19 results on '"Tanka-Salamon A"'
Search Results
2. Biorelevant polyanions stabilize fibrin against mechanical and proteolytic decomposition: Effects of polymer size and electric charge
- Author
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Komorowicz, Erzsébet, Balázs, Nóra, Tanka-Salamon, Anna, Varga, Zoltán, Szabó, László, Bóta, Attila, Longstaff, Colin, and Kolev, Krasimir
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Polyphosphate nanoparticles enhance the fibrin stabilization by histones more efficiently than linear polyphosphates
- Author
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Miklós Lovas, Anna Tanka-Salamon, László Beinrohr, István Voszka, László Szabó, Kinga Molnár, and Krasimir Kolev
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Introduction Beyond the three-dimensional fibrin network, the mechanical and lytic stability of thrombi is supported by the matrix of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) composed of polyanionic DNA meshwork with attached proteins including polycationic histones. Polyphosphates represent another type of polyanions, which in their linear form are known to enhance the fibrin stabilizing effects of DNA and histones. However, in vivo polyphosphates are also present in the form of nanoparticles (PolyP-NP), the interference of which with the fibrin/NET matrix is poorly characterized. Aims To compare the effects of linear and nanoparticulate polyphosphates, and their combinations with relevant NET components (DNA, histone H3) on fibrin formation, structure, and lysis in in vitro assays focusing on histone-polyphosphate interactions. Methods Transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering for stability of the PolyP-NP preparations. Turbidimetry for kinetics of fibrinogen clotting by thrombin and fibrin dissolution by tissue-type plasminogen activator/plasminogen. Scanning electron microscopy for fibrin structure. Surface plasmon resonance for strength of histone-PolyP interactions. Results Both linear PolyP and PolyP-NP accelerated the fibrin formation and slowed down its dissolution and these effects were strongly dependent on the number of individual PolyP particles and not on their size. Addition of DNA did not modify significantly the PolyP-NP effects on fibrin formation and lysis. Both linear and nanoparticulate PolyP counteracted the effect of histone in the acceleration of fibrinogen clotting by thrombin. PolyP-NP, but not linear PolyP enhanced the prolongation of lysis time in fibrin containing histone and caused more pronounced thickening of the fibrin fibers than the linear form. Finally, PolyP-NP bound weaker to histone than the linear form. Conclusions The interaction of PolyP with histone was a stronger modulator of fibrin formation and lysis than its interaction with DNA. In addition, the PolyP nanoparticles enhanced the thrombus stabilizing effects of histone more effectively than linear PolyP.
- Published
- 2022
4. Size‐ and charge‐dependent modulation of the lytic susceptibility and mechanical stability of fibrin‐histone clots by heparin and polyphosphate variants
- Author
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László Szabó, Anna Tanka-Salamon, Attila Bóta, Nóra Balázs, Zoltán Varga, Colin Longstaff, Erzsébet Komorowicz, and Krasimir Kolev
- Subjects
Lysis ,Plasmin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Tissue plasminogen activator ,Fibrin ,Histones ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Polyphosphates ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine ,Humans ,biology ,Heparin ,Polyphosphate ,Thrombosis ,Hematology ,Neutrophil extracellular traps ,Heparin, Low-Molecular-Weight ,chemistry ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) containing DNA and histones are expelled from neutrophils in infection and thrombosis. Heparins, anticoagulant polyanions, can neutralize histones with a potential therapeutic advantage in sepsis. Polyphosphates, procoagulant polyanions, are released by platelets and microorganisms. Objectives To characterize the combined effects of NET components and polyanions on clot structure, mechanical properties and lytic susceptibility. Methods Scanning electron microscopy, pressure-driven permeation, turbidimetry, and oscillation rheometry were used for the characterization of the structure, viscoelasticity, and kinetics of formation and lysis of fibrin and plasma clots containing histones+/-DNA in combination with unfractionated heparin, its desulfated derivatives, low molecular weight heparin (LMWH), pentasaccharide, and polyphosphates of different sizes. Results Histones and DNA inhibited fibrin lysis by plasmin, but this behavior was not neutralized by negatively charged heparins or short polyphosphates. Rather, fibrin lysis was further inhibited by added polyanions. Histones inhibited plasma clot lysis by tissue plasminogen activator and the response to added heparin was size dependent. Unfractionated heparin, LMWH, and pentasaccharide had no effect, exacerbated, or reversed histone inhibition, respectively. Histones increased the mechanical strength of fibrin, which was exacerbated by smaller heparin and polyphosphate molecules. Histones increased fibrin diameter and pore size of fibrin clots and this effect was neutralized by all heparin variants but enhanced by polyphosphates. Conclusions Despite their common polyanionic character, heparins and polyphosphates exert distinct effects on fibrin mechanical and fibrinolytic stability. Anti-fibrinolytic effects of histones were more often enhanced by polyanions not counteracted. Careful selection of anti-histone strategies is required if they are to be combined with thrombolytic therapy.
