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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)
The collagens are the major structural glycoproteins of connective tissues. A unique primary structure and a multiplicity of post-translational modification reactions are required for normal fibrillogenesis. The post-translational modifications include hydroxylation of prolyl and lysyl residues, glycosylation, folding of the molecule into triple-helical conformation, proteolytic conversion of precursor procollagen to
collagen
, and oxidative deamination of certain lysyl and hydroxylysyl residues. Any defect in the normal mechanisms responsible for the synthesis and secretion of
collagen
molecules or the deposition of these molecules into extracellular fibers could result in abnormal fibrillogenesis; such defects could result in a connective tissue disease. Recently, defects in the regulation of the types of
collagen
synthesized and in the enzymes involved in the post-translational modifications have been found in heritable diseases of connective tissue. Thus far, the primary heritable disorders of
collagen
metabolism in man include lysyl hydroxylase deficiency in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI, p-collagen peptidase deficency in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VII, decreased synthesis of type III
collagen
in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV,
lysyl oxidase
deficency in S-linked cutis laxa and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type V, and decreased synthesis of type I collagen in osteogenesis imperfecta.
...
PMID:Defects in the biochemistry of collagen in diseases of connective tissue. 0 48
Direct evidence showing that a soluble form of elastin is the precursor of cross-linked elastin was obtained from pulse-chase experiments using chick embryo aortas and by demonstrating the conversion of soluble elastin into cross-linked elastin in a cell-free system. Acetic acid extracts of embryonic chick aorta pulse-labeled with [14C]lysine contain two radioactive proteins of molecular weights 74,000 and 138,000 which have been identified previously as soluble elastin and the pro-alpha chain of
collagen
, respectively. In pulse-chase experiments, the radioactivity incorporated in the soluble elastin during the pulse with [14C]lysine disappeared during a 24-hour chase with [12C]lysine and 89% of that which disappeared was accounted for in the desmosines of alkali-insoluble elastin. The disappearance of the radioactivity from the soluble fraction and its appearance in the desmosines of elastin were inhibited by beta-aminopropionitrile, a specific inhibitor of the cross-linking enzyme
lysyl oxidase
. In addition in vitro experiments, it was shown that the radioactivity in the desmosines of elastin can arise from that present in an acid-soluble precursor protein. This precursor protein is soluble elastin, as demonstrated by the formation of desmosines when a homogeneous preparation of soluble elastin was incubated with purified
lysyl oxidase
.
...
PMID:Demonstration of a precursor-product relationship between soluble and cross-linked elastin, and the biosynthesis of the desmosines in vitro. 0 2
Activity of
lysyl oxidase
, an enzyme responsible for production of aldehydic precursors for lysine-derived
collagen
crosslinks, was measured in tibial metaphyses from chicks receiving different dietary levels of vitamin D and Ca for 2 weeks after hatching. Enzyme activities were increased twofold in D-deficient chicks compared to activities from chicks receiving control levels of vitamin D. Addition of Ca to the D-deficient diet had no effect on
lysyl oxidase
activity. It is suggested that vitamin D may play a role in the age-related decrease in
lysyl oxidase
activity that normally occurs in chick bone.
...
PMID:Effects of dietary vitamin D and calcium on lysyl oxidase activity in chick bone metaphyses. 0 97
Lysyl oxidase the enzyme which oxidately deaminates lysine residues in
collagen
and elastin, was purified from embryonic chick cartialge by employing an affinity column of lathyritic rat skin
collagen
coupled to Sepharose, followed by separation on DEAE-cellulose. An enzyme preparation was obtained which was pure as shown by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The specific activity was 1800-fold higher than that of the original extract. The pure enzyme utilized both
collagen
and elastin substrate. Furthermore, the ratios of enzyme activity with elastin substrate versus that with
collagen
substrate were the same at all stages of purity. Only one protein band was found after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the pure
lysyl oxidase
in sodium dodecyl sulfate and mercaptoethanol. The molecular weight was estimated to be 28000. It was found that the enzyme contained a large number of cysteine and tyrosine residues. Evidence was obtained for molecular heterogeneity of
lysyl oxidase
. The enzyme eluted from DEAE-cellulsoe in at least four distinct regions. When the peaks were rechromatographed separately, they eluted at salt concentrations similar to those of the original chromatogram. However, the substrate specificity and the electrophoretic mobility on polyacrylamide gel were the same for all enzyme fractions.
