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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)
Oxidative deamination of the epsilon-amino group of lysyl residues to form allysine is the initial reaction in the cross-linking of collagen and elastin in vertebrates. The allysyl residues, generated by
lysyl oxidase
in this reaction, condense with either other allysyl residues or epsilon-amino groups of lysyl or hydroxylysyl to form aldol or Schiff base cross-links. This paper presents evidence that similar allysyl residues and Schiff base cross-links are synthesized in cell envelopes of Escherichia coli. Acid hydrolysis followed by amino acid analysis of envelopes either reduced with NaB[3H]4 or labeled with [14C]lysine and reduced with NaBH4 yielded allysine and two labeled fragments with elution profiles and molecular weights (250 and 330) consistent with Schiff base products derived at least in part from allysine. When [6-3H]lysine-labeled cell envelopes were incubated at 37 degrees C, gradual release of tritiated
water
occurred. This suggests that an enzymatic reaction catalyzes the deamination of lysine in E. coli membranes and that the higher molecular weight proteins detected in stationary phase or in log phase cell envelopes after NaBH4 reduction occur as a result of formation of Schiff base cross-links.
...
PMID:Oxidative deamination of epsilon-aminolysine residues and formation of Schiff base cross-linkages in cell envelopes of Escherichia coli. 36 56
Ascorbic acid plays an important role in connective tissue metabolism, where, among other effects, it acts as a reducing factor in the reactions catalyzed by prolyl and lysyl hydroxylases. In vitro, ascorbic acid has been shown to have a positive influence on collagen synthesis at pre- and/or post-translational levels and a negative effect on elastin production. In the present work, the effects of vitamin C on extracellular matrix deposition have been studied in vivo. Stereological analysis on electron micrographs showed, compared to age-matched controls, a 50 to 60% increase of collagen deposition in the media and in the adventitia of the aorta of rats treated for 30 days from the 18th day of life with 10% ascorbate in their drinking
water
. By contrast, elastin volume density was significantly reduced by the treatment at all ages examined. These morphological data were supported by in situ hybridization observations showing enhanced collagen type I mRNA and reduced elastin mRNA expression upon treatment. Although vitamin C did not inhibit
lysyl oxidase
activity in vivo, being only slightly higher than in controls, enzyme activity was significantly reduced, when high doses of ascorbate were added in vitro. Lysyl oxidase activity may be a function of enhanced collagen metabolism rather than a direct effect of the vitamin on the enzyme activity. These data indicate that ascorbate exerts opposite effects on the deposition of two major components of the extracellular matrix in vivo, at least during periods of rapid growth.
...
PMID:Opposing effects of ascorbate on collagen and elastin deposition in the neonatal rat aorta. 203 48
Benzylamine derivatives containing para substituents of differing electronegativity as well as isomers of aminomethylpyridine have been assessed for their substrate and inhibitor potentials toward
lysyl oxidase
. Substituted benzylamines with increasingly electronegative para substituents had the lowest KI values and thus were the most effective inhibitors of the oxidation of elastin by
lysyl oxidase
. The kcat values for these compounds as substrates of
lysyl oxidase
were also reduced with increasingly electronegative para substituents. Both the Dkcat and D(kcat/Km) kinetic isotope effects decreased with increasingly electronegative p-substituents in [alpha, alpha'-2H]benzylamines. In contrast, there was no Dkcat solvent isotope effect with [2H]
H2O
while the D(kcat/Km) solvent isotope effect tended to increase with increasingly electronegative p-substituents. These results are consistent with the stabilization of an enzyme-generated substrate carbanion and thus the retardation of substrate oxidation by electronegative substituents. Such ground state stabilization thus can result in compounds with increased potential for the inhibition of the oxidation of protein substrates of
lysyl oxidase
.
...
