Regulation of the Plasminogen Activator System in the Ovary
- 19 April 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Neurosignals
- Vol. 8 (3) , 160-177
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000014587
Abstract
Extracellular matrix (ECM) not only provides a structural support for the organism, but also actively conducts cell-to-cell signal transduction and regulates cell proliferation, migration, development and metabolism. The targeted ECM degradation generated by plasminogen activator (PA) and regulated by plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI) is, therefore, an event that affects a wide variety of physiological and pathological processes. The ovary is the best model to study the regulation and function of extracellular proteolysis mediated by multicomponents like the PA system. Studies carried out over the past 10 years in a number of laboratories have elucidated some of the biochemical events related to the function and regulation of the PA system in the ovary: hormone-induced proteolytic activity provided by tissue-type PA(tPA) and modulated by PAI-1 in the preovulatory follicles is responsible for a controlled and directed proteolysis leading to rupture of selected follicles during ovulation, whereas the coordinated expression of urokinase-type PA (uPA) and PAI-1 in the early growing follicle may be important in ECM degradation during cell proliferation and migration; the PA system may also play a role in the control of corpus luteum (CL) development through an autocrine or paracrine mechanism. Increase in tPA and PAI-1 expression in CL at a later stage is well correlated with a sharp decrease in CL progesterone production, while the increase in uPA mRNA levels and activity in the early stage of CL development is correlated with an increase in progesterone secretion.Keywords
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