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1.
Placental microvillous membranes exhibited saturable binding of urokinase-type plasminogen activator with plateau achieved by 30 min at 4 degrees C and 10 min at 37 degrees C. The binding was essentially irreversible. The capacity was about 8 pmol urokinase per mg membrane protein. Half-maximal displacement of 125I-labelled urokinase was achieved with about 1.0 nM unlabelled urokinase when using 75 micrograms membrane protein/ml. 125I-labelled urokinase did not bind when treated with diisopropylfluorophosphate to block the catalytic activity. Single-chain urokinase (prourokinase), devoid of catalytic activity, did not bind. Catalytically active tissue-type plasminogen activator did compete with 125I-labelled urokinase for binding although less efficiently than urokinase. Binding activity remained in the 100,000 x g pellet after treatment of the membranes with 3 M KCl, alkaline stripping at pH 12 or extraction by the detergent Triton X-100. The binding was essentially blocked by antibodies against plasminogen activator inhibitor-type-2 (PAI-2). Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of solubilized membranes with bound 125I-labelled urokinase showed that the urokinase-PAI-2 complexes largely migrated in fractions corresponding to a very large Mr although no clearly defined peaks were observed. It is suggested that PAI-2 occurs in a form anchored to syncytiotrophoblast microvilli, possibly to the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The secretion of plasminogen activators has been implicated in the controlled extracellular proteolysis that accompanies cell migration and tissue remodeling. We found that the human plasminogen activator urokinase (Uk) (Mr 55,000 form) binds rapidly, specifically, and with high affinity to fresh human blood monocytes and to cells of the monocyte line U937. Upon binding Mr 55,000 Uk was observed to confer high plasminogen activator activity to the cells. Binding of the enzyme did not require a functional catalytic site (located on the B chain of the protein) but did require the noncatalytic A chain of Mr 55,000 Uk, since Mr 33,000 Uk did not bind. These results demonstrate the presence of a membrane receptor for Uk on monocytes and show a hitherto unknown function for the A chain of Uk: binding of secreted enzyme to its receptor results in Uk acting as a membrane protease. This localizes plasminogen activation near the cell surface, an optimal site to facilitate cell migration.  相似文献   

4.
Cultured human endothelial cells synthesize and secrete two types of plasminogen activator, tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) and urokinase (u-PA). Previous work from this laboratory (Hajjar, K.A., Hamel, N. M., Harpel, P. C., and Nachman, R. L. (1987) J. Clin. Invest. 80, 1712-1719) has demonstrated dose-dependent, saturable, and high affinity binding of t-PA to two sites associated with cultural endothelial cell monolayers. We now report that an isolated plasma membrane-enriched endothelial cell fraction specifically binds 125I-t-PA at a single saturable site (Kd 9.1 nM; Bmax 3.1 pmol/mg membrane protein). Ligand blotting experiments demonstrated that both single and double-chain t-PA specifically bound to a Mr 40,000 membrane protein present in detergent extracts of isolated membranes, while high molecular weight, low molecular weight, and single-chain u-PA associated with a Mr 48,000 protein. Both binding interactions were reversible and cell-specific and were inhibitable by pretreatment of intact cells with nanomolar concentrations of trypsin. The relevant binding proteins were not found in subendothelial cell matrix, failed to react with antibodies to plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 and interacted with their respective ligands in an active site-independent manner. The isolated t-PA binding site was resistant to reduction and preserved the capacity for plasmin generation. In contrast, the isolated u-PA binding protein was sensitive to reduction, and did not maintain the catalytic activity of the ligand on the blot. The results suggest that in addition to sharing a matrix-associated binding site (plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1), both t-PA and u-PA have unique membrane binding sites which may regulate their function. The results also provide further support for the hypothesis that plasminogen and t-PA can assemble on the endothelial cell surface in a manner which enhances cell surface generation of plasmin.  相似文献   

