Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The differentiation of F9 and PSA-1 embryonal carcinoma cells to embryoid bodies composed of a mixture of parietal and visceral endoderm was accompanied by changes in their secretion of metalloproteinases. Differentiation was induced by retinoic acid and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (for F9 cells) or by removing cells from a substrate of feeder cells to alter cell-cell interaction and adhesion (for PSA-1 cells). The embryoid bodies attached to gelatin-coated dishes, and the parietal endoderm cells spread out over the matrix. The differentiated cells secreted specific gelatin- and casein-degrading proteinases, including enzymes that comigrated with proenzyme forms of collagenase and stromelysin. Total proteinase activity as well as specific collagenase activity increased with the time of differentiation. All of the gelatin- and casein-degrading proteinases detectable by substrate gel zymography were inhibited by inhibitors of metalloproteinases but not by inhibitors of serine or cysteine proteinases, indicating that they were metalloproteinases. Both cell lines showed increased collagenolytic activity, which was activated by treatment with plasmin. In addition, both cell lines showed increased secretion of specific metalloproteinase inhibitors, including tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases, with differentiation. Analysis of mRNA from undifferentiated and differentiated F9 cells by RNA blot analysis or reverse transcription coupled with the polymerase chain reaction showed that increased expression of genes for collagenase, stromelysin and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases is associated with differentiation of these cells. These results suggest that the expression of extracellular matrix-degrading metalloproteinases and their inhibitors is developmentally regulated during the differentiation and spreading of the parietal endoderm.
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PMID:Expression of extracellular matrix-degrading metalloproteinases and metalloproteinase inhibitors is developmentally regulated during endoderm differentiation of embryonal carcinoma cells. 208 60

Articular cartilage from arthritic joints of rats immunized with type II collagen is severely depleted of proteoglycans. Depletion begins within 48 hours after the onset of inflammation, prior to extensive pannus formation, and may represent a critical first step in cartilage destruction. We have immunolocalized stromelysin, an enzyme that is believed to play a major role in the pathologic degradation of proteoglycans, in the joints of rats with collagen-induced arthritis. Immunoperoxidase staining of frozen tissue sections demonstrated the presence of stromelysin in both the synovium and chondrocytes. In contrast, collagenase was localized primarily to the pannus-cartilage junction. Neither enzyme was detectable in joints from normal animals. To test the hypothesis that chondrocytes respond directly to inflammatory mediators by increasing the production of stromelysin, isolated chrondrocytes were incubated with various concentrations of interleukin-1. The culture media were also assayed for the presence of stromelysin by immunoreactivity on Western blots and by analysis of enzymatic activity on casein substrate gels. A 3-fold increase in a doublet of proteins synthesized in response to 10 units/ml of interleukin-1 was observed. These proteins also immunoreacted with the stromelysin antibody and degraded casein. Northern blotting results established that the increased levels of stromelysin were accompanied by increases in stromelysin-specific messenger RNA levels. These results suggest that stromelysin is responsible for proteoglycan degradation in early inflammatory arthritis, and that chondrocytes may play a direct role in the earliest stages of the degradation of their own matrices.
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PMID:The role of stromelysin in the cartilage destruction that accompanies inflammatory arthritis. 215 11

Inactivation of the plasma serine-proteinase inhibitor alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1-AT) by neutrophil metalloproteinases has been reported [Vissers, George, Bathurst, Brennan & Winterbourn (1987) Fed. Proc. Fed. Am. Soc. Exp. Biol. 46, 1390a; (1988) J. Clin. Invest. 82, 706-711; Desrochers & Weiss (1988) J. Clin. Invest. 81, 1646-1650]. To identify the enzyme responsible, supernatant from neutrophils stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate was subjected to preparative SDS/PAGE, both with and without activation of latent metalloproteinases with HgCl2. The lanes were subsequently sliced into pieces, the slices incubated with equimolar amounts of type I collagen and alpha 1-AT in the presence of HgCl2, and the reaction products separated by SDS/PAGE. With the latent supernatant, the characteristic collagen-cleavage products and cleaved alpha 1-AT were present in the same slices, corresponding to an Mr of 80,000-85,000. On treatment with HgCl2 both degradative activities underwent the same molecular-mass shift to a position corresponding to Mr 60,000-65,000. Western blots of neutrophil supernatants, using a polyclonal antibody to purified collagenase, showed Mr values of 83,000 for the latent enzyme and 63,000 for the HgCl2-activated enzyme. Neutrophil collagenase was purified to homogeneity and shown also to exist in a second latent form with Mr 70,000. When activated to the Mr-63,000 form by HgCl2 and incubated with equimolar amounts of collagen and alpha 1-AT, collagenase cleaved alpha 1-AT at almost twice the rate at which collagen was cleaved. alpha 1-AT cleavage was inhibited by 1,10-phenanthroline and by high concentrations of collagen. That the purified collagenase did not contain a contaminant proteinase such as stromelysin was indicated by inability of the preparation to cleave casein. Taken together these results lead us to conclude that neutrophil collagenase is capable of degrading alpha 1-AT. Neutrophil gelatinase also cleaved alpha 1-AT, but cleavage was slow when compared with its activity against gelatin.
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PMID:Human neutrophil collagenase cleaves alpha 1-antitrypsin. 217 52

