Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.21.68 (
tissue plasminogen activator
)
11,311
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Extracellular matrix (ECM) plays an important role in the maintenance of mammary epithelial differentiation in culture. We asked whether changes in mouse mammary specific function in vivo correlate with changes in the ECM. We showed, using expression of beta-casein as a marker, that the temporal expression of ECM-degrading proteinases and their inhibitors during lactation and involution are inversely related to functional differentiation. After a lactation period of 9 d, mammary epithelial cells maintained beta-casein expression up to 5 d of involution. Two metalloproteinases, 72-kD gelatinase (and its 62-kD active form), and
stromelysin
, and a serine proteinase
tissue plasminogen activator
were detected by day four of involution, and maintained expression until at least day 10. The expression of their inhibitors, the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP) and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, preceded the onset of ECM-degrading proteinase expression and was detected by day two of involution, and showed a sharp peak of expression centered on days 4-6 of involution. When involution was accelerated by decreasing lactation to 2 d, there was an accelerated loss of beta-casein expression evident by day four and a shift in expression of ECM-remodeling proteinases and inhibitors to a focus at 2-4 d of involution. To further extend the correlation between mammary-specific function and ECM remodeling we initiated involution by sealing just one gland in an otherwise hormonally sufficient lactating animal. Alveoli in the sealed gland contained casein for at least 7 d after sealing, and closely resembled those in a lactating gland. The relative expression of TIMP in the sealed gland increased, whereas the expression of
stromelysin
was much lower than that of a hormone-depleted involuting gland, indicating that the higher the ratio of TIMP to ECM-degrading proteinases the slower the process of involution. To test directly the functional role of ECM-degrading proteinases in the loss of tissue-specific function we artificially perturbed the ECM-degrading proteinase-inhibitor ratio in a normally involuting gland by maintaining high concentrations of TIMP protein with the use of surgically implanted slow-release pellets. In a concentration-dependent fashion, involuting mammary glands that received TIMP implants maintained high levels of casein and delayed alveolar regression. These data suggest that the balance of ECM-degrading proteinases and their inhibitors regulates the organization of the basement membrane and the tissue-specific function of the mammary gland.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Coordinated expression of extracellular matrix-degrading proteinases and their inhibitors regulates mammary epithelial function during involution. 151 97
Degradation of cartilage matrix macromolecules depends on the increase of metalloprotease activity. It has been suggested that interleukin 1 (IL-1) contributes to cartilage break-down by modulating the synthesis of the elements favoring an activation of these metalloenzymes. We analyzed the effect of IL-1 on the synthesis of collagenase,
stromelysin
, and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteases (TIMP) in human cartilage explants and culture chondrocytes, as well as its effect on the secretion of plasminogen activators (
t-PA
, u-PA) and inhibitors (PAI-1, PAI-2) in cartilage explants. Messenger RNA levels of collagenase and TIMP were also analyzed following chondrocyte incubation in the presence or absence of IL-1. We demonstrate that IL-1 stimulates the secretion of metalloproteases and
t-PA
in a dose dependent manner. At a relatively low concentration (5 pg/ml), IL-1 induced collagenase and
stromelysin
synthesis in parallel with a decline in TIMP secretion. While IL-1 induced collagenase gene expression, no change in the TIMP mRNA level was noted. The increase in
t-PA
synthesis was accompanied by a decreased PAI-1 level, while the PAI-2 level remained unchanged. u-PA could not be detected in the culture medium. This study gives insight into the ways that the synthesis, activation and inhibition of metalloproteases are modulated by IL-1. These results support the importance of IL-1 in the etiology of cartilage degeneration.
...