5.
Binding of plasminogen to cultured human endothelial cells   总被引:26,自引:0,他引:26  
Endothelial cells are known to release the two major forms of plasminogen activator, tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) and urokinase. We have previously demonstrated that plasminogen (PLG) immobilized on various surfaces forms a substrate for efficient conversion to plasmin by TPA (Silverstein, R. L., Nachman, R. L., Leung, L. L. K., and Harpel, P. C. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10346-10352). We now report the binding of human PLG to cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) monolayers, utilizing a newly devised cell monolayer enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay system. PLG binding to HUVEC was concentration dependent and saturable at physiologic PLG concentration (2 microM). Binding of PLG was 70-80% inhibited by 10 mM epsilon-aminocaproic acid, suggesting that it is largely mediated by the lysine-binding sites of PLG. PLG bound at an intermediate level to human fibroblasts, poorly to human smooth muscle cells, and not at all to bovine smooth muscle or bovine endothelial cells; unrelated proteins such as human albumin and IgG failed to bind HUVEC. PLG binding to HUVEC was rapid, reaching a steady state within 20 min, and quickly reversible. 125I-PLG bound to HUVEC with an estimated Kd of 310 +/- 235 nM (S.E.); each cell contained 1,400,000 +/- 1,000,000 (S.E.) binding sites. Functional studies demonstrated that HUVEC-bound PLG is activatable by TPA according to Michaelis-Menten kinetics (Km, 5.9 nM). Importantly, surface-bound PLG was activated with a 12.7-fold greater catalytic efficiency than fluid phase PLG. These results indicate that PLG binds to HUVEC in a specific and functional manner. Binding of PLG to endothelial cells may play a pivotal role in modulating thrombotic events at the vessel surface.  相似文献   

6.
《The Journal of cell biology》1986,103(6):2411-2420
The capacity of cells to interact with the plasminogen activator, urokinase, and the zymogen, plasminogen, was assessed using the promyeloid leukemic U937 cell line and the diploid fetal lung GM1380 fibroblast cell line. Urokinase bound to both cell lines in a time- dependent, specific, and saturable manner (Kd = 0.8-2.0 nM). An active catalytic site was not required for urokinase binding to the cells, and 55,000-mol-wt urokinase was selectively recognized. Plasminogen also bound to the two cell lines in a specific and saturable manner. This interaction occurred with a Kd of 0.8-0.9 microM and was of very high capacity (1.6-3.1 X 10(7) molecules bound/cell). The interaction of plasminogen with both cell types was partially sensitive to trypsinization of the cells and required an unoccupied high affinity lysine-binding site in the ligand. When plasminogen was added to the GM1380 cells, a line with high intrinsic plasminogen activator activity, the bound ligand was comprised of both plasminogen and plasmin. Urokinase, in catalytically active or inactive form, enhanced plasminogen binding to the two cell lines by 1.4-3.3-fold. Plasmin was the predominant form of the bound ligand when active urokinase was added, and preformed plasmin can also bind directly to the cells. Plasmin on the cell surface was also protected from its primary inhibitor, alpha 2-antiplasmin. These results indicate that the two cell lines possess specific binding sites for plasminogen and urokinase, and a family of widely distributed cellular receptors for these components may be considered. Endogenous or exogenous plasminogen activators can generate plasmin on cell surfaces, and such activation may provide a mechanism for arming cell surfaces with the broad proteolytic activity of this enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
Several cell types display binding sites for [125I]urokinase (Vassalli, J.-D., D. Baccino, D. Belin. 1985. J. Cell Biol. 100:86-92) which in certain cases are occupied with endogenous urokinase. These sites appear to focus urokinase at cell surfaces and hence may participate in tissue matrix destruction and cell invasion. Recently Pollanen et al. (1987) demonstrated that the cell surface urokinase of human fibroblasts and fibrosarcoma cells is deposited underneath the cells in strands, apparently at sites of cell-to-substratum contact. Here, using immunofluorescence double labeling, we show that the urokinase strands present on human foreskin fibroblasts are colocalized with strands of vinculin, an intracellular actin-binding protein that is deposited at cell-to-substratum focal adhesion sites. Thus, this indicates linkage of the plasminogen/plasmin system both to sites of cell adhesion and to the cytoskeleton. The urokinase strands on HT 1080 fibrosarcoma cells are more numerous and have shapes that are more tortuous than those on normal fibroblasts. In intact HT 1080 cells, colocalized vinculin strands are obscured by an intense background of soluble vinculin but are apparent on isolated ventral plasma membranes. Certain properties of the urokinase strands suggest that they are related to the [125I]urokinase-binding sites that have been described by several groups: (a) incubating fibroblasts with dexamethasone for 48 h or at pH 3 at 5 degrees C for 10 min greatly decreases the number and intensity of the urokinase strands; (b) strands reappear when glucocorticoid- treated cells are incubated with exogenous 54-kD (but not 35-kD) urokinase, and this process is inhibited by a previously described 16- amino acid peptide that blocks [125I]urokinase binding to the cells.  相似文献   

