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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (
trypsin
)
42,187
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cell responses to different natural substrates have been followed by scanning microscopy in order to evaluate the role of these substrates in morphogenesis. Matrix has been isolated then repopulated with suspensions of embryonic cells from chick skin, spinal ganglia, duodenal epithelium and heart. In some cases outgrowth from amphibian embryonic tissue was used. Basal lamina of the Xenopus tail may be exposed by freezing and thawing the tissue, or by EDTA treatment. The underlying lamella of orthogonally oriented
collagen
fibers may be exposed by use of
trypsin
or hyaluronidase. Trypsin causes more clumping of
collagen
fibers and a coarser texture of the matrix. On
trypsin
isolated basement lamella, nerve cell processes grow out on the surface and show no strong tendency to penetrate the lamella while skin mesenchymal cells commonly burrow among the
collagen
plies. Epithelial cells remain on the surface. On the basal lamina mesenchymal cells ruffle in early stages of culture, then flatten. Epithelial cells flatten rapidly on the lamina. These differences in cell response are in some cases closely related to cell behavior in vivo and suggest that cells show a selective response to the chemical composition of the substrate as well as to its physical conformation.
...
PMID:Differential response of embryonic cells to culture on tissue matrices. 45 99
Soluble 125I-labeled type I collagen binds to cultured fibroblasts but not to cultured epithelia. The binding of the ligand to fibroblasts is reversible, saturable and highly specific for sequences contained within the helical portions of the alpha1 and alpha2 chains. The amount of ligand bound is dependent upon cell number and ligand concentration. Binding is decreased but measurable at 4 degrees C. The steady state binding is greater at 26 degrees than at 37 degrees C due to a more rapid dissociation of the ligand-acceptor complex at 37 degrees C. The half-life of the complex is 46 min at 37 degrees C and approximately 2.5 hr at 26 degrees C. Scatchard plots of binding data indicate a single class of high affinity binding sites (KD = 1.2 X 10(-11) M) with each fibroblast binding approximately 500,000 molecules at saturation. Pretreatment of fibroblasts with bacterial collagenase, chondroitinase ABC or testicular hyaluronidase does not affect the binding reaction, whereas pretreatment of the cells with phospholipase C increases the amount of ligand bound. Ligand binding is decreased but not abolished after fibroblasts are treated with
trypsin
concentrations which remove surface fibronectin. Fibroblast monolayers treated with antiserum against fibronectin bind the radiolabeled ligand normally. In contrast to
collagen
, addition of excess fibronectin does not accelerate the dissociation of bound ligand from fibroblasts. Possible functions for surface-bound
collagen
are discussed.
...
PMID:Binding of soluble type I collagen molecules to the fibroblast plasma membrane. 45 36
Fibronectins are multimeric, adhesive glycoproteins present on cell surfaces and circulating in blood. Cellular fibronectin produced by fibroblasts in vitro and fibronectin isolated from plasma are known to be very similar immunologically and biochemically. We investigated whether or not they are identifical. Purified chicken and human cell-surface fibronectins are 150-fold more active in hemagglutination of fixed erythrocytes than plasma fibronectins. Cell-surface fibronectin is also 50-fold more active in restoring a more normal morphology to transformed cells originally missing the protein. However, in two other assays that measure cell attachment to
collagen
and cell spreading, cell-surface and plasma fibronectins have identical specific activities. In sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels, the subunits of human and chicken plasma fibronectins have significantly smaller apparent subunit molecular weights than cellular fibronectins present on cell surfaces or secreted into culture media. These differences are also present in a characteristic large subfragment of both forms of fibronectin after limited proteolysis by
trypsin
. We conclude that by both biological and biochemical criteria, cellular and plasma fibronectins are similar but not identical.
...
