TISSUE PLASMINOGEN ACTIVATOR PRODUCTION BY MONOCYTES IN VENOUS THROMBOLYSIS
โ Scribed by SOO, K. S.; NORTHEAST, A. D. R.; HAPPERFIELD, L. C.; BURNAND, K. G.; BOBROW, L. G.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 794 KB
- Volume
- 178
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3417
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โฆ Synopsis
Laminated occlusive thrombus was induced in the rat inferior vena cava (IVC) by a distal stenosis and injection of thrombin.
Immunocytochemistry was performed on serial cryostat sections of the thrombus for tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and a variety of phenotype markers for mononuclear cells. There was little tPA in 2-day-old thrombus. However, tPA was present in significant quantities in 1-and 2-week-old thrombus. Most of the staining for tPA was associated with monocytes, which had infiltrated the thrombus in large numbers. No caval endothelium was seen in these sections. By 4 weeks, the IVC had re-canalized and new endothelium had formed; tPA staining was weakly positive in the endothelium and smooth muscle. In situ hybridization with a digoxigenin-labelled RNA probe confirmed the monocytes as the main source of tPA. This study shows that large numbers of infiltrating monocytes are present in venous thrombosis and that they are the main source of tPA.
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A protease-deficient strain of Aspergillus niger has been used as a host for the production of human tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA). In defined medium, up to 0.07 mg t-PA (g biomass)(-1) was produced in batch and fed-batch cultures and production was increased two- to threefold in two-phase bat
## Abstract Although originally known as a plasma serine protease involved in clot dissolution, tPA and its primary inhibitor, PAIโ1, play crucial roles in synaptic reorganization and plasticity in the central nervous system. In contrast to the wide array of work conducted in neural cells, relative