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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.4.24.17 (
MMP-3
)
3,419
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Stromelysins are a group of proteases which degrade the extracellular matrix and activate other secreted proteases. Stromelysin (ST)-1 and ST-2 genes are induced by tumor promoters, oncogenes and growth factors, and have been involved in acquisition of the malignant phenotype. We show here that the
thyroid hormone
(T3) increases ST-1 and ST-2 expression in a non-transformed mouse mammary epithelial cell line (EpH4) in a way that is dependent on the level of thyroid receptor/c-erbA (TR alpha-1) expression. In agreement with this, T3 increases the secreted
stromelysin
activity and enhances the gelatinolytic activity of type IV collagenase. We have also demonstrated that T3 affects the epithelial polarity of EpH4 cells, diminishing the transepithelial electrical resistance of monolayers cultured on permeable filters, causing an abnormal distribution of polarization markers and the disruption of the organized 3-D structures formed by these cells in type I collagen gels. These results indicate that the ligand-activated TR alpha-1 plays an important role in regulating the morphogenetic and invasive capacities of mammary epithelial cells. Because the c-erbA locus is altered in several types of carcinoma, an altered or deregulated TR alpha-1 expression may also be important for breast cancer development and metastasis.
...
PMID:Thyroid hormone regulates stromelysin expression, protease secretion and the morphogenetic potential of normal polarized mammary epithelial cells. 772 Jul 5
Effects of
thyroid hormone
on proteoglycan degradation in various regions of cartilage were investigated. In propylthiouracil-treated rats with hypothyroidism, proteoglycan degradation in epiphyseal cartilage during endochondral ossification was markedly suppressed. However, injections of T(4) reversed this effect of propylthiouracil on proteoglycan degradation. In pig growth plate explants, T(3) also induced breakdown of proteoglycan. T(3) increased the release of aggrecan monomer and core protein from the explants into the medium. Accordingly, the level of aggrecan monomer remaining in the tissue decreased after T(3) treatment, and the monomer lost hyaluronic acid-binding capacity, suggesting that the cleavage site is in the interglobular domain. The aggrecan fragment released from the T(3)-exposed explants underwent cleavage at Glu(373)-Ala(374), the major aggrecanase-cleavage site. The stimulation of proteoglycan degradation by T(3) was less prominent in resting cartilage explants than in growth plate explants and was barely detectable in articular cartilage explants. Using rabbit growth plate chondrocyte cultures, we explored proteases that may be involved in T(3)-induced aggrecan degradation and found that T(3) enhanced the expression of aggrecanase-2/ADAM-TS5 (a disintegrin and a metalloproteinase domain with thrombospondin type I domains) mRNA, whereas we could not detect any enhancement of
stromelysin
, gelatinase, or collagenase activities or any aggrecanase-1/ADAM-TS4 mRNA expression. We also found that the aggrecanse-2 mRNA level, but not aggrecanase-1, increased at the hypertrophic stage during endochondral ossification. These findings suggest that aggrecanse-2/ADAM-TS5 is involved in aggrecan breakdown during endochondral ossification, and that
thyroid hormone
stimulates the aggrecan breakdown partly via the enhancement of aggrecanase-2/ADAM-TS5.
...
PMID:Thyroid hormone enhances aggrecanase-2/ADAM-TS5 expression and proteoglycan degradation in growth plate cartilage. 1274 10
To better understand the molecular mechanisms of anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC), we aimed to identify the hub genes specifically involved in ATC by integrated bioinformatics analysis. In this study, using three Gene Expression Omnibus data sets with the same platform GPL570, we screened hub genes involved in ATC progression. In vitro experiments, such as western blot analysis, Transwell assays, and coimmunoprecipitation, was performed to verify our findings. By comparing three subtypes of thyroid cancer with normal tissue, we found ATC harbored more changed genes than well and poorly differentiated thyroid cancer. Using specifically differentially expressed genes between ATC and normal thyroid tissues to perform Gene ontology (GO) analysis, ATC showed enrichments of GO terms involved in lymphocyte migration and activation, collagen catabolic and metabolic process,
thyroid hormone
synthesis, and embolism. Using genes involved in extracellular matrix, coexpression network analysis and protein-protein interaction analysis were performed to identify matrix metalloproteinase 3 (MMP3) and MMP13 as two hub genes. Our experimental data indicated that both
MMP3
and MMP13 were upregulated in ATC and knockdown of either of them could notably suppress ATC cell invasion and migration. Mechanistically, Gene Set Enrichment Analysis, coimmunoprecipitation, and rescue experiments revealed
MMP3
and MMP13 not only interacted with each other, but also regulated each other through the janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 and mammalian target of rapamycin pathways. In conclusion, we identified a specific molecular mechanisms for the development of ATC by integrated analysis of transcriptome and in vitro experiments, which suggested that
MMP3
and MMP13 might be developed as novel therapeutic targets for ATC.
...
PMID:Integrated analysis of transcriptome data revealed MMP3 and MMP13 as critical genes in anaplastic thyroid cancer progression. 3108 Nov 24