PMID:In vitro effects of interleukin 1 on the synthesis of metalloproteases, TIMP, plasminogen activators and inhibitors in human articular cartilage. 185 Dec 31
To understand the mechanisms regulating osteoid removal by osteoblasts, mouse calvarial osteoblasts were grown on 14C-labelled type I collagen films and stimulated with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3 (2.5.10(-8) M) for 48-72 h. In the presence of 5% non-inhibitory rabbit serum this resulted in a 2-3-fold increase in collagen degradation and a dramatic change in osteoblast morphology, when compared with untreated osteoblasts. Collagenolysis was accompanied by increased synthesis and release of latent collagenase, gelatinase and
stromelysin
and a concomitant decrease in their specific inhibitor, TIMP (tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases). In serum-free medium, osteoblasts failed to degrade collagen, but their ability to lyse collagen could be restored by adding plasminogen (5 micrograms/ml) to the cultures. Plasminogen-dependent collagenolysis was inhibited by human recombinant TIMP (5 units/ml), demonstrating that plasmin, derived from plasminogen, activated latent collagenase and did not itself degrade collagen. Plasminogen activator production was confirmed by culturing osteoblasts on 125I-labelled fibrin plates. Comparison with urokinase-type and
tissue-type plasminogen activator
standards suggested that osteoblast plasminogen activator was predominantly cell-associated and likely to be of the urokinase type. Immunocytochemistry indicated that osteoblasts also constitutively produce plasminogen activator inhibitor-1. These findings provide evidence for the involvement of a plasminogen-plasmin-latent metalloproteinase activation cascade in type I collagen degradation by osteoblasts, and for its regulation by TIMP and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1.
...
PMID:Type I collagen degradation by mouse calvarial osteoblasts stimulated with 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3: evidence for a plasminogen-plasmin-metalloproteinase activation cascade. 255 72
Endothelial cell-derived proteases can be classified according to their physiological role. The proteases involved in extracellular matrix degradation are important in endothelial cell migration and thereby in angiogenesis. They include the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and the metalloproteases, collagenases, gelatinases and
stromelysin
. uPA secreted from endothelial cells remains associated with the cell membrane, on specific receptors localized in the vicinity of the receptors for plasminogen. This favours the local activation of plasminogen into plasmin. Plasmin, generated on the cell surface, is fully active as it is not inhibited by alpha 2-antiplasmin. Plasmin acts directly by degrading some components of the extracellular matrix and indirectly by activating the prometalloproteases. Secretion of PAI by migrating cells is generally stimulated by the same factors that induce uPA secretion, limiting the degradation of the matrix to the pericellular path. The degradation of the fibrin clot involves the
tissue-type plasminogen activator
tPA
, which like the uPA activates plasminogen to plasmin. This system is also regulated by two different mechanisms. On the one hand, fibrin itself favours its own degradation by formation of a ternary complex, fibrin-plasminogen-
tPA
, in which the affinity of
tPA
for plasminogen is markedly increased, as compared to the affinity of unbound
tPA
. In addition, plasmin generated on the clot is protected from inhibition by alpha 2-antiplasmin. On the other hand, as for uPA,
tPA
is inhibited by PAI-1. The importance of the regulation of this system is illustrated by the thrombotic risk observed when there is either a decrease in
tPA
or an increase in PAI-1, and inversely by haemorrhages in the case of increase in
tPA
.
...
PMID:Endothelial cell proteases: physiological role and regulation. 751 36
Neonatal human foreskin obtained at circumcision was cut into 2 x 2-mm pieces and placed in organ culture. Culture medium consisted of a serum-free, growth factor-free basal medium containing either 0.15 mmol/L Ca2+ or 1.4 mmol/L Ca2+. Some cultures were left as control, whereas others were treated with 3 mumol/L all-trans retinoic acid (RA). In the presence of RA, epidermal cohesion was disrupted and the upper layers separated from the viable epidermis beneath. This effect was observed under both low Ca2+ and high Ca2+ conditions. At 2-day intervals, culture fluids were collected and analyzed for serine and metalloproteinase activities. Serine proteinase activity was detected in the culture fluids and virtually all of the detected activity was dependent on the presence of plasminogen. Activity was elevated in the RA-treated tissues and this was due to increased amounts of both urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) and
tissue-type plasminogen activator
(t-PA). Elastase and cathepsin G were not detected in either control or RA-treated cultures. Increased plasminogen activator levels were also detected in RA-treated keratinocytes and fibroblasts in monolayer culture. Significant amounts of t-PA (though not u-PA) were found in fibroblast culture fluids, whereas both t-PA and u-PA were detected in culture fluids from keratinocytes. Metalloproteinase activity was also detected in the culture fluids of control and RA-treated tissues but in contrast to plasminogen activator, metalloproteinase activity decreased in the presence of RA. Casein and gelatin zymographic studies indicated the presence of both 92- and 72-kd gelatinases and
stromelysin
-1 and suggested that the decreased activity was primarily due to reduction in the 92- and 72-kd gelatinases. When serine proteinase inhibitors (aprotinin and soybean trypsin inhibitor) were included in the culture medium throughout the incubation period, epidermal discohesion was reduced. A metalloproteinase inhibitor, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-2, did not have this effect. Taken together, these data show that a number of proteolytic enzymes are produced during organ culture of human skin. They suggest that these proteases may influence the structural integrity of the tissue.