8.
On the basis of a fibrinolytic assay with 125I-fibrin, zymography, and immunoprobing with anti-human urokinase antibody, we have observed that the in vitro established NCTC human keratinocyte cell line releases into the culture medium a 54,000-Da plasminogen activator which is indistinguishable from human urokinase. Only the early release following the washing of keratinocyte monolayers is accounted for by secretion of preformed enzyme, while late secretory events require the de novo synthesis of urokinase. The released enzyme can interact by autocriny with its own receptor present on keratinocytes. The addition to the keratinocyte culture medium of the urokinase A chain can stimulate a concentration-dependent urokinase oversecretion, which is not paralleled by oversecretion of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1. Since stimulation of urokinase production can be obtained by an A chain concentration (5 ng/ml) which was previously shown to be efficient in inducing keratinocyte mobilization in an in vitro migration model system, we hypothesize that this mechanism may be important in vivo during the process of wound repair.  相似文献   

9.
A plasminogen activator secreted from human kidney cells was highly purified by affinity chromatography on an anti-urokinase IgG-Sepharose column. The purified plasminogen activator was inactive and had a single-chain structure and a Mr of 50,000. It not only did not incorporate diisopropyl fluorophosphate, which reacts with active site serine residue in urokinase, but also did not bind to p-aminobenzamidine-immobilized CH-Sepharose, to which urokinase bind via its side-chain binding pocket present in active center. The plasminogen activator was converted to the active two-chain form with the same Mr by catalytic amounts of plasmin. Its potential enzymatic activity was quenched completely by anti-urokinase IgG, but not by anti-tissue plasminogen activator Ig. These results indicate that the plasminogen activator is an inactive proenzyme form of human urokinase. Therefore, the plasminogen activator was termed single-chain pro-urokinase. The cleavage of single-chain pro-urokinase by plasmin induced conformational change which followed the generation of reactive serine residue at active site, the increase enzyme activity and the reduction of its high affinity for fibrin. These findings suggest that conformational change occurs in both regions responsible for enzyme activity and affinity for fibrin upon activation of single-chain pro-urokinase.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of urokinase-type plasminogen activators with receptors on the surface of endothelial cells may play an important role in the regulation of fibrinolysis and cell migration. Therefore, we investigated whether human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) express receptors for single-chain urokinase (scu-PA) on the cell surface and examined the effect of such binding on plasminogen activator activity. Binding of 125I-labeled scu-PA to HUVEC, performed at 4 degrees C, was saturable, reversible, and specific (k+1 4 +/- 1 X 10(6) min-1 M-1, k-1 6.2 +/- 1.4 X 10(-3) min-1, Kd 2.8 +/- 0.1 nM; Bmax 2.2 +/- 0.1 X 10(5) sites/cell; mean +/- S.E.). Binding of radiolabeled scu-PA was inhibited by both natural and recombinant wild-type scu-PA, high molecular weight two-chain u-PA (tcu-PA), catalytic site-inactivated tcu-PA, an amino-terminal fragment of u-PA (amino acids 1-143), and a smaller peptide (amino acids 4-42) corresponding primarily to the epidermal growth factor-like domain. Binding was not inhibited by low molecular weight urokinase or by a recombinant scu-PA missing amino acids 9-45. Cell-bound scu-PA migrated at its native molecular mass on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In the presence of plasminogen, scu-PA bound to endothelial cells generated greater plasmin activity than did scu-PA in the absence of cells. In contrast, when tcu-PA was added directly to HUVEC, sodium dodecyl sulfate-stable complexes formed with cell or matrix-associated plasminogen activator inhibitors with a loss of plasminogen activator activity. These studies suggest that endothelial cells in culture express high affinity binding sites for the epidermal growth factor domain of scu-PA. Interaction of scu-PA with these receptors may permit plasminogen activator activity to be expressed at discrete sites on the endothelial cell membrane.  相似文献   

