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Urokinase

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It has been suggested that PLAU be merged into this article. (Discuss) Proposed since January 2010.
Pharmaceutical compound
Urokinase
Clinical data
ATC code
Identifiers
CAS Number
DrugBank
KEGG
Chemical and physical data
FormulaC1376H2145N383O406S18
Molar mass31126.5 g/mol g·mol
  (what is this?)  (verify)
plasminogen activator, urokinase
Identifiers
SymbolPLAU
NCBI gene5328
HGNC9052
OMIM191840
RefSeqNM_002658
UniProtP00749
Other data
EC number3.4.21.31
LocusChr. 10 q24
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro

Urokinase (trade name Abbokinase), also called urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), is a serine protease (EC 3.4.21.73). Urokinase was originally isolated from human urine, but is present in several physiological locations, such as blood stream and the extracellular matrix. The primary physiological substrate is plasminogen, which is an inactive zymogen form of the serine protease plasmin. Activation of plasmin triggers a proteolysis cascade that, depending on the physiological environment, participates in thrombolysis or extracellular matrix degradation. This links urokinase to vascular diseases and cancer.

Molecular characteristics

Urokinase is a 411-residue protein, consisting of three domains: the serine protease domain, the kringle domain, and the growth factor domain. Urokinase is synthesized as a zymogen form (prourokinase or single-chain urokinase), and is activated by proteolytic cleavage between L158 and I159. The two resulting chains are kept together by a disulfide bond.

Interaction partners

The most important inhibitors of urokinase are the serpins plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and plasminogen activator inhibitor-2 (PAI-2), which inhibit the protease activity irreversibly. In the extracellular matrix, urokinase is tethered to the cell membrane by its interaction to the urokinase receptor.

Fibrinolysis (simplified). Blue arrows denote stimulation, and red arrows inhibition.

Urokinase and cancer

Elevated expression levels of urokinase and several other components of the plasminogen activation system are found to be correlated with tumor malignancy. It is believed that the tissue degradation following plasminogen activation facilitates tissue invasion and, thus, contributes to metastasis. This makes urokinase an attractive drug target, and, so, inhibitors have been sought to be used as anticancer agents. However, incompatibilities between the human and murine systems hamper clinical evaluation of these agents. Through its interaction with the urokinase receptor, urokinase affects several other aspects of cancer biology such as cells adhesion, migration, and cellular mitotic pathways.

Clinical applications

Urokinase is used clinically as a thrombolytic agent in the treatment of severe or massive deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, myocardial infarction, and occluded intravenous or dialysis cannulas. It is also administered intrapleurally to improve the drainage of complicated pleural effusions and empyemas. Urokinase is presently marketed as Kinlytic, and competes with Alteplase as a thrombolytic drug in infarctation.

Coagulation cascade
Coagulation factors
Primary hemostasis
(platelet activation)
Intrinsic pathway
(contact activation)
Extrinsic pathway
(tissue factor)
Common pathway
Anticoagulant factors
Fibrinolytic factors
Coagulation markers
Platelet activation
Thrombin generation
Fibrin generation
Fibrinolysis
Endopeptidases: serine proteases/serine endopeptidases (EC 3.4.21)
Digestive enzymes
Coagulation
Complement system
Other immune system
Venombin
Other
Antithrombotics (thrombolytics, anticoagulants and antiplatelet drugs) (B01)
Antiplatelet drugs
Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors
ADP receptor/P2Y12 inhibitors
Prostaglandin analogue (PGI2)
COX inhibitors
Thromboxane inhibitors
Phosphodiesterase inhibitors
Other
Anticoagulants
Vitamin K antagonists
(inhibit II, VII, IX, X)
Factor Xa inhibitors
(with some II inhibition)
Heparin group/
glycosaminoglycans/
(bind antithrombin)
Direct Xa inhibitors ("xabans")
Direct thrombin (IIa) inhibitors
Other
Thrombolytic drugs/
fibrinolytics
Non-medicinal
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