...
PMID:Expression of serine proteinases and metalloproteinases in organ-cultured human skin. Altered levels in the presence of retinoic acid and possible relationship to retinoid-induced loss of epidermal cohesion. 808 40
Fibroblastoid synovial lining cells isolated from rheumatoid and other chronic inflammatory synovial tissue exhibit distinctive and sustained alterations in serial culture not commonly found in similarly cultured cells from osteoarthritic synovium. These are demonstrable using a multi-gene dot blot assay by labelling reverse transcribed fibroblast cDNA which is hybridized to plasmids containing relevant target gene inserts. Cultured synovial fibroblastoid cells from patients with chronic inflammatory synovitis expressed significantly higher levels of
stromelysin
, vimentin and TIMP-1 mRNA and lower levels of c-myc compared to cells isolated from osteoarthritis synovium although with considerable variation. Early fetal synovial lining cells were similar to cells from osteoarthritis synovium but vimentin expression was higher. Marked differences in patterns of gene expression between cell lines persisted through 10 serial passages over 6-8 months. In whole synovia, the average level of mRNA for
stromelysin
, vimentin, IL-4, IL-6, TIMP-1, cathepsin D, gelatinase, TGF alpha, c-fms and DR beta were preferentially expressed in inflammatory tissue while c-myc expression was higher in osteoarthritis synovium. Inflammatory synovium also expressed TNF alpha, IL-1 alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-2, c-sis,
tissue plasminogen activator
, CSF-1, and GM-CSF. This pattern resembles, in part, that found in cultured inflammatory fibroblasts but, in addition, gene products apparently reflecting the presence of activated monocytes and lymphocytes were detected. These results provide evidence that profiles of certain gene activation in cells from patients with inflammatory synovitis differ from those with non-inflammatory disease and suggest that the fibroblastoid cells are responsible for a considerable proportion of the altered phenotypic expression pattern in whole tissue. Furthermore, this modulated pattern of gene activation appears to be an intrinsic pro-inflammatory characteristic of the fibroblastoid cells initiated in response to chronic inflammation and persists for a prolonged period in the absence of other inflammatory cells.
...
PMID:Sustained and distinctive patterns of gene activation in synovial fibroblasts and whole synovial tissue obtained from inflammatory synovitis. 809 Nov 28
Heparin inhibits the migration and proliferation of arterial smooth muscle cells and modifies the extracellular matrix. These effects may be the result of heparin's effects on proteinases that degrade the matrix. We have previously reported that heparin inhibits the induction of
tissue-type plasminogen activator
and interstitial collagenase mRNA. We have investigated the possibility that heparin affects other members of the matrix metalloproteinase family. Phorbol ester increased the levels of mRNA of collagenase, 92-kD gelatinase and
stromelysin
as well as the synthesis of these proteins. These effects were inhibited by heparin, but not by other glycosaminoglycans, in a dose-dependent manner. The induction of these matrix metalloproteinases was also inhibited by staurosporine and pretreatment with phorbol ester indicating the involvement of the protein kinase C pathway. In contrast, the 72-kD gelatinase was expressed constitutively and was not affected by phorbol ester or heparin. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 was expressed constitutively and was slightly increased by phorbol ester. It was not affected by heparin. Thus, heparin inhibits the production of four proteinases (
tissue plasminogen activator
, collagenase,
stromelysin
and 92-kD gelatinase) that form an interdependent system capable of degrading all the major components of the extracellular matrix.
...