PMID:Electronegativity of aromatic amines as a basis for the development of ground state inhibitors of lysyl oxidase. 288 28
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
Growth characteristics and
lysyl oxidase
activity of fibroblasts derived from human normal mucosa (NM) and oral submucous fibrosis (OSF) associated with betel nut chewing were compared in cell cultures. The growth rates of cultured cells were identified by plating 5 x 10(5) cells/35 mm culture dish (Day 0) and every 24 hours cell proliferation was determined by quantifying the cell number (using a hemocytometer). The third to seventh passages were used. A medium without serum but supplemented with 5 mg/ml bovine serum albumin was substituted for the original medium at the subconfluent period and cultured for an additional 24 h. The medium was collected and used for assays of protein content and
lysyl oxidase
activity. Lysyl oxidase activity was assayed with [4,5-3H]--lysine labelled purified chick--embryo aorta elastin substrate. After incubation for 10 h at 37 degrees C, the enzyme activity was measured from 3HHO (tritiated
water
) separated by ultrafiltration using Amicon C-10 micro-concentrators. The results showed the mean doubling time of OSF fibroblasts was 3.2 days and of NM fibroblasts was 3.6 days. NM fibroblasts became confluent at day 6 as determined by cell number, while OSF fibroblasts were confluent by Day 5. Furthermore, the immunoenzymatic assay for BrdUrd incorporation revealed that OSF fibroblasts proliferate significantly faster than NM fibroblasts under standard culture conditions. Both total protein content (10.84 +/- 1.15 mg/ml) and
lysyl oxidase
activity (3558.6 +/- 345.5 cpm/10(6) cell) in OSF fibroblasts were greater than in NM fibroblasts (6.35 +/- 0.96 mg/ml and 2436.0 +/- 352.6 cpm/10(6) cell). The results of this study provide evidence that fibroblasts derived from oral submucous fibrosis (OSF) tissue and normal mucosa (NM), although similar in many respects, exhibit specific differences in proliferation rates and
lysyl oxidase
activity. Moreover, collagen deposition in OSF tissue may, at least in part, be ascribed to increased
lysyl oxidase
activity.
...
PMID:Increased lysyl oxidase activity in fibroblasts cultured from oral submucous fibrosis associated with betel nut chewing in Taiwan. 853 14
We hypothesized that abnormal capillary formation, which might be associated with an alteration in extracellular malular matrix (ECM), occurs in the alveoli of growing rat lungs treated with beta-aminopropionitrile (beta APN), a lathyrogen that inhibits
lysyl oxidase
activity. On scanning electron microscopy, a corrosion cast of alveolar capillaries in lungs treated with beta APN appeared abnormal in configuration; transmission electron microscopy showed extensive morphological changes in interstitial cells and ECMs, including collagen, elastin, and presumably glycosaminoglycans and, in binding
water
(GBW). Morphometric data revealed an increase in GBW of up to 24.4%, a decrease in the amount of collagen fiber (44.5%), and a decrease in lipid-laden interstitial cells; however, the change in elastin was limited to morphological appearance. From these observations, we conclude that alterations in alveolar capillary formation are associate with extensive changes in ECMs, and that these changes in ECM components might also be involved in the abnormal alveolar formations induced by beta APN.
...
PMID:Changes in alveolar capillary formation in growing rat lung by repeated injections of a lathyrogen. 900 66
The moose (Alces alces L.) in an acid rain affected region in south-west Sweden has developed a complex disease with numerous clinical signs, most of which are consistent with those of secondary copper (Cu) deficiency and/or molybdenosis in cattle and sheep. The clinical signs of the moose disease reported to date include diarrhoea, anorexia, emaciation, achromotrichia, alopecia, sudden heart failure and osteoporosis. Findings at necropsy included mucosal oedema, atrophied lymphoid tissues of the mucous membranes of the alimentary tract, neuropathy, neuronal degeneration and uni- or bilateral corneal opacity. In a study of clinically healthy animals from the affected region in Sweden over a 12-year period (1982-1994), the hepatic Cu concentration decreased by 50% and the liver and kidney cadmium (Cd) concentration decreased by 25-35%, while the molybdenum (Mo) concentration increased by 20-40%. These changes are probably related to an increase in the pH of the soil and
water
in the moose environment and a consequent change in the uptake of these elements by the plants consumed by the moose. It is noteworthy that the occurrence of the disease in the mid 1980s coincided with increased liming undertaken to counteract the noxious effects of acid rain in this region. Clinical signs and lesions of the moose disease resemble those reported for Cu deficiency and/or molybdenosis in cattle and sheep. To elucidate the complex, multi-faceted clinical signs of the moose disease, the clinical signs and necropsy findings are discussed in relation to the biochemical functions of certain well-known Cu-dependent enzymes, e.g. depigmentation of hair due to depressed tyrosinase activity, osteoporosis by depressed
lysyl oxidase
activity, sudden heart failure due to decreased activity of
lysyl oxidase
, cytochrome c oxidase and Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase; in addition, mucosal lesions and ulcerations due to loss of activity of diamine oxidase as well as of
lysyl oxidase
and cytochrome c oxidase. It is concluded from the present findings that the moose disease is most probably a Cu deficiency and/or a molybdenosis-type syndrome.
...