11.
We have found the existence of specific receptors for the plasminogen activator, urokinase, in A431 human epidermoid carcinoma cells, cultures in plasminogen-free conditions. Two subsets of receptors have been recognized on the basis of 125I-labelled urokinase binding analysis: about 1 X 10(3) high-affinity (Kd = 5.0 X 10(-11) M) and 1 X 10(5) low-affinity (Kd = 9 X 10(-9) M) receptors per cell. The electron microscopic observation of a urokinase: ferritin conjugate has shown single and clustered receptors at the cell surface. Down-regulation of the receptors (T1/2 = 3.77 h) follows the binding of urokinase. The binding does not involve an intact catalytic site and is inhibited by a monoclonal antibody against the Mr 17500 proteolytic fragment of the A chain of urokinase.  相似文献   

12.
Low passage cultures of normal human keratinocytes produce several components of the plasminogen activator/plasmin proteolytic cascade, including urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA), tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), and two specific inhibitors. Studies here presented demonstrate that these cells also contain a high-affinity (Kd = 3 x 10(-10) M) plasma membrane-binding site for uPA. High molecular weight uPA, either as the single-chain precursor or two-chain activated form, bound to the receptor; however, low molecular weight (33 kD) uPA, tPA, or epidermal growth factor did not compete for binding, demonstrating specificity. Acid treatment, which removed endogenous uPA from the receptor, was required to detect maximal binding (45,000 sites per cell). To investigate the possibility that the uPA receptor on keratinocytes may be involved in epithelial migration during wound repair, cultures were wounded and allowed to migrate into the wounded site. Binding sites for uPA were localized by autoradiographic analysis of 125I-uPA binding as well as by immunocytochemical studies using anti-uPA IgG. With both techniques uPA binding sites were detected selectively on the plasma membrane of cells at the leading edge of the migrating epithelial sheet. This localization pattern suggests that uPA receptor expression on keratinocytes may be coupled to cell migration during cutaneous wounding.  相似文献   

13.
14.
In cultures of human foreskin fibroblasts most of the cell surface binding sites for 2-chain urokinase are masked and can be exposed by 10 min. incubation on ice at pH 2.5 (A. Bajpai and J.B. Baker (1985), Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.133, 475-482). Here we show that incubation on ice at pH 2.5 also releases from the cell surface a plasminogen activator that is similar to 2-chain urokinase in terms of its electrophoretic mobility, chromatographic behavior on concanavalin A-Sepharose or p-amino-benzamidine-Sepharose, and sensitivity to anti-urokinase antibody. Two observations suggest that the masked binding sites are sites occupied by this cell surface urokinase. First, glucocorticoid-treated cells, which lack cell surface urokinase, have a large number of urokinase binding sites but none that are masked. Second, the extraction of surface urokinase and the exposure of urokinase binding sites exhibit similar pH dependence. Both are complete at about pH 4.0.  相似文献   

