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Serine protease activity is essential for thrombin‐induced protein synthesis in cultured human dental pulp cells: modulation roles of prostaglandin E 2
Author(s) -
Chang MeiChi,
Lan WanHong,
Chan ChiuPo,
Lin ChunPin,
Hsieh ChiChuan,
Jeng JiiangHuei
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of oral pathology and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.887
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1600-0714
pISSN - 0904-2512
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0714.1998.tb02086.x
Subject(s) - prostaglandin e2 , thrombin , serine protease , serine , chemistry , pulp (tooth) , microbiology and biotechnology , protease , biochemistry , enzyme , medicine , biology , endocrinology , immunology , dentistry , platelet
Chang MC, Lan WH, Chan CP, Lin CP, Hsieh CC, Jeng JH: Serine protease activity is essential for thrombin‐induced protein synthesis in cultured human dental pulp cells: modulation roles of prostaglandin E 2 . J Oral Pathol Med 1998; 27: 23–9. © Munksgaard, 1998. Irritations and injuries to the dental pulp usually lead to different degrees of pulpal inflammation. To investigate the roles of thrombin and prostaglandins in the healing and inflammatory processes of dental pulp as well as their effects on pulpal protein synthesis, human dental pulp cell cultures were established and their protein production was measured with or without the presence of exogenous thrombin and prostaglandins. At concentrations of 1–25 U/ml, a‐thrombin increased the protein synthesis to 1.4–2.3 fold over the vehicle control. On the contrary, 0.1 (μg/ml of prostaglandin E] (PGE 1 suppressed protein synthesis by 60%. Prostaglandin E 2 (PGE 2 ) also inhibited protein synthesis with an IC50 of 0.4 ug/ml. The stimulatory effects of thrombin (10 U/ml) can be inhibited by antithrombin III (2 U/ml) (a natural thrombin inhibitor) with heparin (2 U/ml), PPACK (D‐Phe‐Pro‐ArgCH 2 Cl) (20–50 ug/ml) (a serine protease inhibitor), and PGE 2 (0.5–1.0 μg/ml). Moreover, TRAP (20–40 μg/ml), a thrombin receptor agonist peptide, also exerted a stimulatory effect (1.21–1.37 fold). In conclusion, thrombin‐induced protein synthesis by pulp cells is dependent on proteolytic activity, but not on binding to receptors. Both PGE 1 and PGE 2 exert suppressive effects on protein synthesis, indicating that interactions between thrombin and prostaglandins are important in regulating the inflammation, repair and regeneration of pulp tissue following injury.

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