PMID:'Mysterious' moose disease in Sweden. Similarities to copper deficiency and/or molybdenosis in cattle and sheep. Biochemical background of clinical signs and organ lesions. 949 61
The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility of crosslinking exogenously produced tropoelastin, the precursor of insoluble elastin, into existing elastin. Tritiated recombinant human tropoelastin (rhTE) was added to neonatal rat aorta smooth-muscle cell (NNRSMC) cultures. As much as 12% of the added rhTE was incorporated into the NNRSMC-derived insoluble elastin with the formation of the elastin crosslinks desmosine (DES) and isodesmosine (IDES) in a time-dependent fashion. The ratio of radioactivity found in DES and IDES crosslinks to that found in lysyl residues increased from 0.18 immediately after incubation with rhTE to 0.76 after 14 d. Crosslinking of rhTE into elastin and the accompanying formation of tritiated
water
was inhibited by beta-aminoproprionitrile, a potent inhibitor of
lysyl oxidase
, an enzyme critical for the post-translational processing of elastin and collagen. Acellular NNRSMC matrices were produced and replated with Rat-1 fibroblasts, cells that were found to express
lysyl oxidase
but not tropoelastin. At 14 d after incubation with rhTE, the ratio of DES and IDES radioactivity to that of lysine in the insoluble elastin was 0.38. We show for the first time that cells expressing
lysyl oxidase
, but not elastin, as well as elastogenic cells can incorporate rhTE into insoluble elastin with the formation of elastin crosslinks. This novel approach might be used to augment elastin repair in certain pathologic states.
...
PMID:Building Elastin. Incorporation of recombinant human tropoelastin into extracellular matrices using nonelastogenic rat-1 fibroblasts as a source for lysyl oxidase. 1141 39
Lysyl oxidase catalyzes the final known enzymatic step required for collagen and elastin cross-linking in the biosynthesis of normal mature functional insoluble extracellular matrices. In addition,
lysyl oxidase
has been identified as a possible tumor suppressor. Lysyl oxidase activity in biological samples is traditionally and most reliably assessed by tritium release end-point assays using radiolabeled collagen or elastin substrates involving laborious vacuum distillation of the released tritiated
water
. In addition, a less sensitive fluorometric method exists that employs nonpeptidyl amine
lysyl oxidase
substrates and measures hydrogen peroxide production with horseradish peroxidase coupled to homovanillate oxidation. The present study describes a more sensitive fluorescent assay for
lysyl oxidase
activity that utilizes 1,5-diaminopentane as substrate, and released hydrogen peroxide is detected using Amplex red in horseradish peroxidase-coupled reactions. This method allows the detection of 40 ng of enzyme per 2 ml assay at 37 degrees C and is 7.5 times more sensitive than the currently available fluorometric assay for enzyme activity. This method eliminates the interference that occurs in some biological samples and can be successfully used to detect
lysyl oxidase
activity in cell culture experiments.
...
PMID:A fluorometric assay for detection of lysyl oxidase enzyme activity in biological samples. 1177 17
We have previously reported that the fragility of skin, tendon and bone from the oim mouse is related to a significant reduction in the intermolecular cross-linking. The oim mutation is unlikely to affect the efficacy of the
lysyl oxidase
, suggesting that the defect is in the molecule and fibre. We have therefore investigated the integrity of both the oim collagen molecules and the fibre by differential scanning calorimetry. The denaturation temperature of the oim molecule in solution and the fibre from tail tendon were found to be higher than the wild-type by 2.6deg.C and 1.9deg.C, respectively. With the loss of the alpha2 chain, the hydroxyproline content of the homotrimer is higher than the heterotrimer, which may account for the increase. There is a small decrease in the enthalpy of the oim fibres but it is not significant, suggesting that the amount of disorder of the triple-helical molecules and of the fibres is small and involves only a small part of the total bond energy holding the helical structure together. The difference in denaturation temperature of the skin collagen molecules (t(m)) and fibres (t(d)) is significantly lower for the oim tissues, 19.9deg.C against 23.1deg.C, indicating reduced molecular interactions and hence packing of the molecules in the fibre. Computation of the volume fraction of the
water
revealed that the interaxial separation of the oim fibres was indeed greater, increasing from 19.6A to 21.0A. This difference of 1.4A, equivalent to a C-C bond, would certainly decrease the ability of the telopeptide aldehyde to interact with the epsilon -amino group from an adjacent molecule and form a cross-link. We suggest, therefore, that the reduction of the cross-linking is due to increased
water
content of the fibre rather than a distortion of the molecular structure. The higher hydrophobicity of the alpha2 chain appears to play a role in the stabilisation of heterotrimeric type I collagen, possibly by increasing the hydrophobic interactions between the heterotrimeric molecules, thereby reducing the
water
content and increasing the binding of the molecules in the fibre.
...
PMID:The role of the alpha2 chain in the stabilization of the collagen type I heterotrimer: a study of the type I homotrimer in oim mouse tissues. 1220 62
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