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Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:1.4.3.13 (
lysyl oxidase
)
1,248
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lysyl oxidase activity was measured in lung extracts of hamsters with elastase-induced
emphysema
8 days after administration of the enzyme and again after 2, 3, and 4 wk. Levels of activity rose rapidly to 7 times the base values determined in the lungs of saline-injected control animals. In parallel with the increase in
lysyl oxidase
activity, the rate of 14C-lysine incorporation into desmosine and isodesmosine was at its maximum 1 wk after elastase administration, reflecting the lysyl-oxidase-mediated cross-link formation, which is the final step in the resynthesis of the pulmonary elastin destroyed by the elastolytic insult.
...
PMID:Stimulation of lung lysyl oxidase activity in hamsters with elastase-induced emphysema. 285 74
The nonelastolytic proteases trypsin and chymotrypsin were administered to hamsters 24 hours after intratracheal injection of elastase. Severity of the disease, extent of degradation and resynthesis, new cross-link formation, and the levels of the enzyme
lysyl oxidase
, which mediates the cross-link formation, were compared with the same parameters measured in hamsters with experimental
emphysema
induced by elastase alone. Increases in mean linear intercept indicated that a more severe form of the disease was produced. Although elastin degradation after 1 week was similar in both groups, resynthesis of the elastin destroyed by the elastolytic insult was significantly impaired in the animals injected sequentially with elastase and trypsin or chymotrypsin. Formation of new elastin as monitored by 14C-lysine incorporation into the elastin specific cross-links desmosine and isodesmosine was reduced approximately 40%, although there was no significant difference in the levels of
lysyl oxidase
activity. It is suggested that the most likely mechanism compatible with the recorded observations involves destruction of the microfibrillar component of the elastic fiber by trypsin or chymotrypsin, resulting in the absence of the requisite template for resynthesis of the pulmonary elastin.
...
PMID:Impairment of elastin resynthesis in the lungs of hamsters with experimental emphysema induced by sequential administration of elastase and trypsin. 285 57
The severity of pulmonary
emphysema
can be affected by exposure to cigarette smoke in several ways. Inactivation of alpha-1-antitrypsin and recruitment of leukocytes to lung airways shifts the protease-antiprotease balance towards increased elastolytic activity. The present study demonstrates an additional effect of cigarette smoke inhalation and retardation of the repair process and of the neosynthesis of cross-linked elastin. Hamsters with elastase-induced
emphysema
, exposed to cigarette smoke for 1 wk immediately after elastase administration, showed a 40% reduction of 14C-lysine incorporation into the elastin-specific cross-links, desmosine, and isodesmosine. Concomitantly, there was a decrease in the level of lung
lysyl oxidase
to that observed in uninjured control animals, in sharp contrast to the sevenfold increase in
lysyl oxidase
activity in hamsters with elastase-induced
emphysema
recovering under atmospheric conditions. These findings suggest that impairment of the production of
lysyl oxidase
and the resynthesis of cross-linked elastin by smoke inhalation exacerbates alveolar destruction.
...
PMID:Cigarette smoke impairs elastin resynthesis in lungs of hamsters with elastase-induced emphysema. 392 58
A mild form of
emphysema
was produced in pigs raised on a copper-deficient, zinc-supplemented diet. The copper-requiring enzyme,
lysyl oxidase
, catalyzes the cross-linking of tropoelastin into mature elastin. Zinc further inhibits the activity of
lysyl oxidase
. Lungs from animals raised on copper-deficient, zinc-supplemented diets of demonstrate perforations in alveolar walls and diminished amounts of elastin bronchi and pulmonary arteries. Mean linear intercepts are greater and alveolar internal surface areas are less than those in control animals, fulfilling the generally accepted definition of
emphysema
. Physiologic confirmation is provided by a leftward shift of the saline volume-pressure curves when compared with those in control animals. Ultrastructurally, the alveolar walls are effaced and pores of Kohn are enlarged. There are areas in which elastin is absent leaving remnant microfibrils, and there are other changes consistent with active elastin synthesis. Biochemical data demonstrate no difference in elastin content as micrograms/ml of fat-free dry weight but do demonstrate increased collagen content in experimental animal lungs compared with that in control lungs. Ultrastructural similarities to enzyme-induced models of
emphysema
suggest the presence of elastin degradation in our model. We speculate that although the copper-deficient, zinc-supplemented state may stimulate protein synthesis in general, elastin is being degraded by endogenous means, but collagen is not.
