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1.
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   

2.
Recently, we have shown that plasminogen activators (PAs) of both types, urokinase-type (uPA) as well as tissue-type (tPA), are involved in the in vitro invasiveness of human melanoma cells. The present study is focused on the generation and importance of cell surface-bound plasmin in this process. The human melanoma cell lines MelJuso and MeWo expressed plasminogen binding sites on the cell surface. Plasminogen binding was saturable and not species-specific, since human and bovine plasminogen bound to the cells with comparable efficiency. The activation of the proenzyme plasminogen bound on MelJuso cells, which expressed surface-associated uPA activity, occurred almost synchronously with binding to the cell surface. Removal of cell-associated uPA considerably reduced plasmin generation on these cells. In contrast, plasminogen activation on MeWo cells, which secreted tPA into the culture supernatant and which were devoid of surface-associated PA activity, was by far less effective. The efficiency of the activation process could be increased by addition of exogenous tPA. With both cell lines, plasmin generation on the cell surface was suppressed by inhibitory monoclonal antibodies specific for the respective PA type. Selective inhibition of cell surface-associated plasmin by preincubating the cells with an inhibitory monoclonal antibody or with aprotinin, as well as removal of plasmin from the cell surface, led to a significant decrease in cellular invasiveness of both cell lines into various biological substrates such as fibrin gel, the basement membrane extract Matrigel, or intact extracellular matrix. Both cell lines were able to penetrate an intact cell layer of the human keratinocyte line HaCaT, a process, which also proved to be dependent on cell-associated plasmin. In conclusion, these data provide evidence that plasminogen activation associated with the surface of human melanoma cells is catalyzed much more efficiently by cell-associated uPA (MelJuso) than by secreted tPA (MeWo). Cell-associated plasmin, which is protected from inactivation by serum inhibitors, represents the essential component of the proteolytic cascade of plasminogen activation during in vitro invasiveness of human melanoma cells.  相似文献   

3.
Recently, we have shown that plasminogen activators (PAs) of both types, urokinase-type (uPA) as well as tissue-type (tPA), are involved in the in vitro invasiveness of human melanoma cells. The present study is focused on the generation and importance of cell surface-bound plasmin in this process. The human melanoma cell lines MelJuso and MeWo expressed plasminogen binding sites on the cell surface. Plasminogen binding was saturable and not species-specific, since human and bovine plasminogen bound to the cells with comparable efficiency. The activation of the proenzyme plasminogen bound on MelJuso cells, which expressed surface-associated uPA activity, occurred almost synchronously with binding to the cell surface. Removal of cell-associated uPA considerably reduced plasmin generation on these cells. In contrast, plasminogen activation on Me Wo cells, which secreted tPA into the culture supernatant and which were devoid of surface-associated PA activity, was by far less effective. The efficiency of the activation process could be increased by addition of exogenous tPA. With both cell lines, plasmin generation on the cell surface was suppressed by inhibitory monoclonal antibodies specific for the respective PA type. Selective inhibition of cell surface-associated plasmin by preincubating the cells with an inhibitory monoclonal antibody or with aprotinin, as well as removal of plasmin from the cell surface, led to a significant decrease in cellular invasiveness of both cell lines into various biological substrates such as fibrin gel, the basement membrane extract Matrigel, or intact extracellular matrix. Both cell lines were able to penetrate an intact cell layer of the human keratinocyte line HaCaT, a process, which also proved to be dependent on cell-associated plasmin. In conclusion, these data provide evidence that plasminogen activation associated with the surface of human melanoma cells is catalyzed much more efficiently by cell-associated uPA (MelJuso) than by secreted tPA (MeWo). Cell-associated plasmin, which is protected from inactivation by serum inhibitors, represents the essential component of the proteolytic cascade of plasminogen activation during in vitro invasiveness of human melanoma cells.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
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   

6.
We prepared heparin-inserted phospholipid liposomes as a functional model of heparan sulfate present on the vascular surface and examined tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) catalyzed plasminogen activation on the liposome surface. Kinetic analyses showed a marked increase in the affinity of t-PA for Lys-plasminogen in the presence of heparin-inserted phosphatidylcholine (PC) liposomes. The catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of t-PA for the plasminogen activation on the surface of heparin-inserted PC liposomes was 5.4 times that on the surface of heparin-free PC liposomes. This stimulatory action of immobilized heparin was apparently affected by changing the phospholipid component of liposomes. Phosphatidylethanolamine or stearylamine, having a positively charged group, reduced the catalytic efficiency of t-PA by raising its Km value (10-fold), whereas negatively charged phospholipids, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol, did not affect the efficiency. t-PA and generated plasmin bound to the liposome surface heparin were protected from inhibition by plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor, respectively. t-PA-induced clot lysis of euglobulin or whole plasma, which contained native (Glu-) plasminogen and the above inhibitors, was also accelerated by addition of heparin-inserted PC liposomes. These results suggest that the vascular surface heparin-like molecules may play an important role in modulating fibrinolytic events. The principles of conjugation of t-PA with a biologically active liposome will be applied to the construction of better thrombolytic agents.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract In an in vitro direct assay with tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA), plasminogen and the chromogenic substrate S-2251, the ability of Mycoplasma fermentans KL4 to stimulate tPA-mediated activation of plasminogen to plasmin was studied. Mycoplasma cells markedly enhanced the activation of plasminogen by tPA in a concentration-, temperature- and pH-dependent manner. Nonidet P-40 (0.01%), sonication, and freezing and thawing of the cells substantially increased the stimulatory effect of mycoplasma on tPA activity. In contrast, the activation of plasminogen by urokinase was refractory to mycoplasma cells. The mycoplasma-mediated stimulation of tPA activity was prevented by ϵ-aminocaproic acid (EACA), a lysine analogue known to block lysine-binding sites (LBS) in plasminogen and tPA. Among several Mycoplasma fermentans strains tested, incognitus strain demonstrated the highest stimulation activity. These results suggest that mycoplasma cells interact with LBS in tPA and plasminogen to enhance plasminogen activation.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
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   