...
PMID:Properties of highly purified lysyl oxidase from embryonic chick cartilage. 0 18
Aldehyde-deficient non-crosslinked
collagen
obtained from lathyritic rats and
collagen
from penicillamine-treated rats, which is not deficient in aldehydes but the crosslinking of which is also inhibited, were implanted into the peritoneal cavity of hypophysectomized rats using the diffusion chamber technique. The enzyme
lysyl oxidase
which catalyses the aldehyde formation in certain lysyl residues of
collagen
and elastin was extracted from the skin of hypophysectomized rats. The activity of the enzyme was determined following its incubation with an L-[4,5-3H] lysine-labeled elastin substrate prepared from aortas of 17-day-old chick embryos. The result showed that the aldehyde deficient
collagen
did not crosslink while in the hypophysectomized animal indicating the lack of active
lysyl oxidase
in the rats. The enzyme activity in the skin of hypophysectomized animals was markedly reduced as compared with the controls indicating directly the dependance of
lysyl oxidase
activity on pituitary gland hormones.
...
PMID:Lysyl oxidase: a pituitary hormone-dependent enzyme. 0 16
Lysyl oxidase is a specific amine oxidase that catalyzes the formation of aldehyde cross-link intermediates in
collagen
and elastin. In this study,
lysyl oxidase
from embryonic chick cartilage was purified to constant specific activity and a single protein band on sodium dodecyl sulfate acrylamide gel electrophoresis. This band had an apparent molecular weight of 62,000. The eluted protein cross-reacted with inhibiting antisera developed against highly purified
lysyl oxidase
. The highly purified enzyme was active with both insoluble elastin and embryonic chick skin or bone
collagen
precipitated as reconstituted, native fibrils. There was low activity with nonhydroxylated
collagen
,
collagen
monomers, or native fibrils isolated from lathyritic calvaria. The maximum number of aldehyde intermediates formed per molecule of
collagen
that became insoluble was two. These results indicate that
lysyl oxidase
has maximum activity on ordered aggregates of
collagen
molecules that may be overlapping associations of only a few
collagen
molecules across. Formation of aldehyde intermediates and cross-links during fibril formation may facilitate the biosynthesis of stable
collagen
fibrils and contribute to increased fibril tensile strength in vivo.
...
PMID:Collagen cross-linking. Purification and substrate specificity of lysyl oxidase. 0 1
In this paper, the synthesis of
collagen
cross-links in vitro was investigated in a defined system consisting of highly purified chick cartilage
lysyl oxidase
and chick bone
collagen
fibrils. Cross-link synthesis in vitro was quite similar to the biosynthesis of
collagen
cross-links in vivo. Enzyme-dependent synthesis of cross-link intermediates and cross-linked
collagen
derived from lathyritic
collagen
occurred. The concentration of the two principal reducible cross-links, N6:6'-dehydro-5,5'-dihydroxylysinonorleucine and N6:6'-dehydro-5-hydroxylysinonorleucine, increased to a peak value of approximately two cross-links per molecule and then decreased. Synthesis of histidinohydroxymerodesmosine and a second polyfunctional cross-link of unknown structure began after synthesis of bifunctional cross-links was largely completed and proceeded linearly afterwards. Inhibition of
lysyl oxidase
after the bulk of bifunctional cross-link synthesis had occurred did not alter the rate of decrease in reducible cross-link concentration but did inhibit further histidinohydroxymerodesmosine synthesis. These results indicate that
lysyl oxidase
and
collagen
fibrils are the only macromolecules required for cross-link biosynthesis in vivo. It is likely that the decrease in reducible cross-links observed during fibril maturation results from spontaneous reactions within the
collagen
fibril rather than additional enzymatic reactions.
...
