Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.1 (chymotrypsin)
10,938 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have observed that treatment of rabbit synovial fibroblasts with proteolytic enzymes can induce secretion of collagenase (EC 3.4.24.7) and plasminogen activator (EC 3.4.21.-). Cells treated for 2-24 hr with plasmin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, pancreatic elastase, papain, bromelain, thermolysin, or alpha-protease but not with thrombin or neuraminidase secreted detectable amounts of collagenase within 16-48 hr. Treatment of fibroblasts with trypsin also induced secretion of plasminogen activator. Proteases initiated secretion of collagenase (up to 20 units per 10(6) cells per 24 hr) only when treatment produced decreased cell adhesion. Collagenase production did not depend on continued presence of proteolytic activity or on subsequent cell adhesion, spreading, or proliferation. Routine subculturing with crude trypsin also induced collagenase secretion by cells. Secretion of collagenase was prevented and normal spreading was obtained if the trypsinized cells were placed into medium containing fetal calf serum. Soybean trypsin inhibitor, alpha(1)-antitrypsin, bovine serum albumin, collagen, and fibronectin did not inhibit collagenase production. Although proteases that induced collagenase secretion also removed surface glycoprotein, the kinetics of induction of cell protease secretion were different from those for removal of fibronectin. Physiological inducers of secretion of collagenase and plasminogen activator by cells have not been identified. These results suggest that extracellular proteases in conjunction with plasma proteins may govern protease secretion by cells.
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PMID:Proteases induce secretion of collagenase and plasminogen activator by fibroblasts. 20 72

We have identified and purified a polypeptide region containing the collagen-binding site of the adhesive glycoprotein fibronectin. Chicken cellular fibronectin isolated from cultured embryonic fibroblasts was permitted to bind to gelatin coupled to agarose beads and was then digested extensively with chymotrypsin. A prominent 40,000-dalton fragment of fibronectin consisting of a single polypeptide chain was detected by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of material remaining bound to the gelatin-agarose. This fragment appeared within 10 min after the digestion was initiated and persisted for more than 20 hr. This proteolytic fragment was isolated in electrophoretically pure form and retained its affinity for collagen. Plasma fibronectins from chicken and human blood also contained collagen-binding proteolytic fragments of similar size. This finding suggest that the collagen-binding sites of cellular and plasma fibronectins are homologous.
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PMID:Identification and isolation of a collagen-binding fragment of the adhesive glycoprotein fibronectin. 28 1

A rapid, sensitive, and reproducible assay to determine the adhesion of platelets to collagen has been developed. Collagen fibers and adherent platelets are retained on polycarbonate membrane filters. Chemical modification of collagen by acetylation and of platelets by treatment with chymotrypsin markedly reduces adhesion. The role of fibronectin in the collagen-platelet interaction has been examined. Treatment of platelets with purified antibody or Fab' fragments to fibronectin only slightly reduces adhesion. Preincubation of platelets with high concentrations of gelatin reduces adhesion by only 22% but fails to inhibit aggregation. Thus, fibronectin has only a limited role in the adhesion of platelets to collagen and is either not involved in the adhesion that leads to aggregation or is only one of several adhesion mechanisms, any of which alone can initiate aggregation.
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PMID:Fibronectin and the multiple interaction model for platelet-collagen adhesion. 28 53

The precursor of matrix metalloproteinase 9 (proMMP-9), also known as '92 kDa progelatinase/type IV procollagenase', was purified from the conditioned medium of U937 monocytic leukaemia and HT1080 fibrosarcoma cell lines stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. ProMMP-9 in these culture media is non-covalently complexed with the 29 kDa tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP), but free proMMP-9 was separated from the TIMP-proMMP-9 complex by chromatography on Green A Dyematrex gel. The final product was homogeneous on SDS/PAGE, with a molecular mass of 88 kDa without reduction and 92 kDa with reduction. Treatment of proMMP-9 with 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate converted the 88 kDa precursor into 80 kDa and 68 kDa forms. Gelatin-containing zymographic analysis showed zones of lysis associated with all three species. However, only the 68 kDa species was shown to be catalytically active by its ability to bind to alpha 2-macroglobulin. In the presence of an equimolar amount of TIMP, only the 80 kDa species was generated by treatment with 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate, but no enzyme activity was detected. This indicates that TIMP binds to the 80 kDa intermediate and inhibits the generation of the active 68 kDa species. Eight endopeptidases (trypsin, chymotrypsin, plasmin, plasma kallikrein, thrombin, cathepsin G, neutrophil elastase and thermolysin) were tested for their ability to activate proMMP-9. Of them, trypsin was the most effective activator of proMMP-9. Only partial activation (10-30%) was observed with plasmin, cathepsin G and chymotrypsin. The active forms generated by trypsin were identified as 80 kDa, 74 kDa and 66 kDa by their abilities to bind to alpha 2-macroglobulin. In the presence of an equimolar amount of TIMP, proMMP-9 was also converted into the same molecular-mass species by trypsin, but they were not proteolytically active. This suggests activated MMP-9 is inhibited by TIMP. Activated MMP-9 digested gelatin, type-V collagen, reduced carboxymethylated transferrin and, to a lesser extent, type-IV collagen and laminin A chain. The specific activity against gelatin was estimated to be 15,000 units/mg (1 unit = 1 microgram of gelatin degraded/min at 37 degrees C) by titration with alpha 2-macroglobulin. Comparative studies on digestion of gelatin and collagen types IV and V by MMP-9 and MMP-2 indicated that both enzymes degrade these substrates into similar fragments. However, the susceptibilities of laminin, fibronectin and reduced carboxymethylated transferrin to these two MMPs were sufficiently different to indicate differences in substrate specificities between these two closely related proteinases.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of matrix metalloproteinase 9 from U937 monocytic leukaemia and HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells. 137 48

