Publications by authors named "Ruf W"

Objective: To discuss recent studies addressing the relationship between protease-activated receptor signaling, coagulation, and inflammation.

Data Extraction And Synthesis: This review article covers relevant original articles published until October 2003 dealing with animal models, clinical trial data, and in vitro experiments.

Conclusions: Although activation of protease-activated receptors has been implicated in the proinflammatory effects of the coagulation cascade, current data provide evidence that protease-activated receptor signaling plays a more complex role in the regulation of inflammation and endothelial homeostasis.

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Hemostasis initiates angiogenesis-dependent wound healing, and thrombosis is frequently associated with advanced cancer. Although activation of coagulation generates potent regulators of angiogenesis, little is known about how this pathway supports angiogenesis in vivo. Here we show that the tissue factor (TF)-VIIa protease complex, independent of triggering coagulation, can promote tumor and developmental angiogenesis through protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2) signaling.

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Tissue factor (TF) is the physiological activator of the coagulation cascade that plays pathophysiological roles in metastasis, angiogenesis, and inflammation. Downstream in coagulation, thrombin is the central protease that signals through G protein-coupled, protease-activated receptors (PARs). However, the TF-VIIa-Xa complex upstream in coagulation also activates PAR1 and 2.

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The integration of structure and function analysis of the tissue factor-factor VIIa complex has provided a detailed view of the functional surface of the extrinsic activation complex. An incomplete zymogen to enzyme transition is responsible for the strict cofactor dependence of catalytic function of factor VIIa. The mutational analysis demonstrates that factor VIIa is allosterically regulated by specific conformational linkages that involve the cofactor binding site, the catalytic cleft, and the macromolecular substrate exosite.

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Factor X is activated to factor Xa (fXa) in the extrinsic coagulation pathway by the tissue factor (TF)/factor VIIa (fVIIa) complex. Upon activation, the fXa molecule remains associated with the TF/fVIIa complex, and this ternary complex is known to activate protease-activated receptors (PARs) 1 and 2. Activation of fVII in the TF complex by fXa is also seen at physiologic concentrations.

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The anti-inflammatory effects of activated protein C (APC) have lead to its recent approval for the treatment of sepsis. Although the endothelial cell protein C receptor (EPCR) plays a crucial role in APC's protective roles in septicemia, the precise signaling mechanism of the protease APC remains unclear. In fibroblast overexpression systems, we find that APC activates protease activated receptors (PAR) 1 and 2 in an EPCR-dependent manner.

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Vasculogenic mimicry (VM), the formation of matrix-rich vascular-like networks in three-dimensional culture corresponding with the expression of vascular cell-associated genes, and the lining of matrix-rich networks in situ, has been observed in highly aggressive and malignant melanoma. However, little is known about the molecular underpinnings of this phenomenon. On the basis of gene profiling, protein detection, and immunohistochemistry, aggressive relative to poorly aggressive melanoma showed up-regulation of tissue factor (TF), TF pathway inhibitor 1 (TFPI-1) and 2 (TFPI-2), critical genes that initiate and regulate the coagulation pathways.

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The tissue factor (TF)-initiated coagulation pathway plays important roles in hemostasis, inflammation, metastasis, and angiogenesis. Phosphorylation of the TF cytoplasmic domain is functionally relevant in metastasis. How TF cytoplasmic domain phosphorylation downstream of protein kinase C (PKC) activation is regulated in primary vascular cells remains poorly understood.

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Coagulation serine proteases signal through protease-activated receptors (PARs). Thrombin-dependent PAR signaling on platelets is essential for the hemostatic response and vascular thrombosis, but regulation of inflammation by PAR signaling is now recognized as an important aspect of the pro- and anti-coagulant pathways. In tissue factor (TF)-dependent initiation of coagulation, factor (F) Xa is the PAR-1 or PAR-2-activating protease when associated with the transient TF-FVIIa-FXa complex.

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Cellular signaling by proteases of the blood coagulation cascade through members of the protease-activated receptor (PAR) family can profoundly impact on the inflammatory balance in sepsis. The coagulation initiation reaction on tissue factor expressing cells signals through PAR1 and PAR2, leading to enhanced inflammation. The anticoagulant protein C pathway has potent anti-inflammatory effects, and activated protein C signals through PAR1 upon binding to the endothelial protein C receptor.

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Objectives: To review the role of tissue factor-dependent coagulation in acute lung injury. To interpret preclinical and clinical data on therapeutic intervention of the coagulation cascade, focusing on the principles of proteolytic cell signaling of the coagulant and anticoagulant pathways.

Data Extraction And Synthesis: This review is based on published original research and relevant review articles on cell signaling by coagulation proteases and on experimental models that implicate the tissue factor-initiated coagulation cascade in acute lung injury and systemic inflammation.

