Post Transcriptional Regulation Of Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor Type 2 Gene Expression
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$318,000.00
Summary
The process of wound healing, cell migration and the spread of cancers requires the recruitment of specialised proteases to the cell surface . These proteases act to degrade other proteins, mainly in the extracellular space, which in turn allows cells to move around, wounds to close, and blood clots to disappear. The plasminogen activating system is one of the enzyme systems involved in these events. One of the proteases that cleaves plasminogen to its active form, plasmin, is urokinase (u-PA) a ....The process of wound healing, cell migration and the spread of cancers requires the recruitment of specialised proteases to the cell surface . These proteases act to degrade other proteins, mainly in the extracellular space, which in turn allows cells to move around, wounds to close, and blood clots to disappear. The plasminogen activating system is one of the enzyme systems involved in these events. One of the proteases that cleaves plasminogen to its active form, plasmin, is urokinase (u-PA) and the activity of u-PA is regulated by its natural inhibitor called plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 (PAI-2). u-PA is strongly implicated in the progression of metastatic cancer and high levels of PAI-2 relative to u-PA is regularly seen as a positive prognostic indicator for metastatic cancer. In this situation, PAI-2 acts to limit the activity of u-PA thereby restricting the migration potential of the cancer. PAI-2 is unusual because it exists both inside and outside the cell. Outside the cell, PAI-2 acts to inhibit u-PA activity, while inside the cell, PAI-2 also plays a role in the inhibition of cell growth and differentiation. It is therefore important to understand how the production of PAI-2 is regulated in cells. A significant component of PAI-2 regulation occurs post-transcriptionally, particularly at the level of mRNA stability. We have identified some of the proteins that bind to PAI-2 mRNA and influence its longevity in the cell. This project aims to further undertand how these as well as other PAI-2 mRNA binding proteins influence the expression of the PAI-2 gene.Read moreRead less
Post-transcriptional Regulation Of Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor 2 Gene Expression
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$508,838.00
Summary
Plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 (PAI-2) is a protease inhibitor that has intracellular and extracellular functions. The PAI-2 gene is highly regulated at the level of PAI-2 mRNA stability. We have identified regions within the PAI-2 transcript essential for this regulation and a number of novel proteins that engage these regions. This project is aimed at understanding how these and other proteins control PAI-2 expression at the mRNA level.