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- 2021
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5. Polyphosphate nanoparticles enhance the fibrin stabilization by histones more efficiently than linear polyphosphates
- Author
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Lovas, Miklós, primary, Tanka-Salamon, Anna, additional, Beinrohr, László, additional, Voszka, István, additional, Szabó, László, additional, Molnár, Kinga, additional, and Kolev, Krasimir, additional
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- 2022
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6. Free Fatty Acids Modulate Thrombin Mediated Fibrin Generation Resulting in Less Stable Clots.
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Anna Tanka-Salamon, Erzsébet Komorowicz, László Szabó, Kiril Tenekedjiev, and Krasimir Kolev
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Upon platelet activation, free fatty acids are released at the stage of thrombus formation, but their effects on fibrin formation are largely unexplored. Our objective was to characterize the kinetic effects of fatty acids on thrombin activity, as well as the structural and mechanical properties of the resultant fibrin clots. Thrombin activity on fibrinogen was followed by turbidimetry and detailed kinetic characterization was performed using a fluorogenic short peptide substrate. The viscoelastic properties of fibrin were measured with rotatory oscillation rheometer, whereas its structure was analyzed with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). In turbidimetric assays of fibrin generation, oleate and stearate at physiologically relevant concentrations (60-600 μM) produced a bell-shaped inhibitory dose response, increasing 10- to 30-fold the time to half-maximal clotting. Oleate inhibited thrombin activity on a short peptide substrate according to a mixed-type inhibitor pattern (a 9-fold increase of the Michaelis constant, Km and a 20% decrease of the catalytic constant), whereas stearate resulted in only a minor (15%) drop in the catalytic constant without any change in the Km. Morphometric analysis of SEM images showed a 73% increase in the median fiber diameter in the presence of stearate and a 20% decrease in the presence of oleate. Concerning the viscoelastic parameters of the clots, storage and loss moduli, maximal viscosity and critical shear stress decreased by 32-65% in the presence of oleate or stearate, but loss tangent did not change indicating decreased rigidity, higher deformability and decreased internal resistance to shear stress. Our study provides evidence that free fatty acids (at concentrations comparable to those reported in thrombi) reduce the mechanical stability of fibrin through modulation of thrombin activity and the pattern of fibrin assembly.
- Published
- 2016
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7. Suppressed catalytic efficiency of plasmin in the presence of long-chain fatty acids: Identification of kinetic parameters from continuous enzymatic assay with Monte Carlo simulation
- Author
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Tanka-Salamon, Anna, Tenekedjiev, Kiril, Machovich, Raymund, and Kolev, Krasimir
- Published
- 2008
8. Structure and Function of Trypsin-Loaded Fibrinolytic Liposomes
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András Wacha, Judith Mihály, Krasimir Kolev, Miklós Lovas, Anna Tanka-Salamon, and Attila Bóta
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Lysis ,Article Subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lcsh:Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Fibrin ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrinolytic Agents ,Phosphatidylcholine ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Thrombolytic Therapy ,Trypsin ,Liposome ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Fibrin degradation product ,biology ,Chemistry ,Vesicle ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,Biochemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Liposomes ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,Fibrinolytic agent ,Research Article - Abstract
Protease encapsulation and its targeted release in thrombi may contribute to the reduction of haemorrhagic complications of thrombolysis. We aimed to prepare sterically stabilized trypsin-loaded liposomes (SSLT) and characterize their structure and fibrinolytic efficiency. Hydrogenated soybean phosphatidylcholine-basedSSLTwere prepared and their structure was studied by transmission electron microscopy combined with freeze fracture (FF-TEM), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). Fibrinolytic activity was examined at 45, 37, or 24°C on fibrin or plasma clots with turbidimetric and permeation-driven lysis assays. Trypsin was shown to be attached to the inner surface of vesicles (SAXS and FF-TEM) close to the lipid hydrophilic/hydrophobic interface (FT-IR). The thermosensitivity ofSSLTwas evidenced by enhanced fibrinolysis at 45°C: time to reduce the maximal turbidity to 20% decreased by 8.6% compared to 37°C and fibrin degradation product concentration in the permeation lysis assay was 2-fold to 5-fold higher than that at 24°C.SSLTexerted its fibrinolytic action on fibrin clots under both static and dynamic conditions, whereas plasma clot dissolution was observed only in the permeation-driven assay. The improved fibrinolytic efficiency ofSSLTunder dynamic conditions suggests that they may serve as a novel therapeutic candidate for dissolution of intravascular thrombi, which are typically exposed to permeation forces.