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Factor VIIa (VIIa) remains in a zymogen-like state following proteolytic activation and depends on interactions with the cofactor tissue factor (TF) for function. Val(21), Glu(154), and Met(156) are residues that are spatially close in available zymogen and enzyme structures, despite major conformational differences in the corresponding loop segments. This residue triad displays unusual side chain properties in comparison to the properties of other coagulation serine proteases.

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Angiostatin, a plasminogen fragment containing 3-4 N-terminal kringle domains, is a potent inhibitor of tumor-induced angiogenesis, but its mechanism of action is unclear. Angiostatin is a ligand for integrin alphavbeta(3) but does not induce stress fiber formation upon integrin binding, suggesting that angiostatin is a potential integrin antagonist. Plasmin, the parent molecule of angiostatin and a major extracellular protease, induces platelet aggregation, migration of peripheral blood monocytes, and release of arachidonate and leukotriene from several cell types.

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Protease-activated receptors (PARs) are vascular sensors for signaling of the trypsinlike coagulation serine proteases that play key roles in cardiovascular medicine. In the initiation phase of coagulation, tissue factor (TF) orchestrates the assembly of VIIa with substrate X, forming a ternary complex in which product Xa is generated. The resulting TF-VIIa-Xa complex is an efficient activator of PAR1 and PAR2.

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The coagulant and inflammatory exacerbation in sepsis is counterbalanced by the protective protein C (PC) pathway. Activated PC (APC) was shown to use the endothelial cell PC receptor (EPCR) as a coreceptor for cleavage of protease activated receptor 1 (PAR1) on endothelial cells. Gene profiling demonstrated that PAR1 signaling could account for all APC-induced protective genes, including the immunomodulatory monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), which was selectively induced by activation of PAR1, but not PAR2.

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TF expression is a hallmark of cancer progression. The procoagulant functions of TF that lead to thrombin generation are critically important to support metastasis, in part through the generation of fibrin that assures prolonged arrest of tumor cells in target organs. In addition, the coagulation initiation complex, i.

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The crucial role of cell signaling in hemostasis is clearly established by the action of the downstream coagulation protease thrombin that cleaves platelet-expressed G-protein-coupled protease activated receptors (PARs). Certain PARs are cleaved by the upstream coagulation proteases factor Xa (Xa) and the tissue factor (TF)--factor VIIa (VIIa) complex, but these enzymes are required at high nonphysiological concentrations and show limited recognition specificity for the scissile bond of target PARs. However, defining a physiological mechanism of PAR activation by upstream proteases is highly relevant because of the potent anti-inflammatory in vivo effects of inhibitors of the TF initiation complex.

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Cell signaling by coagulation factor Xa (Xa) contributes to pro-inflammatory responses in vivo. This study characterizes the signaling mechanism of Xa in a HeLa cell line that expresses protease-activated receptor 1 (PAR-1) but not PAR-2, -3, or -4. Xa induced NF-kappaB in HeLa cells efficiently but with delayed kinetics compared to thrombin.

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The extrinsic coagulation pathway is initiated by the binding of plasma factor VIIa (VIIa) to the cell surface receptor tissue factor (TF). Formation of the TF-VIIa complex results in allosteric activation of VIIa as well as the creation of an extended macromolecular substrate binding exosite that greatly enhances proteolytic activation of substrate factor X. The catalytic function of the TF-VIIa complex is regulated by a specific Kunitz-type inhibitor, tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI).

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Recombinant nematode anticoagulant protein c2 (rNAPc2) is a potent, factor Xa (fXa)-dependent small protein inhibitor of factor VIIa-tissue factor (fVIIa.TF), which binds to a site on fXa that is distinct from the catalytic center (exo-site). In the present study, the role of other fX derivatives in presenting rNAPc2 to fVIIa.

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Functional regulation by cofactors is fundamentally important for the highly ordered, consecutive activation of the coagulation cascade. The initiating protease of the coagulation system, factor VIIa (VIIa), retains zymogen-like features after proteolytic cleavage of the activating Arg(15)-Ile(16) peptide bond and requires the binding of the cofactor tissue factor (TF) to stabilize the protease domain in an active enzyme conformation. Structural comparison of TF-bound and free VIIa failed to provide a conclusive mechanism for this catalytic activation.

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Serine protease activation is typically controlled by proteolytic cleavage of the scissile bond, resulting in spontaneous formation of the activating Ile(16)-Asp(194) salt bridge. The initiating coagulation protease factor VIIa (VIIa) differs by remaining in a zymogen-like conformation that confers the control of catalytic activity to the obligatory cofactor and receptor tissue factor (TF). This study demonstrates that the unusual hydrophobic Met(156) residue contributes to the propensity of the VIIa protease domain to remain in a zymogen-like conformation.

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Tissue factor (TF) is a transmembrane receptor that initiates the thrombogenic cascade by assembly with the serine protease factor VII or VIIa (VII/VIIa) resulting in formation of the bimolecular active complex TF.VIIa. Chemical cross-linking studies identified that a minor population of TF forms dimers on the surface of cells, possibly influencing TF.

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