15.
Catalytic activity of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) in plasma is regulated in part by formation of complexes with specific inhibitors as well as by hepatic clearance. Potential interaction of these two regulatory mechanisms was examined in the human hepatoma cell line Hep G2. These cells secrete plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 (PAI-1) and initiate catabolism of exogenous t-PA by receptor-mediated endocytosis. Specific binding of 125I-t-PA to cells at 4 degrees C results in dose-dependent formation of a 95-kDa species recognized by monospecific anti-PAI-1 and anti-t-PA antibodies and stable in the presence of low (0.2%) concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Specific binding of 125I-t-PA and formation of the 95-kDa SDS-stable species are inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner following preincubation of cells with anti-PAI-1 antibodies. High and low molecular weight forms of urokinase plasminogen activator (u-PA) capable of forming specific complexes with PAI-1 complete for 125I-t-PA binding sites. However, the proenzyme form of u-PA (scu-PA), incapable of forming complexes with PAI-1, does not compete for 125I-t-PA binding sites. The role of the serine protease active site of t-PA in mediating both interaction with PAI-1 and specific binding was examined using 125I-t-PA that had been functionally inactivated with D-phenylalanyl-L-propyl-L-arginyl-chloromethyl ketone (PPACK). 125I-t-PA-PPACK, despite a 6-fold lower affinity than active 125I-t-PA, exhibited specific binding to cells without detectable formation of SDS-stable complexes with PAI-1. Both surface-bound 125I-t-PA and 125I-t-PA-PPACK are internalized and degraded by cells at 37 degrees C. 125I-t-PA is internalized as a stable complex with PAI-1, whereas 125I-t-PA-PPACK is internalized with similar kinetics but without the presence of an SDS-stable complex. Thus, PAI-1 appears capable of modulating t-PA catabolism in the human hepatocyte.  相似文献   

16.
Cell surface binding sites for the constituent proteins of the fibrinolytic system may play a role in the localization and regulation of fibrinolysis. In the present study, specific binding of recombinant human tissue-type plasminogen activator (rt-PA) to human blood platelets was identified and characterized. 125I-labeled rt-PA was found to bind specifically, saturably, and reversibly to the surface of gel-filtered platelets, reaching equilibrium within 5 min at 22 degrees C. Scatchard analysis revealed a single class of binding sites. Unstimulated platelets bound 120,000 +/- 24,000 (mean +/- S.D.) molecules/platelet with an apparent Kd of 340 +/- 25 nM, whereas thrombin-stimulated platelets bound 290,000 +/- 32,000 molecules/platelet with an apparent Kd of 800 +/- 60 nM. Binding of 0.1 microM 125I-rt-PA was greater than 90% reversible by a 50-fold excess of unlabeled rt-PA. Binding was not inhibited by fibrinogen or single chain urokinase-type plasminogen activator, but plasminogen partially competed for binding of 125I-rt-PA to platelets (up to 40% displacement). These findings indicate that the platelet surface possesses a large number of specific, low affinity binding sites for t-PA and provide further evidence for the role of platelets in localization and regulation of fibrinolysis.  相似文献   

17.
The binding specificities of human urinary urokinase (EC 3.4.99.26) and HeLa cell plasminogen activator were studied using peptidyl chloromethyl ketone inhibitors. A 125I-labeled fibrin assay has been developed to yield kinetic information. Reagents of the sequence X-Gly-ArgCH2Cl were the most effective. The susceptibility of the HeLa cell plasminogen activator differed from that of urokinase in several respects indicating the utility of this type of inhibitor in distinguishing between proteases of this specificity.  相似文献   