PMID:Fibroblast cellular and plasma fibronectins are similar but not identical. 45 56
Long-Evans hooded rats were cordotomized at the T-5 level and given either (1) cyclophosphamide (cytoxan), an immunosuppressive, (2) piromen, a bacterial polysaccharide-nucleic acid complex, (3) topical and systemic
trypsin
, or (4) no further specific treatment. Because of past and present controversy surrounding the proposed ability of these agents to promote spinal cord regeneration, a systematic study, employing light and electron microscopy, and quantitative methods in a single animal model, was done in order to re-evaluate the effects of each treatment upon the connective tissue matrix which forms in the defect left by transection. After an initial inflammatory reaction during the first week after surgery, the lesion zone is characterized either by areas of dense collagenous connective tissue with occasional fibroblasts and macrophages, or a loose areolar tissue with numerous sheets and cords of mesodermal cellular elements but minimal
collagen
. By 45 days postoperatively (dpo), axons supported by Schwann cells invade and become entangled in the loose connective tissue matrix. With longer postoperative survival, cysts appear craniad and caudad to the lesion and erode much of the scar together with viable neural tissue. Giving cytoxan or piromen did not result in any qualitative alteration of the scar matrix as evidenced by electron microscopy. Quantitative analysis revealed a slight reduction in the fibrous connective tissue component of the scar at 45--90 dpo, but this was transient when longer postoperative periods were studied. Trypsin caused a significant reduction in the amount of fibrous connective tissue with a concomitant increase in loose connective tissue and the appearance of a few distinctive, compact bundles of unmyelinated axons lacking Schwann cells. Consistent behavioral changes were not observed in any group which could distinguish them from the controls. Our results appear to contradict the findings of Matinian and Andreasian (1976) who reported return of normal sensori-motor function in 80% of their animals treated with topical and systemic
trypsin
. It is concluded that a major impediment to whatever longterm regenerative potential exists within the spinal cord is the lack of axonal guiding elements within the scar, but more importantly, the severe erosion of the remaining spinal cord due to cyst enlargement.
...
PMID:Spinal cord transection: a quantitative analysis of elements of the connective tissue matrix formed within the site of lesion following administration of piromen, cytoxan or trypsin. 47 Nov 88
The state of chick embryo chondroblasts in culture was found to be sensitive to both fibronectin and another substance(s) (activity A) which could be extracted from chick embryo fibroblasts with 1 M urea or from conditioned medium. In the presence of either of these activities at concentrations of 25-150 micrograms/ml, chondroblasts, which normally grow as mixed cultures of floating and adherent cells, all immediately became attached to the tissue culture dish and spread. After several days, the morphology of these typically epithelioid cells became fibroblastic. This did not involve a selection process, since the effect was reversible. The synthetic program of these cells was also dramatically modified: the cultures no longer synthesized the chondroblast-unique type IV sulfated proteoglycan and began synthesizing alpha 2
collagen
chains typical of fibroblastic or early limb bud cells. Fibronectin was resolved from activity A by gelatin affinity chromatography or gel filtration. Both activities were
trypsin
-sensitive. The two activities differed, however, on the basis of how the protein fractions in which they were found migrated in SDS-polyacrylamide gels, their specific activities and their effects on cell morphology and cell growth.
...
PMID:Fibronectin alters the phenotypic properties of cultured chick embryo chondroblasts. 47 27
The N-terminal procollagen peptide of the pN alpha 1(I) chain from dermatosparactic calf skin contains 139 amino acid residues. For the determination of the amino acid sequence the procollagen peptide was treated with pyroglutamate aminopeptidase, protease from Staphylococcus aureus V8 and
trypsin
. The fragments obtained were separated by molecular sieve and ion-exchange chromatography and submitted to automated Edman degradation. The procollagen peptide consists of three segments, an N-terminal globular domain which contains all the cysteine residues and most of the hydrophobic residues present in the entire peptide, a triple helical part with a relatively high content of proline and hydroxyproline, and a short nonhelical region which forms the connection to the nonhelical region of the alpha 1(I) chain and which contains the proline-glutamine bond specifically split by the N-terminal procollagen peptidase during conversion of procollagen to
collagen
.
...
