Cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells have a relatively complex fibrinolytic system that is responsive to both the physiological state of the cell itself and to a variety of agents added to the culture medium. The fibrinolytic activity of these cells results from the production of both urokinase-
The human plasma fibrinolytic system: Regulation and control
β Scribed by Kenneth C. Robbins
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1978
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 778 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0300-8177
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β¦ Synopsis
The factors involved in the regulation and control of the human plasma fibrinolytic system at the cellular level are unknown at this time. The physiological regulation of plasmin formation in plasma depends primarily on the nature of the circulating zymogen, plasminogen, the physiological activators formed both in the blood and in the vascular endothelium, and the specific plasmin inhibitors found both in plasma and in certain of the cellular elements of the blood. The biosynthesis of the zymogen must be under genetic control, and the activators are probably released, after thrombus and clot formation, from components involved in the surface-mediated initiation of the coagulation system, and from the vascular endothelium. Activation of plasminogen can occur both in the fluid phase surrounding the thrombus and probably at thrombus surfaces, involving both the fibrin clot and the platelet membrane. The plasmin inhibitors act to control the system in order to prevent proteolytic degradation of important physiologic trace proteins of the coagulation, complement and kallikrein-kinin systems by the enzyme.
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