Phosphoglycerate kinase acts in tumour angiogenesis as a disulphide reductase
Disulphide bonds in secreted proteins are considered to be inert because of the oxidizing nature of the extracellular milieu. An exception to this rule is a reductase secreted by tumour cells that reduces disulphide bonds in the serine proteinase plasmin. Reduction of plasmin initiates proteolytic c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2000-12, Vol.408 (6814), p.869-873 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Disulphide bonds in secreted proteins are considered to be inert because
of the oxidizing nature of the extracellular milieu. An exception to this
rule is a reductase secreted by tumour cells that reduces disulphide bonds
in the serine proteinase plasmin. Reduction of plasmin initiates
proteolytic cleavage in the kringle 5 domain and release of the tumour blood
vessel inhibitor angiostatin. New blood vessel formation or
angiogenesis is critical for tumour expansion and metastasis.
Here we show that the plasmin reductase isolated from conditioned medium of
fibrosarcoma cells is the glycolytic enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase.
Recombinant phosphoglycerate kinase had the same specific activity as the
fibrosarcoma-derived protein. Plasma of mice bearing fibrosarcoma tumours
contained several-fold more phosphoglycerate kinase, as compared with mice
without tumours. Administration of phosphoglycerate kinase to tumour-bearing
mice caused an increase in plasma levels of angiostatin, and a decrease in
tumour vascularity and rate of tumour growth. Our findings indicate that phosphoglycerate
kinase not only functions in glycolysis but is secreted by tumour cells and
participates in the angiogenic process as a disulphide reductase. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/35048596 |