Fish Plasminogen Activators: Their Identification and Characterization

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Abstract

Immunoblots of proteins extracted from the skin of a small viviparous fish (Xiphophorus) showed that a monoclonal antibody against human urokinase recognizes multiple molecular weight species of antigens. The immunoaffinity-purified antigens had serine-protease activity for the hydrolysis of a chromogenic substrate and could convert human plasminogen to plasmin in a manner similar to that for human urokinase in vitro. Two antigens with apparent molecular weights of 55 and 50 kilodaltons that had been purified on a fibrin-Celite column were separable on SDS-polyacrylamide gels and were characterized as major plasminogen activators on fibrin-agar indicator plates. The 125I-tryptic peptide maps of both antigens were similar to that of human urokinase; therefore, the fish activators and human urokinase are structurally and functionally related. © 1987, Japan Society for Cell Biology. All rights reserved.

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Takahashi, K., Wakamatsu, Y., Ozato, K., & Wakayama, Y. (1987). Fish Plasminogen Activators: Their Identification and Characterization. Cell Structure and Function, 12(1), 11–22. https://doi.org/10.1247/csf.12.11

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