...
PMID:A copper-deficient, zinc-supplemented diet produces emphysema in pigs. 612 18
Water-soluble components of the gas phase of filtered cigarette smoke inhibit formation of covalent desmosine cross-links during conversion of tropoelastin to elastin in vitro. These same smoke components also suppress lysyl-oxidase-catalyzed oxidation of lysine epsilon-amino groups in tropoelastin (the chemical step preceding formation of all elastin cross-links, including desmosine) in a dose-dependent fashion. However, gas phase smoke does not block the oxidation of diaminopentane by
lysyl oxidase
. Thus, gas phase cigarette smoke may possess substrate-directed (rather than enzyme-directed) inhibitory components capable of interfering with elastin cross-linking in vitro. Similar effects occurring in smokers' lungs could impede elastin repair and contribute to the development of pulmonary
emphysema
.
...
PMID:Cigarette smoke blocks cross-linking of elastin in vitro. 683 36
Elastic fibers are components of the extracellular matrix and confer resilience. Once laid down, they are thought to remain stable, except in the uterine tract where cycles of active remodeling occur. Loss of elastic fibers underlies connective tissue aging and important diseases including
emphysema
. Failure to maintain elastic fibers is explained by a theory of antielastase-elastase imbalance, but little is known about the role of renewal. Here we show that mice lacking the protein lysyl oxidase-like 1 (LOXL1) do not deposit normal elastic fibers in the uterine tract post partum and develop pelvic organ prolapse, enlarged airspaces of the lung, loose skin and vascular abnormalities with concomitant tropoelastin accumulation. Distinct from the prototypic
lysyl oxidase
(
LOX
), LOXL1 localizes specifically to sites of elastogenesis and interacts with fibulin-5. Thus elastin polymer deposition is a crucial aspect of elastic fiber maintenance and is dependent on LOXL1, which serves both as a cross-linking enzyme and an element of the scaffold to ensure spatially defined deposition of elastin.
...
PMID:Elastic fiber homeostasis requires lysyl oxidase-like 1 protein. 1474 49
Menkes disease is an X-linked recessive disorder of copper transport characterized by neurological deterioration, connective tissue, and vascular defects, abnormal hair, and death in early childhood. We report on a patient with Menkes disease in whom severe diffuse
emphysema
caused respiratory failure and death at 14 months of age. He had severe growth and developmental delays and other typical clinical manifestations of Menkes disease. He developed respiratory problems requiring continuous supplemental oxygen and a progressively enlarging soft tissue mass appeared on the neck. Imaging studies revealed cystic spaces in multiple lobes of the lung consistent with bullous
emphysema
. The neck mass was determined to be an internal jugular venous aneurysm. At autopsy, extensive emphysematous change was evident. Post-mortem barium injections of the pulmonary arterial system revealed marked dilatation and tortuosity of the preacinar pulmonary arteries and reduced numbers of intra-acinar arteries. Severe
emphysema
, presumably caused by abnormal elastin due to deficiency of the copper-dependent enzyme
lysyl oxidase
, may represent an underestimated clinical complication of Menkes disease and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of chronic respiratory disease in these patients.
...