PMID:Collagen cross-linking. Synthesis of collagen cross-links in vitro with highly purified lysyl oxidase. 0 2
A total of 160 1-2 day old chickens were fed a 2% cholesterol diet for a period of 8 to 42 days and compared with an equal number of controls. Aortas were analyzed for various indexes of reactivity of connective tissue, cholesterol content and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) characteristics of the endothelial lining. Cholesterol feeding for a period up to 6 weeks resulted in doubling the level of serum cholesterol. It was, however, without effect on the activity of prolyl hydroxylase,
lysyl oxidase
, collagenase and
collagen
content in the aortic wall. As early as 3 weeks of feeding significant changes occurred in total and esterified cholesterol content. At the same time endothelial cells were characteristically contracted with several long cytoplasmic elongations and protrusions. A significant decrease of activity of the above enzymes was found in aortic tissue with increased age of the chicken. Collagen content in aortas increased with age of chickens. It is concluded that cholesterol as an atherogenic agent induces marked changes in endothelial cells and lipids of chicken aorta at earlier periods, prior to the activation of connective tissue.
...
PMID:Early changes in the arterial wall of chickens fed a cholesterol diet. 0 48
Morphologic and biochemical analyses were performed to compare normal skin and mature scars to hypertrophic scar and keloid. Correlation of morphologic findings with biochemical profiles of the skin and scar samples proved feasible and enlightening. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to characterize the architectural arrangement of
collagen
fibers in skin and scars. Cultured fibroblasts from each specimen were also examined with the SEM. A biochemical profile of each tissue specimen was constructed, characterizing the
collagen
component of the specimen by sequential molecular sieve and ion exchange chromatography to determine a) the degree of intermolecular crosslinking, b) amino acid analysis, and c) levels of
lysyl oxidase
activity. Results indicate that
collagen
fibers and fiber bundles display a decreasing level of organization as the clinical degree of scar abnormality increases, and this structural gradient correlates with the gradient of intermolecular crosslinking in the same tissue--normal skin and mature scar being highly crosslinked, hypertrophic and keloid successively less so. Surprisingly, the level of the crosslinking enzyme
lysyl oxidase
is normal or elevated in hypertrophic scar and keloid despite the relative lack of crosslinking. Amino acid content was uniform for all specimens. Scanning electron microscopy examination of cultured fibroblasts from the tissue specimens demonstrated three phenotypically distinctive fibroblasts whose numerical and volumetric proportions correlated with the tissue of origin.
...
PMID:Pathologic scar formation. Morphologic and biochemical correlates. 1 61
D-Pencillamine is believed to inhibit
collagen
cross-link biosynthesis by forming thiazolidine rings with lysyl-derived aldehydes that are intermediates in bifunctional cross-link synthesis. Recently, we showed that aldehyde biosynthesis catalyzed by
lysyl oxidase
occurs after the onset of fibril formation and that nascent aldehydes form Schiff-base cross-links rapidly in fibrils. This suggested that the accessibility of D-penicillamine to most aldehydes formed during cross-link synthesis might be limited. To study this, reconstituted chick bone
collagen
fibrils were incubated in vitro with highly purified
lysyl oxidase
and D-penicillamine. As reported in previous studies in vivo, allysine content increased and polyfunctional cross-link synthesis decreased with D-penicillamine. However, the concentration of bifunctional cross-links increased rather than decreased due to a 2-fold increase in N6:6'-dehydro-5,5'-dihydroxylysinonorleucine. Hydroxyallysine, an intermediate in formation of this Schiff base, decreased. A time study indicated that allysine levels increased primarily after the bulk of Schiff base synthesis. These results indicate that D-penicillamine does not inhibit bifunctional cross-link synthesis as previously suggested. Its principal effect is to block synthesis of polyfunctional cross-link products from Schiff base cross-link precursors and to cause accumulation of these precursors. This effect may be due to interference with the close molecular packing required for polyfunctional cross-link synthesis. These results also suggest a mechanism for the relative insensitivity of tissues such as bone with high hydroxylysine content to D-penicillamine. In this study, D-penicillamine caused selective accumulation of allysyl and not hydroxyallysyl residues. In bone as opposed to soft tissues, hydroxyallysyl residues are intermediates in synthesis of almost all cross-links.
...
PMID:Collagen cross-linking. Effect of D-penicillamine on cross-linking in vitro. 1 66
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