Hepatocyte growth factor is a preferred in vitro substrate for human hepsin, a membrane-anchored serine protease implicated in prostate and ovarian cancers.
暂无分享,去创建一个
C. Craik | N. Walker | T. Hoey | P. Cao | A. Bhatt | G. Cutler | D. E. Piper | Charles S Craik | D. Meininger | Timothy Hoey | David Meininger | Richard J Austin | Sylvia Herter | S. Herter | Youngchool Choe | Ami S Bhatt | Derek E Piper | Wade Aaron | Timothy Gabriele | Gene Cutler | Ping Cao | Nigel Walker | T. Gabriele | Youngchool Choe | W. Aaron | R. Austin
[1] T. Stamey,et al. Molecular genetic profiling of Gleason grade 4/5 prostate cancers compared to benign prostatic hyperplasia. , 2001, The Journal of urology.
[2] Hilla Peretz,et al. Ju n 20 03 Schrödinger ’ s Cat : The rules of engagement , 2003 .
[3] M. Ingelman-Sundberg,et al. Purification and characterization of hepsin from rat liver microsomes. , 1997, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[4] Zhenbao Yu,et al. Identification and characterization of hepsin/-TM, a non-transmembrane hepsin isoform. , 2005, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[5] K. Kurachi,et al. Hepsin, a cell membrane-associated protease. Characterization, tissue distribution, and gene localization. , 1991, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[6] K. Mann,et al. The mechanism of inactivation of human factor V and human factor Va by activated protein C. , 1994, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[7] K. Miyazawa,et al. Hepatocyte Growth Factor Activator Inhibitor, a Novel Kunitz-type Serine Protease Inhibitor* , 1997, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[8] D. Kirchhofer,et al. Conformational lability in serine protease active sites: structures of hepatocyte growth factor activator (HGFA) alone and with the inhibitory domain from HGFA inhibitor-1B. , 2005, Journal of molecular biology.
[9] K. Miyazawa,et al. Activation of Hepatocyte Growth Factor in the Injured Tissues Is Mediated by Hepatocyte Growth Factor Activator (*) , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[10] V. Vasioukhin. Hepsin Paradox Reveals Unexpected Complexity of Metastatic Process , 2004, Cell cycle.
[11] Jennifer L. Harris,et al. Cellular Localization of Membrane-type Serine Protease 1 and Identification of Protease-activated Receptor-2 and Single-chain Urokinase-type Plasminogen Activator as Substrates* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[12] Baljit Singh,et al. Expression of the serine protease matriptase and its inhibitor HAI-1 in epithelial ovarian cancer: correlation with clinical outcome and tumor clinicopathological parameters. , 2002, Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
[13] M. Matsumura,et al. Substrates of the prostate‐specific serine protease prostase/KLK4 defined by positional‐scanning peptide libraries , 2005, The Prostate.
[14] O. Klezovitch,et al. Hepsin promotes prostate cancer progression and metastasis. , 2004, Cancer cell.
[15] H. Itoh,et al. Roles of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) activator and HGF activator inhibitor in the pericellular activation of HGF/scatter factor , 2003, Cancer and Metastasis Reviews.
[16] M Karplus,et al. Three-dimensional structure of proteins determined by molecular dynamics with interproton distance restraints: application to crambin. , 1986, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[17] T. Stamey,et al. Hepsin and maspin are inversely expressed in laser capture microdissectioned prostate cancer. , 2003, The Journal of urology.
[18] M. Halks-Miller,et al. Generation and characterization of mice deficient in hepsin, a hepatic transmembrane serine protease. , 1998, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[19] James P. Quigley,et al. Membrane anchored serine proteases: A rapidly expanding group of cell surface proteolytic enzymes with potential roles in cancer , 2003, Cancer and Metastasis Reviews.
[20] K. Kurachi,et al. Hepsin, a putative cell-surface serine protease, is required for mammalian cell growth. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[21] R. Dickson,et al. Type II transmembrane serine proteases , 2003, Thrombosis and Haemostasis.
[22] R. Berkowitz,et al. Prostasin, a potential serum marker for ovarian cancer: identification through microarray technology. , 2001, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[23] W. Kisiel,et al. Expression of the Factor VII Activating Protease, Hepsin, in situ in Renal Cell Carcinoma , 1998, Thrombosis and Haemostasis.
[24] T. Vu,et al. Identification and Cloning of the Membrane-associated Serine Protease, Hepsin, from Mouse Preimplantation Embryos* , 1997, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[25] Jonathan A. Ellman,et al. Definition of the Extended Substrate Specificity Determinants for β-Tryptases I and II* , 2001, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[26] Francesco Leonetti,et al. Synthesis of positional-scanning libraries of fluorogenic peptide substrates to define the extended substrate specificity of plasmin and thrombin , 2000, Nature Biotechnology.
[27] S. Dhanasekaran,et al. Delineation of prognostic biomarkers in prostate cancer , 2001, Nature.
[28] Wei Li,et al. Tissue Expression, Protease Specificity, and Kunitz Domain Functions of Hepatocyte Growth Factor Activator Inhibitor-1B (HAI-1B), a New Splice Variant of HAI-1* , 2003, Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[29] A. Bardelli,et al. Biological Activation of pro-HGF (Hepatocyte Growth Factor) by Urokinase Is Controlled by a Stoichiometric Reaction (*) , 1995, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[30] C. Craik,et al. Rapid and general profiling of protease specificity by using combinatorial fluorogenic substrate libraries. , 2000, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[31] K. Shigemasa,et al. Hepsin, a cell surface serine protease identified in hepatoma cells, is overexpressed in ovarian cancer. , 1997, Cancer Research.