10.
The plasminogen activator system consists of two proteins: tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA), which act upon their specific receptors to generate plasmin from plasminogen located on the cell surface. Plasmin then acts directly and indirectly to degrade the components of the extracellular matrix (ECM). This process is likely to be important in the normal turnover of the ECM of fetal membranes and in its premature weakening in preterm premature rupture of the fetal membranes. Quantitative Northern analysis and in situ hybridization have shown that the decidua expresses mRNA for tPA. However, the immunolocalized tPA protein was most strongly associated with the amnion and chorion, as was its receptor annexin II, suggesting that the amnion and chorion are the targets for decidual tPA. At term, decidual tPA expression was unaffected by labor, and the tPA receptor was elevated both before and after labor. At preterm, the converse was found: decidual tPA expression was significantly (p < 0. 05) up-regulated by labor, but the tPA receptor was not. The results suggest that the generation of plasmin at term would be controlled by an increased concentration of the tPA receptor in the amnion and chorion, whereas at preterm a pathological increase in plasmin would be generated by an overexpression of tPA, initiated by labor.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae is a major, economically damaging respiratory pathogen. Although M. hyopneumoniae cells bind plasminogen, the identification of plasminogen-binding surface proteins and the biological ramifications of acquiring plasminogen requires further investigation. mhp182 encodes a highly expressed 102 kDa protein (P102) that undergoes proteolytic processing to generate surface-located N-terminal 60 kDa (P60) and C-terminal 42 kDa (P42) proteins of unknown function. We show that recombinant P102 (rP102) binds plasminogen at physiologically relevant concentrations (K(D) ~ 76 nM) increasing the susceptibility of plasmin(ogen) to activation by tissue-specific plasminogen activator (tPA). Recombinant proteins constructed to mimic P60 (rP60) and P42 (rP42) also bound plasminogen at physiologically significant levels. M. hyopneumoniae surface-bound plasminogen was activated by tPA and is able to degrade fibrinogen, demonstrating the biological functionality of M. hyopneumoniae-bound plasmin(ogen) upon activation. Plasmin(ogen) was readily detected in porcine ciliated airways and plasmin levels were consistently higher in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from M. hyopneumoniae-infected animals. Additionally, rP102 and rP42 bind fibronectin with K(D) s of 26 and 33 nM respectively and recombinant P102 proteins promote adherence to porcine kidney epithelial-like cells. The multifunctional binding ability of P102 and activation of M. hyopneumoniae-sequestered plasmin(ogen) by an exogenous activator suggests P102 plays an important role in virulence.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
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   

15.
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   

16.
The ability of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) to induce human umbilical vein endothelial (HUVE) cell migration was studied using an in vitro, serum-free wound assay system. At pharmacological doses, tPA stimulated HUVE cell migration dose-dependently. Treatment of cells with epsilon amino caproic acid (EACA) to detach cell-surface and extracellular matrix bound plasminogen, which could lead to plasmin generation, resulted in increased HUVEcell migration on stimulation with tPA.Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), a natural plasminogen activator inhibitor, abolished tPA-induced HUVEcell migration. These results demonstrate for the first time that tPA is capable of stimulating endothelial cell migration in wound assays and this effect is susceptible to PAI-1 inhibition.  相似文献   

17.
The cysteine protease cathepsin B is upregulated in a variety of tumors, particularly at the invasive edges. Cathepsin B can degrade extracellular matrix proteins, such as collagen IV and laminin, and can activate the precursor form of urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA), perhaps thereby initiating an extracellular proteolytic cascade. Recently, we demonstrated that procathepsin B interacts with the annexin II heterotetramer (AIIt) on the surface of tumor cells. AIIt had previously been shown to interact with the serine proteases: plasminogen/plasmin and tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA). The AIIt binding site for cathepsin B differs from that for either plasminogen/plasmin or tPA. AIIt also interacts with extracellular matrix proteins, e.g., collagen I and tenascin-C, forming a structural link between the tumor cell surface and the extracellular matrix. Interestingly, cathepsin B, plasminogen/plasmin, t-PA and tenascin-C have all been linked to tumor development. We speculate that colocalization through AIIt of proteases and their substrates on the tumor cell surface may facilitate: (1) activation of precursor forms of proteases and initiation of proteolytic cascades; and (2) selective degradation of extracellular matrix proteins. The recruitment of proteases to specific regions on the cell surface, regions where potential substrates are also bound, could well function as a 'proteolytic center' to enhance tumor cell detachment, invasion and motility.  相似文献   