The possible mitogenic activity of fibronectin (FN) in human primary and metastatic melanoma lines and clones and the involvement of integrins in mediating this effect were evaluated. Quescent human melanoma cells cultured in serum-free medium proliferated in a dose- and time-dependent fashion to immobilized FN as indicated by [3H]thymidine incorporation, increment of cell number, and cell cycle analysis. This response to FN was observed with tumor clones isolated from a subcutaneous metastasis and with primary or metastatic melanomas from different patients, but only when tumor cells expressed the alpha 5 subunit of the FN receptor (i.e., VLA-5). Proliferation to FN by a primary tumor (Me4405) expressing all FN receptors and by a tumor clone (2/60) lacking only the alpha 4 subunit was inhibited by monoclonal antibodies to the alpha 5 and beta 1 but not by monoclonal antibodies to other subunits of FN receptors. Mapping of FN regions responsible for the proliferative signal was performed by stimulating melanoma cells with different FN proteolytic fragments and indicated that a significant mitogenic signal was provided by the M(r) 120,000 alpha-chymotrypsin fragment containing the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence. The proliferation of melanoma cells to FN and to FN fragments was also significantly inhibited by peptides containing the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence. These data indicate that FN can stimulate the proliferation of quiescent melanoma cells and that integrins as alpha 5 beta 1 are involved in the response of tumor cells to this extracellular matrix protein.
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PMID:Role of the alpha 5 beta 1 integrin receptor in the proliferative response of quiescent human melanoma cells to fibronectin. 138 57

Thrombospondin is a major glycoprotein of the platelet alpha-granule and is secreted during platelet activation. Several protease-resistant domains of thrombospondin mediate its interactions with components of the extracellular matrix including fibronectin, collagen, heparin, laminin, and fibrinogen. Thrombospondin, as well as fibronectin, is composed of several discretely located biologically active domains. We have characterized the thrombospondin binding domains of plasma fibronectin and determined the binding affinities of the purified domains; fibronectin has at least two binding sites for thrombospondin. Thrombospondin bound specifically to the 29-kDa amino-terminal heparin binding domain of fibronectin as well as to the 31-kDa non-heparin binding domain located within the larger 40-kDa carboxy-terminal fibronectin domain generated by chymotrypsin proteolysis. Platelet thrombospondin interacted with plasma fibronectin in a specific and saturable manner in blot binding as well as solid-phase binding assays. These interactions were independent of divalent cations. Thrombospondin bound to the 29-kDa fibronectin heparin binding domain with a Kd of 1.35 x 10(-9) M. The Kd for the 31-kDa domain of fibronectin was 2.28 x 10(-8) M. The 40-kDa carboxy-terminal fragment bound with a Kd of 1.65 x 10(-8) M. Heparin, which binds to both proteins, inhibited thrombospondin binding to the amino-terminal domain of fibronectin by more than 70%. The heparin effect was less pronounced with the non-heparin binding carboxy-terminal domain of fibronectin. By contrast, the binding affinity of the thrombospondin 150-kDa domain, which itself lacked heparin binding, was not affected by the presence of heparin. Based on these data, we conclude that thrombospondin binds with different affinities to two distinct domains in the fibronectin molecule.
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PMID:Localization of two binding domains for thrombospondin within fibronectin. 149 47

Terminal differentiation of the odontoblast is characterized by an elongation and a polarization of the cell. The change in the cell shape and the reorganization of the cytoplasm involve the microfilament system. An immunological approach has previously implicated a transmembrane interaction between fibronectin and vinculin in the control of odontoblast differentiation. A 165 kDa protein localized on the cell-surface of odontoblasts mediated this interaction. In order to define the nature of the interaction of the 165 kDa protein with fibronectin, peptides were prepared by proteolytic cleavage of fibronectin with alpha-chymotrypsin. The results indicate that the 165 kDa protein interacted with a 62 kDa peptide located towards the amino-terminal extremity of fibronectin, but not with a 47 kDa related fragment. Both these 62 kDa and 47 kDa peptides included the collagen-binding domain and were retarded on a heparin-Ultrogel column. Microsequences demonstrated that the 62 kDa and 47 kDa fragments had the same amino-terminal extremity and that the larger fragment was extended in the carboxy-terminal direction. This carboxy-terminal extension of the collagen binding domain of fibronectin is implicated in the interaction of this molecule with the 165 kDa protein. On the other hand, odontoblasts differentiated normally when tooth germs were cultured in the presence of GRGDS synthetic peptide, suggesting that RGD-dependent integrins were not involved in odontoblast differentiation. Staining of dental mesenchymal cells in primary culture and of differentiated odontoblasts in situ with antibodies directed against the beta 1-subunit of integrins confirmed previous observations and showed that although beta 1 integrins are involved in the attachment of cultured dental cells, they are not implicated in the process of odontoblast differentiation.
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PMID:The carboxy-terminal extension of the collagen binding domain of fibronectin mediates interaction with a 165 kDa membrane protein involved in odontoblast differentiation. 159 56

