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Current Medicinal Chemistry

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 0929-8673
ISSN (Online): 1875-533X

The Urokinase Receptor and its Structural Homologue C4.4A in Human Cancer: Expression, Prognosis and Pharmacological Inhibition

Author(s): B. Jacobsen and M. Ploug

Volume 15, Issue 25, 2008

Page: [2559 - 2573] Pages: 15

DOI: 10.2174/092986708785909012

Price: $65

Abstract

The urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) and its structural homologue C4.4A are multidomain members of the Ly6/uPAR/α-neurotoxin protein domain family. Both are glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored membrane glycoproteins encoded by neighbouring genes located on chromosome 19q13 in the human genome. The structural relationship between the two proteins is, however, not reflected at the functional level. Whereas uPAR has a wellestablished role in regulating and focalizing uPA-mediated plasminogen activation to the surface of those cells expressing the receptor, the biological function of C4.4A remains elusive. Nonetheless, both uPAR and C4.4A have been implicated in human pathologies such as wound healing and cancer. A large body of experimental evidence thus demonstrates that high levels of uPAR in resected tumour tissue as well as in plasma are associated with poor prognosis in a number of human cancers including colon adenocarcinoma and pulmonary squamous cell carcinoma. Targeting uPAR in experimental animal models has also provided promising results regarding the interference with pathogenic plasminogen activation. In the case of C4.4A, very recent data have demonstrated that high protein expression in tumour cells of non-small cell pulmonary adenocarcinomas is associated with a particularly severe disease progression. This review will evaluate structuralfunctional and disease-related aspects of uPAR and C4.4A with a view to possible pharmacological targeting strategies for therapy and for non-invasive bioimaging.

Keywords: uPAR, LU protein domain family, CD87, non-small cell lung cancer, prognosis, pharmacological targeting, peptide antagonists, PET


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