These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Effect of a synthetic carboxy-terminal peptide of alpha(2)-antiplasmin on urokinase-induced fibrinolysis. Author: Lee KN, Jackson KW, McKee PA. Journal: Thromb Res; 2002 Feb 01; 105(3):263-70. PubMed ID: 11927133. Abstract: alpha(2)-Antiplasmin (alpha(2)AP) interferes with the binding of plasminogen to fibrin because lysine residues in its carboxy-terminal region compete with those in fibrin, presumably the same way that free lysine or epsilon-aminocaproic acid (EACA) inhibits plasminogen binding to fibrin. While this overall process causes an inhibition of fibrinolysis, the converse was observed with a 26-residue synthetic peptide (AP26) corresponding to the carboxy-terminal region of alpha(2)AP. The AP26 peptide, in fact, accelerated urokinase-induced lysis of (1) fully crosslinked fibrin with complete gamma-dimer and alpha-polymer formation; (2) partially crosslinked fibrin that had undergone only gamma-dimerization; and (3) noncrosslinked fibrin. The AP26 peptide also inhibited factor XIIIa-catalyzed crosslinking of fibrin alpha-chains, and this also accelerated lysis of fibrin. EACA had no effect. In the presence of noncrosslinked fibrin, AP26 promoted plasminogen activation by urokinase and fibrinolysis. EACA only slightly increased the rate of plasminogen activation, and as expected, it inhibited fibrinolysis. Since AP26 peptide enhanced the lysis of partially crosslinked and noncrosslinked fibrin, our results indicate that inhibition of factor XIIIa-catalyzed alpha-polymer formation by AP26, although associated with accelerated fibrinolysis, is not the primary mechanism. Instead, our data support the conclusion that AP26 enhances the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin approximately 5-fold, probably by inducing a conformational change in plasminogen structure just as occurs with low concentrations of lysine or EACA. At higher concentrations, however, AP26 apparently does not approach the avidity or affinity of lysine or EACA for the kringle structures of plasminogen or plasmin so that their binding to fibrin is blocked. Whether AP26 alone, or as part of another molecule, could have potential for enhancing thrombolysis will require further study.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]