A metalloproteinase with Mr 29,000 was purified to homogeneity as a latent proenzyme from the conditioned medium of a human rectal carcinoma cell line CaR-1. This enzyme hydrolyzed casein more potently than gelatin embedded in polyacrylamide gels in zymography assay. Calcium ion was essential for the activity. It exerted the maximum activity at pH 7-9. Its activity was stimulated by organomercurials, such as p-amino-phenyl mercuric acetate and p-chloromercuric benzoic acid, and was inhibited by 1,10-phenanthroline but was hardly affected by diisopropyl fluorophosphate and pepstatin. When the purified proenzyme was activated by the organomercurials, it effectively hydrolyzed fibronectin, laminin, type IV basement membrane collagen, and several types of gelatins but not interstitial type I and III collagens. The treatment of the purified proenzyme with p-aminophenyl mercuric acetate or trypsin formed an active peptide with Mr 20,000. The structural analysis indicated that it was most likely identical to putative metalloproteinase-1, the complementary DNA of which had been cloned from human tumor mRNAs capable of hybridizing to a rat transin complementary DNA. Based on the fact that this enzyme is secreted extracellularly and degrades the matrix proteins, we propose the name "matrin" for this newly identified enzyme.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of extracellular matrix-degrading metalloproteinase, matrin (pump-1), secreted from human rectal carcinoma cell line. 225 19

A metalloproteinase similar or identical to stromelysin was shown to co-purify with interstitial collagenase from the rat mammary carcinoma cell line, BC1. The mixture of BC1 metalloproteinase and collagenase degraded casein, gelatin, fibronectin, fibrinogen, laminin, proteoglycan and type IV collagen, in addition to types I and II collagen. Using SDS-PAGE and zymography, the Mr of both enzymes was 51.10(3). During storage, the 51.10(3) protein converted to fragments of Mr 34.10(3) and 24.10(3), and isoelectric points of 4.6-5.3 and 5.7-6.0, respectively. The fragments were separated from the intact (Mr 51.10(3) enzymes by DEAE-Sepharose chromatography, but intact metalloproteinase and collagenase activities resisted separation by a range of chromatographic methods. The Mr 34.10(3) fragment retained the proteinolytic activities of the intact enzymes, excepting collagenase cleavage of collagen types I and II. The Mr 24.10(3) fragment had no proteinolytic activity, showed an increase in Mr of 6.10(3) upon reduction, in common with the intact enzymes, and also had similar chromatographic properties to the intact enzymes. The data presented are consistent with a pattern of breakdown which is common to both collagenase and the metalloproteinase, and suggest that both enzymes are comprised of two protein domains.
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PMID:Identification of a metalloproteinase co-purifying with rat tumour collagenase and the characteristics of fragments of both enzymes. 253 40

Tendon repair following trauma, rupture, or surgery involves both synthesis and degradation of collagen in order to reweave new collagen bundles in with the old. Using an in situ assay on polyacrylamide gels containing gelatin, we have identified protease activity from tendon tissue and from tendon cells in culture. A population of synovial cells from the epitenon surrounding the tendon as well as the tendon fibroblasts themselves were examined. The cells and the conditioned medium from both cell populations exhibited a major band of gelatin-degrading activity at 70 kdaltons and a minor band of activity at 60 kdaltons. When preparations were reacted with p-aminophenylmercuric acetate (APMA) before electrophoresis, a third band appeared at 63 kdaltons. The main band at 70 kdaltons comigrated with a [35S]methionine-radiolabeled protein band. Inhibitor and pH studies identified the enzymes as neutral metalloproteases requiring disulfide bonds for activity. No proteolytic activity was detected on casein-containing gels, ruling out the presence of stromelysin. Since electrophoresis in the presence of SDS would separate the metalloprotease from the smaller molecular weight inhibitor (TIMP), these in situ assays provide a sensitive screening system for gelatin-degrading enzymes present in tendon without prior removal of TIMP.
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PMID:Neutral metalloprotease from tendons. 253 97

