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Author

J Grøndahl-Hansen

Other affiliations: Finsen Laboratory
Bio: J Grøndahl-Hansen is an academic researcher from University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasminogen activator & Urokinase. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 10 publications receiving 3510 citations. Previous affiliations of J Grøndahl-Hansen include Finsen Laboratory.

Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: This chapter describes two types of plasminogen activators—namely, the urokinase-type plasMinogen activator (u-PA) and the tissue- type plasmineg activator(t-PA), which are essentially different gene products.
Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the role of plasminogen activators in various biological processes. In specific, it describes two types of plasminogen activators—namely, the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and the tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), which are essentially different gene products. The amino acid sequences of these activators and nucleotide sequences of the corresponding cDNAs have largely been determined, and the cDNAs have been cloned using recombinant techniques. A variety of enzymatic as well as immunological assay and detection methods have also been developed that allows a precise quantification of the activators, a distinction between u-PA and t-PA, determination of whether an activator is present in its active or zymogen form, analysis of the kinetics of different steps of the cascade reaction, and immunocytochemical identification of u-PA and t-PA in tissue sections. Much of the studies on plasminogen activators and cancer has been guided by the hypothesis that proteolysis of the components of extracellular matrix, initiated by the release of plasminogen activator from the cancer cells, plays a decisive role for the degradation of normal tissue, and thereby for invasive growth and metastases.

2,545 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An approximately 75% pure form of a human Mr approximately 54,000 plasminogen activator inhibitor from conditioned culture fluid of the fibrosarcoma cell line HT-1080 was obtained by a single step of chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose.

235 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Immunocytochemistry, using rabbit antibodies to a urokinase-type 48- Kdalton Mr mouse plasminogen activator, showed that enzyme immunoreactivity is widely distributed in the normal mouse.
Abstract: Immunocytochemistry, using rabbit antibodies to a urokinase-type 48-Kdalton Mr mouse plasminogen activator, showed that enzyme immunoreactivity is widely distributed in the normal mouse. Strong staining was obtained in widely disseminated connective tissue cells with a fibroblast-like morphology. Such cells occurred in high numbers in the lamina propria mucosae of the gastrointestinal tract, and in moderate numbers in the connective tissue septa of the pancreas. A few such cells were detected around the larynx, trachea, and bronchi. Immunoreactivity also occurred in epithelial cells of the proximal and distal kidney tubules, the ductus deferens, and in pulmonary pneumocytes. In addition, presumably extracellular staining was seen irregularly along the basement membrane and fibrillar structures in the lamina propria of the small and large intestines. Moreover, decidual cells of the mouse placenta stained strongly, and a moderate staining was observed in epithelial cells of involuting mammary glands, but not in those of noninvoluting glands. No immunoreactivity was observed in endothelial cells. Control experiments included absorption of the antibodies against highly-purified mouse plasminogen activator and the corresponding proenzyme, and the finding of a good correspondence between the number of immunoreactive cells and measurable enzymatic activity determined in adjacent tissue sections. Separation by SDS PAGE followed by immunoblotting revealed only one immunochemically stainable protein band with Mr approximately 48 Kdaltons in extracts from tissues showing immunoreactivity.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the plasminogen activator present in endothelium of veins and other blood vessels is of the tissue‐type, which supports the assumption that mobilization of plAsmin for different purposes may involve different types of plasmineogen activators, and that thePlasminagen activator involved in thrombolysis is ofThe tissue‐ type.

151 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mouse monoclonal antibodies derived against a plasminogen activator inhibitor derived from cultured human umbilical cord endothelial cells identified four clones of hybridomas producing IgG1 antibodies which could be used for immunocytochemical localization of the inhibitor in HT-1080 cells.
Abstract: Mouse monoclonal antibodies were derived against a plasminogen activator inhibitor with a mol. wt. of approximately 54,000 (54 K) from the human fibrosarcoma cell line HT-1080. Screening for hybrids producing antibodies directed against the inhibitor was performed with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) followed by immunoblotting. Four clones of hybridomas producing IgG1 antibodies were further characterized. The inhibitor was purified approximately 50-fold to homogeneity from conditioned cell culture fluid with a yield of approximately 85% by a one-step procedure using Sepharose-conjugated monoclonal antibody. In the 125I-fibrin plate assay one of the antibodies neutralized the effect of the inhibitor on urokinase-type plasminogen activator. Two of the antibodies bound complexes between urokinase-type plasminogen activator and inhibitor while the remaining two antibodies did not. The antibodies could be used for immunocytochemical localization of the inhibitor in HT-1080 cells. All four antibodies cross-reacted with a plasminogen activator inhibitor derived from cultured human umbilical cord endothelial cells.