18.
Epithelial-mesenchymal transformation (EMT), the process by which epithelial cells are converted into motile, invasive mesenchymal cells, is critical to valvulogenesis. Transforming growth factor-beta3 (TGF-beta3), an established mediator of avian atrioventricular (AV) canal EMT, is secreted as a latent complex. In vitro, plasmin-mediated proteolysis has been shown to release active TGF-betas from the latent complex. Annexin II, a co-receptor for tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and plasminogen, promotes cell-surface generation of the serine protease plasmin. Here, we show that annexin II-mediated plasmin activity regulates release of active TGF-beta3 during chick AV canal EMT. Primary embryonic endocardial-derived cells express annexin II which promotes plasminogen activation in vitro. Incubation of heart explant cultures with either alpha(2)antiplasmin (alpha(2)AP), a major physiological plasmin inhibitor, or anti-annexin II IgG, blocked EMT by approximately 80%, and 50%, respectively. Anti-annexin II IgG-mediated inhibition of EMT was overcome by the addition of recombinant TGF-beta3. Upon treatment with anti-annexin II IgG or alpha(2)AP, conditioned medium from heart explant cultures showed absence of the active fragment of TGF-beta3 by Western blot analysis and a approximately 50% decrease in TGF-beta specific bioactivity. Our results suggest that annexin II-mediated plasmin activity regulates the release of active TGF-beta during cardiac valve development in the avian heart.  相似文献   

19.
Plasmin inhibited the biosynthesis of tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) antigen by human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) in a dose-dependent manner. The amount of tPA antigen found in the 24-h conditioned medium of cells treated with 100 nM plasmin for 1 h was 20-30% of that in the control group. However, in contrast to tPA, such treatment led to a 3-fold increase in plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) activity, whereas the amount of PAI type 1 antigen was unchanged. The effects of plasmin on HUVEC were binding- and catalytic activity-dependent and were specifically blocked by epsilon-aminocaproic acid. Microplasmin, which has no kringle domains, was less effective in reducing tPA antigen biosynthesis or enhancing PAI activity in HUVEC. Kringle domains of plasmin affected neither tPA antigen nor PAI activity of the cells. Other proteases including chymotrypsin, trypsin, and collagenase at comparable concentrations did not have a significant effect on the biosynthesis of tPA antigen or PAI activity of HUVEC. Thrombin stimulated the biosynthesis of tPA and PAI-1 antigens by HUVEC. Thrombin also stimulated an increase in the protein kinase activity in HUVEC, whereas plasmin inhibited the protein kinase activity of the cells. It is possible that plasmin regulates the biosynthesis of tPA in HUVEC through the signal transduction pathway involving protein kinase.  相似文献   

20.
Decreased degradation of the glomerular extracellular matrix (ECM) is thought to contribute to the accumulation of glomerular ECM that occurs in diabetic nephropathy and other chronic renal diseases. Several lines of evidence indicate a key role for the plasminogen activator/plasminogen/plasmin system in glomerular ECM degradation. However, which of the two plasminogen activators (PAs) present in renal tissue, tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) or urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), is responsible for plasmin generation and those factors that modulate the activity of this system remain unclear. This study utilized mesangial cells isolated from mice with gene deletions for tPA, uPA, and plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) to further delineate the role of the PA/plasminogen/plasmin system in ECM accumulation. ECM degradation by uPA-null mesangial cells was not significantly different from controls (92% +/- 1%, n = 12). In contrast, ECM degradation by tPA-null mesangial cells was markedly reduced (-78 +/- 1%, n = 12, P < 0.05) compared with controls, whereas tPA/uPA double-null mesangial cells degraded virtually no ECM. Previous studies from this laboratory have established that transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGFbeta1) inhibits ECM degradation by cultured mesangial cells by increasing the production of PAI-1, the major physiological PA inhibitor. In keeping with this observation, TGFbeta1 (1 ng/ml) had no effect on ECM degradation by PAI-1-null MC. High glucose levels (30 mM) in the presence or absence of insulin (0.1 mM) caused a moderate increase in ECM degradation by normal human mesangial cells. In contrast, glycated albumin, whose concentration is known to increase in diabetes, produced a dose-dependent (0.2-0.5 mg/ml) inhibition of ECM degradation by normal human mesangial cells. Taken together, these results document the importance of tPA versus uPA in renal plasmin production and indicate that in contrast to elevated glucose, glycated albumin may contribute to ECM accumulation in diabetic nephropathy.  相似文献   

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