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:3.4.24.17 (
MMP-3
)
3,419
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The process of endochondral fracture healing is biochemically similar to growth plate calcification. Recent studies have identified potentially important roles for proteoglycan-degrading enzymes in the growth plate. The purpose of the study described herein was to identify, in healing fractures, neutral enzyme activities capable of degrading proteoglycans and other matrix proteins. Two sets of 60 male Sprague-Dawley rats underwent the production of closed femoral fractures. Calluses were retrieved at timed intervals, and cell and matrix vesicle fractions were prepared for electron microscopy, neutral peptidase, and alkaline phosphatase assays. In another group of 10 animals, fractions were prepared from 14-day calluses and examined for
proteoglycanase
activity. In the cell fractions, alkaline phosphatase, alanyl-beta-naphthylamidase,
aminopeptidase
, and endopeptidase activities showed somewhat parallel distributions peaking at approximately 14-17 days. In the matrix vesicle fractions, similar relative distributions were observed for alkaline phosphatase and endopeptidase. However, here the peak activities occurred up to 3 days later than they did in the cell fractions. Significant
proteoglycanase
activity was confirmed in both cell and matrix vesicle fractions. These findings are consistent with the hypotheses that (a) neutral peptidases, by virtue of their temporal expression in parallel with alkaline phosphatase, may be involved in preparing fracture callus matrix for calcification; and (b) matrix vesicles may convey certain of these enzymes to sites of both matrix degradation and calcification, since the same activities found in cells are found in matrix vesicles a few days later. The possibility that some of these enzymes are involved in growth factor activation remains to be investigated.
...
PMID:Neutral protein-degrading enzymes in experimental fracture callus: a preliminary report. 267 85
The peptide DHLSDNYTLDHDRAIH (Link N), cleaved from the N-terminus of the link protein component of cartilage proteoglycan aggregates by the action of
stromelysin
, can act as a growth factor and stimulate synthesis of proteoglycans and collagen in articular cartilage [McKenna, Liu, Sansom and Dean (1998) Arthritis Rheum. 41, 157-161]. The mechanism by which this biologically active peptide is degraded and inactivated was investigated using U937 monocytes as a model cell. Time-course experiments showed that two major proteases, an initial serine proteinase followed by a metalloproteinase, acted in sequence. Analysis of the resulting fragments showed that the serine endopeptidase cleavage was at the Leu(3)-Ser(4) bond to produce the peptide SDNYTLDHDRAIH. The terminal serine could then be removed from the resulting peptide by an
aminopeptidase
. A second metallopeptidase liberated the peptides SDNYTL or DNYTL from DHDRAIH by cleavage at the Leu(9)-Asp(10) bond. The DNYTL peptide intermediate was degraded too rapidly to allow sequencing and sequential
aminopeptidase
cleavages removed further amino acids from the N-terminus of the remaining DHDRAIH peptide. The identical patterns of breakdown that occurred when either whole cells or purified plasma membranes were used indicated that proteolysis and inactivation of Link N was carried out entirely by membrane-associated enzymes.
...
PMID:Link peptide cartilage growth factor is degraded by membrane proteinases. 1088 Mar 46
Posttranslational modifications influence the structure, stability and biological activity of proteins. Most of the reactions are enzyme-catalyzed, but some, such as asparagine (Asn) and glutamine (Gln) deamidation and the isoaspartate (isoAsp) formation within peptide chains, occur spontaneously. It has been previously shown that certain peptide sequences form isoAsp quite fast if the Asp stretches are exposed to the protein surface, thereby potentially changing susceptibility to proteolysis at these sites. This tempted us to investigate the activity of exo- and endopeptidases against Asp- or isoAsp-containing substrates. Members of the prolyl oligopeptidase family were unable to cleave substrates after proline if isoAsp was placed in the P2-position. Caspases, usually accepting Asp at P1-position of their substrates, did not cleave isoAsp-containing sequences. Similarly, the metal-dependent
aminopeptidase
amino peptidase N did not turnover N-terminal isoAsp-containing substrates, nor could the endopeptidase
matrix metalloproteinase 3
(MMP 3) hydrolyze a serum amyloid A protein-like substrate if the sequence contained isoAsp instead of Asp. Also, the highly specific enterokinase, usually clipping after a stretch of four Asp residues and a lysine in the P1 position, could not turnover substrates if the P2 amino acid was replaced by isoAsp. In contrast, acylamino acid-releasing enzyme and dipeptidyl peptidases 1, 2 and 4 hydrolyzed substrates containing the isoAsp-Ala motif.
...
PMID:Isoaspartate residues dramatically influence substrate recognition and turnover by proteases. 1897 29