Pump-1 cDNA has recently been isolated by screening a human tumor cDNA library with a transin (rat stromelysin) probe under low-stringency hybridization conditions. The cDNA codes for a potential protein with significant sequence similarity to the metalloproteinases collagenase and stromelysin, but which lacks the hemopexin-like domain characteristic of these enzymes. Expression of pump-1 cDNA in cos cells using an expression vector leads to secretion of a protein of Mr 28,000 with latent, organomercurial-activatable proteinase activity. Cos cells transfected with a partial pump-1 cDNA in the vector pPROTA secrete a fusion protein between the IgG-binding domains of staphylococcal protein A and pump-1. The fusion protein binds to IgG-Sepharose, and the bound fusion protein undergoes apparent autocleavage in the presence of 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate with elution of active pump-1 species of Mr 21,000 and 19,000. Active pump-1 degrades casein, gelatins of types I, III, IV, and V, and fibronectin and can activate collagenase. Active pump-1 is inhibited by EDTA, 1,10-phenanthroline, and the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases. These results show that, despite the absence of a hemopexin-like domain, pump-1 is a latent secreted metalloproteinase. Postpartum rat uteri contain elevated levels of rat pump-1 mRNA. On the basis of this observation, its size, and its substrate specificity, we suggest that pump-1 might correspond to a previously described uterine metalloproteinase, matrix metalloproteinase 7.
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PMID:Pump-1 cDNA codes for a protein with characteristics similar to those of classical collagenase family members. 255 50

On purification, human fibroblast collagenase breaks down into two major forms (Mr22,000 and Mr 27,000) and one minor form (Mr 25,000). The most likely mechanism is autolysis, although the presence of contaminating enzymes cannot be excluded. From N-terminal sequencing studies, the 22,000-Mr fragment contains the active site; differential binding to concanavalin A shows the 25,000-Mr fragment is a glycosylated form of the 22,000-Mr fragment. These low-Mr forms can be separated by Zn2+-chelate chromatography. An activity profile of this column, combined with data from substrate gels, indicates no activity against collagen in the 22,000-Mr and 25,000-Mr forms, but rather, activity casein and gelatin. The 27,000-Mr form has no activity. The 22,000/25,000-Mr form can act as an activator for collagenase in a similar way to that reported for stromelysin. The activity of the 22,000/25,000-Mr form is not inhibited by the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP). The 27,000-Mr C-terminal part of the collagenase molecule therefore appears to be important in maintaining the substrate-specificity of the enzyme, and also plays a role in the binding of TIMP.
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PMID:Fragments of human fibroblast collagenase. Purification and characterization. 255 22

The 'neutral' proteoglycan-degrading metalloproteinase of human articular cartilage was purified 3,500-fold by use of an anti-(matrix metalloproteinase-3) immunoglobulin G affinity column. Molecular masses of the latent and multiple active forms and specificity of action on casein, transferrin, gelatin and fibronectin were identical with those of authentic stromelysin (matrix metalloproteinase-3) from cultured human rheumatoid synovial fibroblasts. The optimum pH of this proteinase on proteoglycan monomer was pH 5.5, and on Azocoll, 6.2; digestion of fibronectin and gelatin was more extensive at pH 5.5 than at 7.5.
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PMID:Purification of the neutral proteoglycan-degrading metalloproteinase from human articular cartilage tissue and its identification as stromelysin matrix metalloproteinase-3. 293 May

Rabbit synovial fibroblasts induced to undergo a specific switch in gene expression by agents that alter cell morphology secreted the neutral proteinase precursor procollagenase (apparent Mr of 53,000 and 57,000). A major Mr = 51,000 polypeptide that was always induced coordinately with procollagenase has now been identified as the proenzyme form of a metal-dependent proteinase active at neutral pH. We have named this proteinase stromelysin. Prostromelysin and procollagenase were the most prominent [35S]methionine-labeled secreted proteins of the induced fibroblasts. By the use of casein degradation as an assay for enzyme activity, stromelysin was isolated with high yield from the conditioned culture medium of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate-treated fibroblasts and migrated as an active form of Mr = 21,000 that was immunologically identical to the proteoglycan-degrading proteinase purified from rabbit bone. Immunoglobulin G from antiserum raised to purified rabbit bone proteoglycanase immunoprecipitated the Mr = 51,000 proenzyme form from conditioned medium of induced rabbit cells and also immunoprecipitated an Mr = 55,000 polypeptide from induced human fibroblasts. When rabbit prostromelysin was activated by trypsin or 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate, the proenzyme was converted to an active form of Mr = 41,000. During the course of the purification, prostromelysin was converted to an additional activatable form of Mr = 35,000 and additional active forms of Mr = 21,000-25,000, which had related peptide maps distinct from collagenase. All of these forms were immunologically cross-reactive. Purified stromelysin degraded casein, cartilage proteoglycans, fibronectin, alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor, and immunoglobulin G2a and had limited activity on laminin, elastin, type IV collagen, and gelatin, but did not degrade type I collagen. Stromelysin was inhibited by EDTA, 1,10-phenanthroline, and the specific glycoprotein tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases isolated from human amniotic fluid and was therefore classified as a metalloproteinase.
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PMID:Stromelysin, a connective tissue-degrading metalloendopeptidase secreted by stimulated rabbit synovial fibroblasts in parallel with collagenase. Biosynthesis, isolation, characterization, and substrates. 299 74


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