18.
We show here that the interaction between the urokinase-type plasminogen activator and its receptor, which plays a critical role in cell invasion, is regulated by heparan sulfate present on the cell surface and in the extracellular matrix. Heparan sulfate oligomers showing a composition close to the dimeric repeats of heparin (glucosamine-NSO(3)(6-OSO(3))-iduronic acid(2-OSO(3))) n = 5 and n > 5, where iduronic acid may alternate with glucuronic acid, exhibit affinity for urokinase plasminogen activator and confer specificity on urokinase/urokinase receptor interaction. Cell surface clearance of heparan sulfate reduces the affinity of such interaction with a parallel decrease of specific urokinase binding in the presence of an unaltered expression of receptor. Transfection of human urokinase plasminogen activator receptor in normal Chinese hamster ovary fibroblasts and in Chinese hamster ovary cells defective for the synthesis of sulfated glycosaminoglycans results in specific urokinase/receptor interaction only in nondefective cells. Heparan sulfate/urokinase and receptor/urokinase interactions exhibit similar K(d) values. We concluded that heparan sulfate functions as an adaptor molecule that confers specificity on urokinase/receptor binding.  相似文献   

19.
Fibronectin immobilized onto polystyrene surface was found to bind plasminogen and tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) but only slightly the urokinase type as determined using mono- and polyclonal antibodies against the activators. Of the defined fibronectin fragments tested, the Mr 120,000-140,000 fragment was found to bind both plasminogen and t-PA. Proteolytically modified plasminogen (Lys-plasminogen) bound considerably better than the native form (Glu-plasminogen). Experiments with 125I-plasminogen yielded Kd = 9.1 X 10(-8) M for the binding to immobilized fibronectin. The partially or completely inactive single-chain form of t-PA (pro-t-PA) bound considerably better than the activated two-chain form. Lysine at greater than 3 mM inhibited the binding of plasminogen. The interaction was independent of calcium ions. CaCl2 (greater than 0.5 mM) and NaCl (greater than 0.2 M) inhibited the binding of pro-t-PA and of t-PA. Fibronectin-bound t-PA retained its ability to activate plasminogen. The observed interactions may operate in directional proteolysis localizing plasminogen and plasminogen activator to degrade fibronectin-containing extracellular matrix including fibrin clots.  相似文献   

20.
Binding and activation of plasminogen on the platelet surface   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
A mechanism by which platelets might participate in fibrinolysis by binding plasminogen and influencing its activation has been examined. Binding of radioiodinated human Glu-plasminogen to washed human platelets was time-dependent and was enhanced 3-9-fold by stimulation of platelets with thrombin but not with ADP. The interaction with both stimulated and unstimulated cells was specific, saturable, divalent ion-independent, and reversible. The platelet-bound ligand had the molecular weight of plasminogen, and no conversion to plasmin was detected. Scatchard analyses provided evidence for a single class of plasminogen-binding sites on both stimulated and unstimulated cells. The Kd for thrombin-stimulated platelets was 2.6 +/- 1.3 microM, and 190,000 +/- 45,000 molecules were bound per cell, whereas unstimulated platelets bound 37,000 +/- 10,500 molecules/cell with a Kd of 1.9 +/- 0.15 microM. Plasminogen binding was inhibited in a dose-dependent manner by omega-aminocarboxylic acids at concentrations consistent with a requirement for an unoccupied high affinity lysine-binding site for plasminogen binding to the cells. When platelet-bound plasminogen was incubated with tissue plasminogen activator, urokinase, or streptokinase, gel analysis established that plasmin was preferentially associated with the platelet relative to the supernatant. Plasminogen and plasmin interacted with thrombin-stimulated platelets with similar binding characteristics, and there was no evidence for a binding site for plasmin which did not also bind plasminogen. Therefore, the results suggest that plasminogen activation is enhanced on the cell surface. In sum, these results indicate that platelets bind plasminogen at physiologic zymogen concentrations and this interaction may serve to localize and promote plasminogen activation.  相似文献   

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