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- 2017
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9. Proteolytic resistance conferred to fibrinogen by von Willebrand factor
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Raymund Machovich, Anna Tanka-Salamon, Erzsébet Komorowicz, and Krasimir Kolev
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biology ,Chemistry ,Plasmin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hematology ,Fibrinogen ,Fibrin ,Biochemistry ,Von Willebrand factor ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Fibrinolysis ,cardiovascular system ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Platelet ,Binding site ,Fibrinolysin ,circulatory and respiratory physiology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
SummaryThe formation of platelet-rich thrombi under high shear rates requires both fibrinogen and von Willebrand factor (VWF) as molecular adhesives between platelets. We attempted to describe the role of VWF as a potential substrate and modulator of the fibrinolytic system using binding assays, as well as kinetic measurements on the cleavage of fibrin(ogen) and a synthetic plasmin substrate (Spectrozyme-PL). The similar dissociation constants for the binding of plasminogen, plasmin, and active site-blocked plasmin onto immobilised VWF suggest that the primary binding site in plasmin(ogen) is not the active site. The progressive loss of clottability and generation of degradation products during fibrinogen digestion with plasmin were delayed in the presence of VWF at physiological concentrations, while VWF cleavage was not detectable. Determination of kinetic parameters for fibrinogen degradation by plasmin, miniplasmin and microplasmin showed that VWF did not modify the Km, whereas kcat values decreased with increasing VWF concentrations following the kinetic model of non-competitive inhibition. Inhibitory constants calculated for VWF were in the range of its physiological plasma concentration (5.4 μg/ml, 5.7 μg/ml and 10.0 μg/ ml for plasmin, miniplasmin and microplasmin, respectively) and their values suggested a modulating role of the kringle 5 domain in the interaction between VWF and (mini)plasmin. VWF had no effect on the amidolytic activity of plasmin on Spectrozyme-PL, or on fibrin dissolution by (mini)plasmin. Our data suggest that VWF, while a poor plasmin substrate relative to fibrinogen, protects fibrinogen against degradation by plasmin preserving its clottability in plasma and its adhesive role in platelet-rich thrombi.