[32] Jeffrey A. Magee,et al. Expression profiling reveals hepsin overexpression in prostate cancer. , 2001, Cancer research.
[33] J. Welsh,et al. Analysis of gene expression identifies candidate markers and pharmacological targets in prostate cancer. , 2001, Cancer research.
[34] P. Matsudaira. Limited N-terminal sequence analysis. , 1990, Methods in enzymology.
[35] C. Fieber,et al. Tissue plasminogen activator is a potent activator of PDGF‐CC , 2004, The EMBO journal.
[36] M. Sahin-Tóth,et al. Affinity purification of recombinant trypsinogen using immobilized ecotin. , 1998, Protein expression and purification.
[37] C R Kissinger,et al. Rapid automated molecular replacement by evolutionary search. , 1999, Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography.
[38] K. Kurachi,et al. A novel trypsin-like serine protease (hepsin) with a putative transmembrane domain expressed by human liver and hepatoma cells. , 1988, Biochemistry.
[39] V. Srikantan,et al. HEPSIN inhibits cell growth/invasion in prostate cancer cells. , 2002, Cancer research.
[40] T. Barrette,et al. Meta-analysis of microarrays: interstudy validation of gene expression profiles reveals pathway dysregulation in prostate cancer. , 2002, Cancer research.
[41] M. Bittner,et al. Human prostate cancer and benign prostatic hyperplasia: molecular dissection by gene expression profiling. , 2001, Cancer research.
[42] R. Dickson,et al. Activation of Hepatocyte Growth Factor and Urokinase/Plasminogen Activator by Matriptase, an Epithelial Membrane Serine Protease* , 2000, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[43] Liang Chen,et al. A statistical method for identifying differential gene-gene co-expression patterns , 2004, Bioinform..
[44] Aaron Shipway,et al. Biochemical characterization of prostasin, a channel activating protease. , 2004, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[45] S. Henderson,et al. Predicting biomarkers for ovarian cancer using gene-expression microarrays , 2004, British Journal of Cancer.
[46] S. Loening,et al. Hepsin is highly over expressed in and a new candidate for a prognostic indicator in prostate cancer. , 2004, The Journal of urology.
[47] G Waksman,et al. Crystal structure of enteropeptidase light chain complexed with an analog of the trypsinogen activation peptide. , 1999, Journal of molecular biology.
[48] Shu-Wha Lin,et al. Mice Deficient in Hepsin, a Serine Protease, Exhibit Normal Embryogenesis and Unchanged Hepatocyte Regeneration Ability , 2000, Thrombosis and Haemostasis.
[49] G. Tulunay,et al. COMPARISON OF HGF (HEPATOCYTE GROWTH FACTOR) LEVELS OF EPITHELIAL OVARIAN CANCER CYST FLUIDS WITH BENIGN OVARIAN CYSTS , 2003, International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer.
[50] J. Wells,et al. Substrate phage: selection of protease substrates by monovalent phage display. , 1993, Science.
[51] Qingyu Wu. Type II transmembrane serine proteases. , 2003, Current topics in developmental biology.
[52] D. Kirchhofer,et al. Unusual Proteolytic Activation of Pro-hepatocyte Growth Factor by Plasma Kallikrein and Coagulation Factor XIa* , 2002, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[53] K. Miyazawa,et al. Activation of hepatocyte growth factor by two homologous proteases, blood-coagulation factor XIIa and hepatocyte growth factor activator. , 1995, European journal of biochemistry.
[54] W. Kisiel,et al. Hepsin, a Putative Membrane-associated Serine Protease, Activates Human Factor VII and Initiates a Pathway of Blood Coagulation on the Cell Surface Leading to Thrombin Formation (*) , 1995, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[55] L. Trusolino,et al. Scatter-factor and semaphorin receptors: cell signalling for invasive growth , 2002, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[56] W. Birchmeier,et al. Met, metastasis, motility and more , 2003, Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology.
[57] K. Miyazawa,et al. Molecular cloning and sequence analysis of the cDNA for a human serine protease reponsible for activation of hepatocyte growth factor. Structural similarity of the protease precursor to blood coagulation factor XII. , 1993, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[58] K. Abromeit. Music Received , 2023, Notes.
[59] A. N. Corps,et al. Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) in ovarian epithelial tumour fluids stimulates the migration of ovarian carcinoma cells , 1999, International journal of cancer.
[60] G. Tulunay,et al. Comparison of hepatocyte growth factor levels of epithelial ovarian cancer cyst fluids with benign ovarian cysts , 2003, International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer.
[61] J. R. Somoza,et al. The structure of the extracellular region of human hepsin reveals a serine protease domain and a novel scavenger receptor cysteine-rich (SRCR) domain. , 2003, Structure.
[62] Q. Wu. Gene targeting in hemostasis. Hepsin. , 2001, Frontiers in bioscience : a journal and virtual library.
[63] G. Watkins,et al. The Hepatocyte Growth Factor Regulatory Factors in Human Breast Cancer , 2004, Clinical Cancer Research.
[64] Karen Billeci,et al. Hepsin activates pro‐hepatocyte growth factor and is inhibited by hepatocyte growth factor activator inhibitor‐1B (HAI‐1B) and HAI‐2 , 2005, FEBS letters.
[65] A. Lee,et al. Epidemiology and management of venous thromboembolism in patients with cancer. , 2003, Thrombosis research.
[66] K K Sethia,et al. Banking of fresh‐frozen prostate tissue: methods, validation and use , 2003, BJU international.
[67] K. Huppi,et al. Molecular profiling of prostate cancer , 2004, Current urology reports.