PMID:Heparin inhibits the induction of three matrix metalloproteinases (stromelysin, 92-kD gelatinase, and collagenase) in primate arterial smooth muscle cells. 818 30
Steroid-induced glaucoma is believed to result from increased aqueous outflow resistance and evidence suggests that this is the result of an excess accumulation of extracellular matrix components. This accumulation could result from an imbalance in the natural turnover of these components. We have investigated the effect of corticosteroid treatment of trabecular meshwork (TM) organ and cell cultures on the extracellular activities of the matrix metalloproteinases and plasminogen activators. We find that corticosteroid treatment results in decreased extracellular activity of
stromelysin
and
tissue plasminogen activator
in trabecular meshwork cell culture, and decreased 92 kDa collagenase IV,
stromelysin
, and
tissue plasminogen activator
in trabecular meshwork organ culture. These data suggest that decreased levels of proteolytic activities could account, in part, for the accumulation of some extracellular matrix components and be a contributing mechanism in steroid-induced glaucoma.
...
PMID:Corticosteroid treatment and trabecular meshwork proteases in cell and organ culture supernatants. 828 32
Constitutive overexpression of both urokinase and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity is frequently observed in individual malignant tumors. In this study we describe the combined contribution of these distinct enzyme systems to the invasive phenotype of a highly metastatic human melanoma cell line (M24met). M24met cells were found to secrete a spectrum of MMPs, including interstitial collagenase, type IV collagenases (M(r) 92,000 and 72,000 progelatinases), and
stromelysin
. Urokinase, but not
tissue-type plasminogen activator
, was detected in M24met-conditioned media and on cell surfaces. The contribution of these enzymes to extracellular matrix dissolution was determined by exploiting specific inhibitors, namely tissue inhibitor of the metalloproteinases-2 and plasminogen activator inhibitor-2. Due to the coexpression of urokinase and MMP-dependent activity, M24met cells were observed to degrade multiple components of the extracellular matrix and to significantly degrade both interstitial and basement membrane matrices. Urokinase-dependent removal of matrix glycoprotein was observed to precede MMP-dependent collagenolysis as a prerequisite rate-limiting step. We present evidence which suggests that this temporal relationship is imposed by the structural architecture of the matrix such that matrix glycoprotein serves to protect associated collagen from MMP-dependent degradation. In addition to mediating significant collagenolysis, MMP activity was further implicated in the dissolution of matrix tropoelastin. Urokinase/plasmin activity was not found to be required for MMP-zymogen activation.
...
PMID:Melanoma-mediated dissolution of extracellular matrix: contribution of urokinase-dependent and metalloproteinase-dependent proteolytic pathways. 842 5
Decidual and placental relaxins have been proposed as autocrine/ paracrine hormones in the remodeling of collagen in the amnion and chorion in the last weeks of pregnancy. The matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) is a key enzyme in the degradation of the interstitial collagens which predominate in the fetal membranes. Distribution of the MMP-1 gene and of the MMP-1 protein was shown by in situ hybridization and immunolocalization, respectively, in amnion, chorion, and decidua collected from patients before the onset of spontaneous labor. The distribution of MMP-1 in the chorionic cytotrophoblast and decidua coincided with that of the human relaxin receptor, detected by tissue section autoradiography in tissues collected at the same stage of pregnancy. Fetal membrane explants were used to study the effect of exogenous human relaxin H2. These responded by a dose-dependent increase in expression of the MMP-1 gene, in its secreted protein, and in its enzyme activity in the medium. A similar dose-dependent increase in the
tissue plasminogen activator
(
tPA
) gene and protein upon exposure of the explants to relaxin H2 suggested a coordinated cascade system, resulting in increases in secreted activities of MMP-1, MMP-3 (
stromelysin
), and MMP-9 (gelatinase B). There was no effect on the genes or proteins for MMP-2 (gelatinase A) or tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1), showing the specificity of the response. This coordinated regulation by relaxin H2 of
tPA
, MMP-1, MMP-3, and MMP-9 would result in more complete degradation of the fetal membrane extracellular matrix components.
...
PMID:An autocrine/paracrine role of human decidual relaxin. I. Interstitial collagenase (matrix metalloproteinase-1) and tissue plasminogen activator. 909 59
1
2
Next >>