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- 2010
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10. Free Fatty Acids Modulate Thrombin Mediated Fibrin Generation Resulting in Less Stable Clots
- Author
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Erzsébet Komorowicz, Anna Tanka-Salamon, Krasimir Kolev, László Szabó, and Kiril Tenekedjiev
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0301 basic medicine ,Glycobiology ,lcsh:Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Fibrinogen ,Biochemistry ,Physical Chemistry ,Polymerization ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Materials Physics ,lcsh:Science ,Shear Stresses ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Viscosity ,Physics ,Fatty Acids ,Oleates ,Thrombin ,Chemical Reactions ,Classical Mechanics ,Lipids ,Chemistry ,Physical Sciences ,Mechanical Stress ,Fibrin Clot Lysis Time ,medicine.drug ,Protein Binding ,Research Article ,Materials Science ,Michaelis–Menten kinetics ,Fibrin ,03 medical and health sciences ,Stearate ,medicine ,Platelet activation ,Thrombus ,Glycoproteins ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,medicine.disease ,Polymer Chemistry ,Elasticity ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Chemical Properties ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,lcsh:Q ,Turbidimetry ,Protein Multimerization - Abstract
Upon platelet activation, free fatty acids are released at the stage of thrombus formation, but their effects on fibrin formation are largely unexplored. Our objective was to characterize the kinetic effects of fatty acids on thrombin activity, as well as the structural and mechanical properties of the resultant fibrin clots. Thrombin activity on fibrinogen was followed by turbidimetry and detailed kinetic characterization was performed using a fluorogenic short peptide substrate. The viscoelastic properties of fibrin were measured with rotatory oscillation rheometer, whereas its structure was analyzed with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). In turbidimetric assays of fibrin generation, oleate and stearate at physiologically relevant concentrations (60-600 μM) produced a bell-shaped inhibitory dose response, increasing 10- to 30-fold the time to half-maximal clotting. Oleate inhibited thrombin activity on a short peptide substrate according to a mixed-type inhibitor pattern (a 9-fold increase of the Michaelis constant, Km and a 20% decrease of the catalytic constant), whereas stearate resulted in only a minor (15%) drop in the catalytic constant without any change in the Km. Morphometric analysis of SEM images showed a 73% increase in the median fiber diameter in the presence of stearate and a 20% decrease in the presence of oleate. Concerning the viscoelastic parameters of the clots, storage and loss moduli, maximal viscosity and critical shear stress decreased by 32-65% in the presence of oleate or stearate, but loss tangent did not change indicating decreased rigidity, higher deformability and decreased internal resistance to shear stress. Our study provides evidence that free fatty acids (at concentrations comparable to those reported in thrombi) reduce the mechanical stability of fibrin through modulation of thrombin activity and the pattern of fibrin assembly.
- Published
- 2016
11. DNA, histones and neutrophil extracellular traps exert anti-fibrinolytic effects in a plasma environment
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Krasimir Kolev, Raymund Machovich, Veronika Judit Varga-Szabó, Á. Farkas, Imre Varjú, Colin Longstaff, László Szabó, and Anna Tanka-Salamon
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Lysis ,Plasmin ,Neutrophils ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Extracellular Traps ,Fibrin ,Neutrophil Activation ,Permeability ,Histones ,03 medical and health sciences ,Plasma ,0302 clinical medicine ,Thrombin ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine ,Deoxyribonuclease I ,Humans ,Microscopy, Confocal ,biology ,Plasminogen ,Hematology ,Neutrophil extracellular traps ,DNA ,Molecular biology ,Kinetics ,030104 developmental biology ,Histone ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate ,Plasminogen activator ,circulatory and respiratory physiology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
SummaryIn response to various inflammatory stimuli, neutrophils secrete neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), web-like meshworks of DNA, histones and granular components forming supplementary scaffolds in venous and arterial thrombi. Isolated DNA and histones are known to promote thrombus formation and render fibrin clots more resistant to mechanical forces and tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA)-induced enzymatic digestion. The present study extends our earlier observations to a physiologically more relevant environment including plasma clots and NET-forming neutrophils. A range of techniques was employed including imaging (scanning electron microscopy (SEM), confocal laser microscopy, and photoscanning of macroscopic lysis fronts), clot permeability measurements, turbidimetric lysis and enzyme inactivation assays. Addition of DNA and histones increased the median fibre diameter of plasma clots formed with 16 nM thrombin from 108 to 121 and 119 nm, respectively, and decreased their permeability constant from 6.4 to 3.1 and 3.7×10−9 cm2. Histones effectively protected thrombin from antithrombin-induced inactivation, while DNA inhibited plasminogen activation on the surface of plasma clots and their plasmin-induced resolution by 20 and 40 %, respectively. DNA and histones, as well as NETs secreted by phorbol-myristate-acetate-activated neutrophils, slowed down the tPA-driven lysis of plasma clots and the latter effect could be reversed by the addition of DNase (streptodornase). SEM images taken after complete digestion of fibrin in NET-containing plasma clots evidenced retained NET scaffold that was absent in DNase-treated clots. Our results show that DNA and histones alter the fibrin architecture in plasma clots, while NETs contribute to a decreased lytic susceptibility that can be overcome by DNase.