PMID:Amino acid sequence of the aminoterminal segment of dermatosparactic calf-skin procollagen type I. 48 18
Tumour extracts were obtained from rat Walker 256 carcinoma and examined for the presence of tumour angiogenesis factor (TAF) in vivo before being used in tissue culture experiments. Capillary endothelial cells derived from cow brain white matter were used to study the effects of TAF-containing tumour extracts on cell proliferation in vitro. The cells were grown on two types of substrata: (1) plastic tissue culture dishes and (2) hydrated gels made of rat tail tendon type I collagen. Human platelets or platelet-released factors were introduced into the system because of the many inter-relationships known to exist between platelets,
collagen
and endothelial cells. If
trypsin
was used during the preparation of TAT, the resulting batches stimulated endothelial cell proliferation only when the cells were growing on a
collagen
substratum and either platelets or platelet-released factors were present in the growth medium. If incubation with
trypsin
was omitted from the TAF extraction procedure, the resulting batches stimulated cell growth both on plastic and on
collagen
. A synergistic interaction also occurred between these TAF-containing tumour extracts and platelet-released factors. This effect was always more marked when the cells were growing on
collagen
than when on plastic. These data suggest that the nature of the substratum affects the response of the endothelial cells to TAF and to platelet-released factors.
...
PMID:Importance of a collagen substratum for stimulation of capillary endothelial cell proliferation by tumour angiogenesis factor. 48 64
Media from cultured mouse peritoneal macrophages were tested for cartilage proteoglycan degrading activity using S35-labelled rabbit ear cartilage. Media samples collected at 2-day intervals contained increasing amounts of activity between days two and six. This activity was activated by
trypsin
and antagonized by chelating agents. The macrophage products induced release of the proteoglycan component of cartilage as determined by biochemical and histological methods without affecting the
collagen
component. Media from cells incubated with hydrocortisone were devoid of proteoglycan degrading activity.
...
PMID:Release of cartilage proteoglycan degrading enzyme activity by thioglycollate stimulated mouse peritoneal macrophages in culture. 54 72
Human liver type III
collagen
was prepared by limited pepsin digestion, differential salt precipitation, and carboxymethylcellulose chromatography. Cyanogen bromide digestion of purified type III
collagen
chains yielded nine distinct peptides. Three peptides, alpha1(III)-CB3, alpha1(III)-CB7, and alpha1(III)-CB6, were isolated by carboxymethylcellulose chromatography and Sephadex G-50 SF gel filtration. Automated Edman degradation together with selective hydroxylamine cleavage and chymotrypsin and
trypsin
digestion enabled determination of their complete amino acid sequence. Compared with type I collagen, the data show tentative homology of alpha1(III)-CB3 with alpha1(I)-CB1, alpha1(I)-CB2, and alpha1(I)-CB4; alpha1(III)-CB7 with alpha1(I)-CB5; and alpha1(III)-CB6 with the amino-terminal portion of alpha1(I)-CB8. Close interspecies homology was found between the sequences presented here with 90 residues of alpha1(III)-CB3 and 26 of alpha1(III)-CB8 of calf aorta. The present study establishes the amino acid sequence of 229 residues near the amino terminus or nearly one-quarter of the type III
collagen
chains. The disaccharide, Glc-Gal, was convalently bound to hydroxylysine at a position corresponding to the same location in the alpha1(I) chain.
...
PMID:Covalent structure of collagen: amino acid sequence of cyanogen bromide peptides from the amino-terminal segment of type III collagen of human liver. 55 35
Hog anterior pituitary secretory granules sediment at 3,000 g. When rat or rabbit skeletal muscle actin filaments are present with the granules, the sedimentation decreases markedly. Depolymerized actin or viscous solutions of Ficoll and
collagen
have no effect on granule sedimentation. With this assay, actin filaments bind secretory granules (consisting of the proteinaceous core plus limiting membrane), secretory granule membranes, mitochondria, artificial lecithin liposomes, and styrene-butadiene microspheres, but have little or no interaction with membrane-free secretory granule cores and albumin microspheres. A secretory granule-actin complex sedimentable between 3,000 g and 25,000 g can be isolated. Metal ions, nucleotides, salts, dithiothreitol, or pretreatment of the granules with
trypsin
do not destroy the binding, which appears to be a lipophilic interaction.
...
PMID:Muscle actin filaments bind pituitary secretory granules in vitro. 55 96
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