BOOKS BY CATEGORY
Your Account
Plasminogen–Related Growth Factors
This book is currently unavailable – please contact us for further information.
Price
Quantity
€115.20
(To see other currencies, click on price)
Other digital
Add to basket  

MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK

Main description:

Plasminogen is the inactive precursor of the blood proteinase plasmin, the enzyme responsible for the dissolution of fibrin clots. It has been recognized for several years, however, that plasmin has a broad substrate specificity and can cleave a number of other proteins, including several components of the extracellular matrix. Specific cell surface receptors for the two major plasminogen activators exist on a number of cell types and probably play an important role in controlling plasminogen activation. The identification of plasminogen fragments that lack enzymic activity but affect cell growth and migration, and the discovery of the plasminogenrelated growth factors, has highlighted previously unsuspected links between blood coagulation and fibrinolysis on the one hand, and regulation of cell behaviour on the other. This book brings together these two lines of work and discusses two main areas: first, the evolutionary and structural relationship between plasminogen–related growth factors and second, the role of plasminogen activation in cell regulation. Chapters in the book deal specifically with the evolutionary and structural links between the clotting and fibrinolytic proteins and the plasminogenrelated growth factors; the role of individual domains for enzymic or receptor binding activity; general features of the receptors for plasminogen–related growth factors and signalling via these receptors; the role of plasmin and the plasminogen–activators in cell regulation and organogenesis; the role of plasminogen–related growth factors in development, in the regeneration of epithelial organs and in angiogenesis; and the role of these growth factors in cancer and in atherogenesis.


Back cover:

Plasminogen is the inactive precursor of the blood proteinase plasmin, the enzyme responsible for the dissolution of fibrin clots. It has been recognized for several years, however, that plasmin has a broad substrate specificity and can cleave a number of other proteins, including several components of the extracellular matrix. Specific cell surface receptors for the two major plasminogen activators exist on a number of cell types and probably play an important role in controlling plasminogen activation. The identification of plasminogen fragments that lack enzymic activity but affect cell growth and migration, and the discovery of the plasminogenrelated growth factors, has highlighted previously unsuspected links between blood coagulation and fibrinolysis on the one hand, and regulation of cell behaviour on the other. This book brings together these two lines of work and discusses two main areas: first, the evolutionary and structural relationship between plasminogen–related growth factors and second, the role of plasminogen activation in cell regulation. Chapters in the book deal specifically with the evolutionary and structural links between the clotting and fibrinolytic proteins and the plasminogenrelated growth factors; the role of individual domains for enzymic or receptor binding activity; general features of the receptors for plasminogen–related growth factors and signalling via these receptors; the role of plasmin and the plasminogen–activators in cell regulation and organogenesis; the role of plasminogen–related growth factors in development, in the regeneration of epithelial organs and in angiogenesis; and the role of these growth factors in cancer and in atherogenesis.


Contents:

Evolution of Vertebrate Fibrin Formation and the Process of its Dissolution;

Evolution of Plasminogen–Related Growth Factors and their Receptors;

Domain Structure and Interactions in Plasminogen;

Structure and Function of Plasminogen: Reconstitution of Microplasminogen and Microplasmin from Isolated Fragments;

Protein Engineering of HGF/SF;

Met–HGF/SF: Tumorigenesis, Invasion and Metastasis;

Signalling Through PRGF Receptors;

Plasminogen/Plasmin as a Mediator of Extracellular Proteolysis;

HGF/SF and Met in Chick Development;

Essential Roles of Scatter Factor/Hepatocyte Growth Factor (SF/HGF) and the C–Met Receptor During Mouse Development;

Action of Macrophage–Stimulating Protein (MSP) on Macrophages and Keratinocytes;

HGF/SF in Angiogenesis;

The Organotrophic Function of HGF and its Therapeutic Potential;

Role of SF/Gab–1 in Morphogenesis and Metastasis of Mammary Epithelial Cells.


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9780470515457
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Ltd (Wiley–Blackwell)
Publication date: September, 2007
Pages: 268
Dimensions: 156.00 x 235.00 x 16.00
Weight: 560g
Availability: Not available (reason unspecified)
Subcategories: Diseases and Disorders
Related books
From the same series

CUSTOMER REVIEWS

Average Rating