- Published
- 2014
12. Structure and Function of Trypsin-Loaded Fibrinolytic Liposomes
- Author
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Tanka-Salamon, Anna, primary, Bóta, Attila, additional, Wacha, András, additional, Mihály, Judith, additional, Lovas, Miklós, additional, and Kolev, Krasimir, additional
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Free Fatty Acids Modulate Thrombin Mediated Fibrin Generation Resulting in Less Stable Clots
- Author
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Tanka-Salamon, Anna, primary, Komorowicz, Erzsébet, additional, Szabó, László, additional, Tenekedjiev, Kiril, additional, and Kolev, Krasimir, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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14. DNA, histones and neutrophil extracellular traps exert anti-fibrinolytic effects in a plasma environment
- Author
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Varjú, Imre, primary, Longstaff, Colin, primary, Szabó, László, primary, Farkas, Ádám Zoltán, primary, Varga-Szabó, Veronika Judit, primary, Tanka-Salamon, Anna, primary, Machovich, Raymund, primary, and Kolev, Krasimir, additional
- Published
- 2015
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15. Proteolytic resistance conferred to fibrinogen by von Willebrand factor1
- Author
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Tanka-Salamon, Anna, Kolev, Krasimir, Machovich, Raymund, and Komorowicz, Erzsebet
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Fibrinolysis ,Fibrinogen ,Thrombosis ,Article ,Kinetics ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,von Willebrand Factor ,cardiovascular system ,Cell Adhesion ,Humans ,Fibrinolysin ,Blood Coagulation ,circulatory and respiratory physiology ,Peptide Hydrolases ,Protein Binding - Abstract
The formation of platelet-rich thrombi under high shear rates requires both fibrinogen and von Willebrand factor (VWF) as molecular adhesives between platelets. We attempted to describe the role of VWF as a potential substrate and modulator of the fibrinolytic system using binding assays, as well as kinetic measurements on the cleavage of fibrin(ogen) and a synthetic plasmin substrate (Spectrozyme-PL). The similar dissociation constants for the binding of plasminogen, plasmin, and active site-blocked plasmin onto immobilised VWF suggest that the primary binding site in plasmin(ogen) is not the active site. The progressive loss of clottability and generation of degradation products during fibrinogen digestion with plasmin were delayed in the presence of VWF at physiological concentrations, while VWF cleavage was not detectable. Determination of kinetic parameters for fibrinogen degradation by plasmin, miniplasmin and microplasmin showed that VWF did not modify the Km, whereas kcat values decreased with increasing VWF concentrations following the kinetic model of non-competitive inhibition. Inhibitory constants calculated for VWF were in the range of its physiological plasma concentration (5.4 mg/ml, 5.7 mg/ml and 10.0 mg/ml for plasmin, miniplasmin and microplasmin, respectively) and their values suggested a modulating role of the kringle 5 domain in the interaction between VWF and (mini)plasmin. VWF had no effect on the amidolytic activity of plasmin on Spectrozyme-PL, or on fibrin dissolution by (mini)plasmin. Our data suggest that VWF, while a poor plasmin substrate relative to fibrinogen, protects fibrinogen against degradation by plasmin preserving its clottability in plasma and its adhesive role in platelet-rich thrombi.