Tripeptidyl peptidase II (TPP II) is a large intracellular exopeptidase with an active site of the subtilisin type. Affinity-purified hen antibodies against human erythrocyte TPP II cross-reacted with fibronectin in an immunoblot analysis. Furthermore, antibodies against human fibronectin cross-reacted with TPP II. Antibodies against a 65 kDa cell-binding fragment of fibronectin specifically reacted with TPP II, whereas antibodies against the collagen-binding domain, the main heparin-binding domain or the N-terminal fibrin-binding domain did not react. Moreover, the affinity-purified antibodies against TPP II reacted with a 105 kDa cell-binding fragment of fibronectin but not with the fibrin-binding domain or the collagen-binding domain. When native TPP II was dissociated into smaller units through dialysis against a dilute Tris buffer, it could be digested by chymotrypsin into three stable fragments of 70 kDa, 42 kDa and 20 kDa. It could be demonstrated that the 42 kDa fragment was specifically recognized by antibodies against the 65 kDa cell-binding fragment of fibronectin. Furthermore, labelling with di-[3H]isopropyl phosphorofluoridate and N-terminal sequence determination showed that the 70 kDa fragment contained the active-site serine residue. In conclusion, our findings suggest that one domain of the TPP II molecule bears structural resemblance to a cell-binding fragment of fibronectin.
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PMID:Immunological cross-reactivity between human tripeptidyl peptidase II and fibronectin. 169 35

Fibronectin (Fn) is a high molecular-weight glycoprotein that can influence many aspects of monocyte function. The purpose of this study was to determine whether Fn could stimulate monocyte tumor necrosis factor (TNF) secretion. Monocytes were isolated from the peripheral blood of healthy volunteers by density gradient centrifugation and adherence to plastic (2 h). Plasma Fn was purified from the blood by gelatin-Sepharose affinity chromatography. Monocytes were stimulated with Fn for 18 h and the supernatants were assayed for TNF activity using the L929 bioassay. Intact Fn stimulated the secretion of TNF in a dose-dependent manner. Intact Fn-induced TNF secretion by monocytes was inhibited (50%) but not eliminated by the addition of the R-G-D-containing peptide GRGDSP. Limited proteolysis of the Fn molecule using insoluble chymotrypsin resulted in a fragment preparation that was dramatically more stimulatory than the intact Fn preparation. High-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) purification of the fragments demonstrated that at least two fragments were capable of stimulating TNF secretion. Further purification by affinity chromatography and HPLC localized the stimulatory activity to the 120-kd cell-binding fragment. The possibility that the stimulatory activity was the result of endotoxin contamination was ruled out using macrophages from C3H/Hej mice. These results suggest that Fn fragments are potentially important molecules for activation of monocytes and may stimulate monocyte cytotoxic activity.
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PMID:Fibronectin fragments stimulate tumor necrosis factor secretion by human monocytes. 174 Jun 45

We have used 125I-labeled fibronectin (FN) as an extracellular substrate for neutrophils (PMN) in order to investigate the mechanism responsible for FN solubilization by PMN and the effects of recombinant cytokines on this process. Pure active alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1AT), when added to PMN before or during, but not after, adherence to FN, inhibited solubilization of the substrate in a dose-dependent manner, but alpha 1AT that had been inactivated by proteolysis or oxidation and alpha 1AT Pittsburgh (alpha 1AT 358Met-Arg) had no significant effect. The solubilization of FN was also inhibited by the PMN elastase inhibitor N-methoxysuccinyl-alanyl-alanyl-prolyl-valine-chloromethylketone but not by the chymotrypsin and cathepsin G inhibitor N-Cbz-glycyl-glycyl-phenylalanine-chloromethylketone, nor by catalase or superoxide dismutase. The products of solubilization of FN by PMN, analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide electrophoresis, were similar to those produced by pure PMN elastase but not cathepsin G. These results suggest that FN solubilization by PMN is caused largely by the pericellular activity of PMN elastase. The solubilization of FN by PMN was increased significantly by adding tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-1 alpha, or interferon-gamma to the adherent cells but without a significant general release of elastase into the culture supernatants. Granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) had no significant effect. None of the cytokines had any effect when preincubated with the cells in suspension, and non increased FN solubilization by PMN incubated with the optimal (10(-6) mol/liter) or suboptimal dose (10(-8) mol/liter) of the peptide formylmethionylleucylphenylalanine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Extracellular proteolysis of fibronectin by neutrophils: characterization and the effects of recombinant cytokines. 201 99


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