes t-PA and plasminogen. Analysis of these complexes revealed that t-PA is rapidly cleaved by plasmin within the complex whereas complexed PAI-1 is not further degraded. Matrix-associated PAI-1 may play an important role in the protection of extracellular matrices from remodeling and degradation by cellular t-PA and plasminogen.  相似文献   

19.
Degradation of adhesive glycoproteins by plasmin is implicated in cell migration. In this study, we further explored the role of plasminogen activation in cell adhesion and survival and show that uncontrolled plasminogen activation at the cell surface may induce cell detachment and apoptosis. We hypothesized that this process could be prevented in adherent cells by expression of protease nexin-1, a potent serpin able to inhibit thrombin, plasmin, and plasminogen activators. Using two- and three-dimensional culture systems, we demonstrate that Chinese hamster ovary fibroblasts constitutively express tissue-type plasminogen activator and efficiently activate exogenously added plasminogen in a specific and saturable manner (K(m) = 46 nm). The formation of plasmin results in proteolysis of fibronectin and laminin, which is followed by cell detachment and apoptosis. Protease nexin-1 expressed by transfected cells significantly inhibited the activity of plasmin and tissue-type plasminogen activator via the formation of inhibitory complexes and prevented cell detachment and apoptosis. In conclusion, protease nexin-1 may be an important anti-apoptotic factor for adherent cells. This cell model could be a useful tool to evaluate therapeutic agents such as serpins in vascular pathologies involving pericellular protease-protease inhibitor imbalance.  相似文献   

20.
Evidence suggests that aggregated low density lipoprotein (AgLDL) accumulates in atherosclerotic lesions. Previously, we showed that AgLDL induces and enters surface-connected compartments (SCC) in human monocyte-derived macrophages by a process we have named patocytosis. Most AgLDL taken up by these macrophages in the absence of serum is stored in SCC and remains undegraded. We now show that macrophages released AgLDL (prepared by vortexing or treatment with phospholipase C or sphingomyelinase) from their SCC when exposed to 10% human lipoprotein-deficient serum (LPDS). Macrophages also took up AgLDL in the presence of LPDS, but subsequently released it. In both cases, the released AgLDL was disaggregated. Although the AgLDL that macrophages took up could not pass through a 0.45-micrometer filter, >60% of AgLDL could pass this filter after release from the macrophages. Disaggregation of AgLDL was verified by gel-filtration chromatography and electron microscopy that also showed particles larger than LDL, reflecting fusion of LDL that aggregates. The factor in serum that mediated AgLDL release and disaggregation was plasmin generated from plasminogen by macrophage urokinase plasminogen activator. AgLDL release was decreased >90% by inhibitors of plasmin (epsilon-amino caproic acid and anti-plasminogen mAb), and also by inhibitors of urokinase plasminogen activator (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 and anti-urokinase plasminogen activator mAb). Moreover, plasminogen could substitute for LPDS and produce similar macrophage release and disaggregation of AgLDL. Because only plasmin bound to the macrophage surface is protected from serum plasmin inhibitors, interaction of AgLDL with macrophages was necessary for reversal of its aggregation by LPDS. The released disaggregated LDL particles were competent to stimulate LDL receptor-mediated endocytosis in cultured fibroblasts. Macrophage-mediated disaggregation of aggregated and fused LDL is a mechanism for transforming LDL into lipoprotein structures size-consistent with lipid particles found in atherosclerotic lesions.  相似文献   

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