Publication | Open Access
Cyclic AMP potentiates phorbol ester stimulation of tissue plasminogen activator release and inhibits secretion of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 from human endothelial cells.
110
Citations
36
References
1988
Year
We have examined the effect of phorbol esters and cAMP elevating compounds on tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) secretion. Phorbol esters induce a time- and dose-dependent increase in tPA release from endothelial cells, while forskolin, isobutylmethylxanthine, dibutyryl cAMP, and 8-bromo-cAMP had no significant stimulatory effect on tPA secretion. However, elevation of cAMP simultaneously with phorbol ester treatment potentiated the phorbol ester-induced release of tPA 6 times from 22.2 ng/ml with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) alone to 122.1 ng/ml (PMA and forskolin). Potentiation was dose-dependent (half-maximal potentiation = 4 microM forskolin), and tPA release was enhanced at all stimulatory concentrations of PMA with no change in the PMA concentrations causing half-maximal or maximum tPA release. The kinetics of release was also similar in PMA versus PMA-forskolin-treated cells. A 4-h delay was observed, enhanced release was transient, and was followed by the onset of a refractory period. In contrast, elevation of cAMP reduced constitutive secretion of PAI-1 by 30-40% and prevented the increase in PAI-1 secretion stimulated by PMA. Elevated cAMP also decreased the rate of PAI-1 deposition into the endothelial substratum. These studies indicate that activation of a cAMP-dependent pathway(s) in coordination with phorbol ester-induced responses plays a central role in modifying the tPA and PAI-1 secretion from endothelial cells, leading to a profibrinolytic state in the endothelial environment.
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