PMID:Severe bilateral panlobular emphysema and pulmonary arterial hypoplasia: unusual manifestations of Menkes disease. 1627 98
Copper (Cu)-dependent
lysyl oxidase
(LO) catalyzes crosslinking of collagen and elastin stabilizing the extracellular matrix (ECM). Chronic inhalation of cadmium (Cd), a toxic metal, induces
emphysema
. To probe mechanisms of Cd injury to the lung, we developed Cd-resistant (CdR) cells from rat fetal lung fibroblasts (RFL6) by chronic exposure to CdCl(2) from 1 to 40 microM and further examined their expressions of LO, LO substrates, and Cu-scavenging thiols. Levels of cellular thiols, metallothionein, and glutathione in CdR cells were elevated to 13.0- and 3.2-fold of parental controls, respectively, whereas LO mRNA and protein levels were markedly reduced in these cells, with catalytic activity declining to only 16% of the parental control. A conspicuous 52 kDa species rather then the normal 50 kDa proenzyme appeared in the CdR cell extract but not in the conditioned medium, which was codistributed with the endoplasmic reticulum marker [DiOC5(3)] within the cell, implying the Cd-induced 52 kDa species as a product of an abnormal LO-processing defect in secretion. Addition of Cu into CdR cell cultures enhanced the expression of LO mRNA, protein and catalytic activities reflecting limitation of Cu bioavailability for LO in these cells. With inhibition of LO, CdR cells also displayed downregulation of collagen and elastin, substrates of LO. Restoration of collagen synthesis by exposure of CdR cells to purified LO or Cu suggests that inhibition of LO and limitation of Cu cofactor by Cd, as key phenotype changes, accelerated collagen and elastin damage, a critical event pertinent to
emphysema
pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Inhibition of the expression of lysyl oxidase and its substrates in cadmium-resistant rat fetal lung fibroblasts. 1643 78
Elastic fibers provide tissues with elasticity which is critical to the function of arteries, lungs, skin, and other dynamic organs. Loss of elasticity is a major contributing factor in aging and diseases. However, the mechanism of elastic fiber development and assembly is poorly understood. Here, we show that lack of fibulin-4, an extracellular matrix molecule, abolishes elastogenesis. fibulin-4-/- mice generated by gene targeting exhibited severe lung and vascular defects including
emphysema
, artery tortuosity, irregularity, aneurysm, rupture, and resulting hemorrhages. All the homozygous mice died perinatally. The earliest abnormality noted was a uniformly narrowing of the descending aorta in fibulin-4-/- embryos at embryonic day 12.5 (E12.5). Aorta tortuosity and irregularity became noticeable at E15.5. Histological analysis demonstrated that fibulin-4-/- mice do not develop intact elastic fibers but contain irregular elastin aggregates. Electron microscopy revealed that the elastin aggregates are highly unusual in that they contain evenly distributed rod-like filaments, in contrast to the amorphous appearance of normal elastic fibers. Desmosine analysis indicated that elastin cross-links in fibulin-4-/- tissues were largely diminished. However, expression of tropoelastin or
lysyl oxidase
mRNA was unaffected in fibulin-4-/- mice. In addition, fibulin-4 strongly interacts with tropoelastin and colocalizes with elastic fibers in culture. These results demonstrate that fibulin-4 plays an irreplaceable role in elastogenesis.
...
PMID:Targeted disruption of fibulin-4 abolishes elastogenesis and causes perinatal lethality in mice. 1647 91
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with
emphysema
has been considered to be an accelerated involutional disease of aging smokers. However, because only a proportion ( approximately 15%) of smokers develop chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with
emphysema
, clearly genetic susceptibility must play a significant part in determining both the age of onset and the rapidity of decline in lung function. In mice, interference with key genes, either by null mutation, hypomorphism, or gain or loss of function, results in phenotypes comprising either neonatal lethal respiratory distress if the structural effect is severe, or reduced alveolarization and/or early-onset
emphysema
if the effect is milder. Likewise, null mutants that interfere with matrix assembly and/or integrity, such as elastin,
lysyl oxidase
, or fibrillin, also result in alveolar dysplasia. Importantly, null mutation of Smad3, which encodes a receptor-activated Smad in the transforming growth factor-beta signaling pathway, results in a more subtle failure to correctly organize the alveolar matrix, which is in turn antecedent to early-onset
emphysema
mediated by matrix metalloproteinase-9. Furthermore, exposure to side-stream smoke profoundly exacerbates and accelerates alveolar destruction, leading to more severe early-onset
emphysema
in young Smad3-null mice (unpublished data). Interestingly, polymorphisms in the fibrillin, transforming growth factor-beta type II receptor, and matrix metalloproteinase-9 genes have been described in humans with
emphysema
. Thus, dysplastic or degraded matrix cannot provide the structural niche for alveolar stem/progenitor cells to assume the correct phenotype and/or repair the alveolar cell lineage niche. The hope is that providing the correct exogenous signals can coax them into doing so.
...
PMID:Lung development and susceptibility to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 1706 71
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