116 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Tumors of epithelioma are composed of two discrete but interdependent compartments: the malignant cells themselves and the stroma that they induce and in which they are dispersed.
Abstract: SOLID tumors are composed of two discrete but interdependent compartments: the malignant cells themselves and the stroma that they induce and in which they are dispersed.1 , 2 In tumors of epitheli...

4,132 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present review discusses in detail the primary structures and the overlapping yet distinct substrate specificities of MMPs as well as the mode of activation of the unique MMP precursors.
Abstract: Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are a family of nine or more highly homologous Zn(++)-endopeptidases that collectively cleave most if not all of the constituents of the extracellular matrix. The present review discusses in detail the primary structures and the overlapping yet distinct substrate specificities of MMPs as well as the mode of activation of the unique MMP precursors. The regulation of MMP activity at the transcriptional level and at the extracellular level (precursor activation, inhibition of activated, mature enzymes) is also discussed. A final segment of the review details the current knowledge of the involvement of MMP in specific developmental or pathological conditions, including human periodontal diseases.

3,040 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
25 Jan 1991-Cell
TL;DR: General themes are emerging that yield new strategies for prognosis and therapy of hu- man metastatic cancer, and an imbalanced regulation of motility and proteoly- sis appears to be required for invasion and metastasis.

2,776 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: This chapter describes two types of plasminogen activators—namely, the urokinase-type plasMinogen activator (u-PA) and the tissue- type plasmineg activator(t-PA), which are essentially different gene products.
Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the role of plasminogen activators in various biological processes. In specific, it describes two types of plasminogen activators—namely, the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and the tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), which are essentially different gene products. The amino acid sequences of these activators and nucleotide sequences of the corresponding cDNAs have largely been determined, and the cDNAs have been cloned using recombinant techniques. A variety of enzymatic as well as immunological assay and detection methods have also been developed that allows a precise quantification of the activators, a distinction between u-PA and t-PA, determination of whether an activator is present in its active or zymogen form, analysis of the kinetics of different steps of the cascade reaction, and immunocytochemical identification of u-PA and t-PA in tissue sections. Much of the studies on plasminogen activators and cancer has been guided by the hypothesis that proteolysis of the components of extracellular matrix, initiated by the release of plasminogen activator from the cancer cells, plays a decisive role for the degradation of normal tissue, and thereby for invasive growth and metastases.

2,545 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Constitutive generation of large amounts of reactive oxygen intermediates, if it occurs in vivo, might contribute to the ability of some tumors to mutate, inhibit antiproteases, injure local tissues, and therefore promote tumor heterogeneity, invasion, and metastasis.
Abstract: Few nonphagocytic cells are known to generate reactive oxygen intermediates. Based on horseradish peroxidase-dependent, catalase-inhibitable oxidation of fluorescent scopoletin, seven human tumor cell lines constitutively elaborated H2O2 at rates (up to 0.5 nmol/10(4) cells/h) large enough that cumulative amounts at 4 h were comparable to the amount of H2O2 produced by phorbol ester-triggered neutrophils. Superoxide dismutase-inhibitable ferricytochrome c reduction was detectable at much lower rates. H2O2 production was inhibited by diphenyleneiodonium, a flavoprotein binder (concentration producing 50% inhibition, 0.3 microM), and diethyldithiocarbamate, a divalent cation chelator (concentration producing 50% inhibition, 3 microM), but not by cyanide or azide, inhibitors of electron transport, or by agents that inhibit xanthine oxidase, polyamine oxidase, or cytochrome P450. Cytochrome b559, present in human phagocytes and lymphocytes, was undetectable in these tumor cells by a sensitive spectrophotometric method. Mouse fibroblasts transfected with human tyrosinase complementary DNA made melanin, but not H2O2. Constitutive generation of large amounts of reactive oxygen intermediates, if it occurs in vivo, might contribute to the ability of some tumors to mutate, inhibit antiproteases, injure local tissues, and therefore promote tumor heterogeneity, invasion, and metastasis.

2,417 citations