- Published
- 2009
16. Suppressed catalytic efficiency of plasmin in the presence of long-chain fatty acids. Identification of kinetic parameters from continuous enzymatic assay with Monte Carlo simulation
- Author
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Kiril Tenekedjiev, Raymund Machovich, Krasimir Kolev, and Anna Tanka-Salamon
- Subjects
progress curves ,Plasmin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Biochemistry ,Michaelis–Menten kinetics ,Catalysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,oleate ,0302 clinical medicine ,Stearate ,Stearates ,medicine ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Enzyme kinetics ,Fibrinolysin ,Molecular Biology ,Monte Carlo simulation ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Chromatography ,Protease ,Arachidonic Acid ,Substrate (chemistry) ,Cell Biology ,Original Articles ,arachidonate ,Oleic acid ,Kinetics ,chemistry ,Models, Chemical ,stearate ,Arachidonic acid ,Monte Carlo Method ,Oligopeptides ,medicine.drug ,Oleic Acid - Abstract
Thrombi, which are dissolved primarily by plasmin (EC 3.4.21.7.), contain up to millimolar concentrations of fatty acids and these are known to affect the action of the protease. In the present study the modulation of plasmin activity was characterized quantitatively in a continuous amidolytic assay based on synthetic plasmin substrate (Spectrozyme-PL). A novel numerical procedure was applied for identification of kinetic parameters and their confidence intervals, with Monte Carlo simulation of the reaction progress curves, providing adequate grounds for discrimination of different models of the enzyme action. All three fatty acids caused a 10-20-fold increase in the Michaelis constant on Spectrozyme-PL (baseline value 5.9 mum). The catalytic constant decreased from 5.8.s(-1) to 2.4-2.8.s(-1) in the presence of arachidonate and oleate, but increased to 14.8.s(-1) in the presence of stearate, implying enhancement of plasmin activity at saturating substrate concentrations. However, based on the ratio of the catalytic and Michaelis constants, all three fatty acids acted as inhibitors of plasmin with various degrees of potency, showing concentration dependence in the range of 10-65 mum for oleate and arachidonate, and 115-230 mum for stearate. The reported effects of the three fatty acids require the presence of kringle 5 in the structure of the protease; miniplasmin (des-kringle 1-4 plasmin) is as sensitive to fatty acids as plasmin, whereas the activity of microplasmin (des-kringle 1-5 plasmin) is not affected.
- Published
- 2008
17. Modulation of fibrinolysis by the combined action of phospholipids and immunoglobulins
- Author
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Krasimir Kolev, Judit Gombás, Anna Tanka-Salamon, Zoltán Zsolt Nagy, Judit Skopál, and Raymund Machovich
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Antifibrinolytic ,medicine.drug_class ,Plasmin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fibrin ,Antiphospholipid syndrome ,Internal medicine ,Fibrinolysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Platelet ,Fibrinolysin ,Phospholipids ,biology ,T-plasminogen activator ,Chemistry ,Hematology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Antiphospholipid Syndrome ,Endocrinology ,Biochemistry ,Case-Control Studies ,Immunoglobulin G ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,biology.protein ,Antibodies, Antiphospholipid ,Plasminogen activator ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Because both immunoglobulin G (IgG) and phospholipids interfere with fibrinolysis, their combined modulating effects were investigated in experimental models of three consecutive steps of the fibrinolytic process [diffusion of tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) into the clot, plasminogen activation on fibrin surface and fibrin dissolution by plasmin] using IgGs isolated from healthy subjects and from patients with antiphospholipid syndrome in combination with mixtures of synthetic dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and dipalmitoylphosphatidylserine. In fibrin clots containing phospholipids the normal IgG enhanced the barrier function of the phospholipids with respect to the diffusion of tPA and plasminogen activation, but did not modify the lysis by plasmin. One of the examined antiphospholipid syndrome-IgGs also restricted the diffusion of tPA, but it accelerated the plasminogen activation on the fibrin surface and slowed down the lysis of fibrin by plasmin. Another antiphospholipid syndrome IgG, which did not affect significantly the tPA penetration into the fibrin gel, did not modify the plasminogen activation on its own, but it partially opposed the inhibiting effect of phospholipids on plasmin formation and accelerated the end-stage lysis of fibrin containing phospholipids. The IgGs from the two examined antiphospholipid syndrome patients did not show consistent deviation from the pattern of normal IgG effects on fibrinolysis in phospholipid environment. Thus, a high degree of heterogeneity with respect to the profibrinolytic or antifibrinolytic effects of the pathological IgGs can be expected in the antiphospholipid syndrome patient population, which may contribute to the variable thrombotic symptoms in this clinical syndrome.
- Published
- 2008
18. Proteolytic resistance conferred to fibrinogen by von Willebrand factor
- Author
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Tanka-Salamon, Anna, primary, Machovich, Raymund, primary, Komorowicz, Erzsebet, primary, and Kolev, Krasimir, additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Modulation of fibrinolysis by the combined action of phospholipids and immunoglobulins
- Author
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Gombás, Judit, primary, Tanka-Salamon, Anna, additional, Skopál, Judit, additional, Nagy, Zoltán, additional, Machovich, Raymund, additional, and Kolev, Krasimir, additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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