Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.23 (MMP)
4,246 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Numerous studies have reported a correlation between production of 72-kDa (MMP-2) and 92-kDa (MMP-9) type-IV collagenases/gelatinases and the metastatic potential of cancer cells. An abrogating effect of tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMP-1 and TIMP-2) on metastases has also been noted. In this report we have used sensitive enzyme-linked immunoassays to measure MMP-2, MMP-9, TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 levels in eight human lung-cancer cell lines which were characterized for biological behavior in nude mice. We demonstrated that the Calu-6 and A549 cell lines with the highest metastatic, invasive and tumorigenic potential secreted the highest levels of MMP-2. MMP-9 and TIMP-1 secretions were comparatively low in all cell lines. TIMP-2 secretion, which exceeded MMP-2 secretion for all cell lines, did not correlate with metastatic potential. To further explore these correlations, the metastatic Calu-6 cell line was transfected with a K-rev-1 cDNA expression construct. The K-rev revertant cell lines demonstrated a more differentiated phenotype and were less tumorigenic, invasive and metastatic in nude mice. Nonetheless, the Calu-6 revertant cell lines secreted higher levels of MMP-2 than the parent cell line. In conclusion, invasion and metastasis by lung-cancer cells requires not only enhanced MMP production, but also other less well-understood tumorigenic characteristics. The multiplicity of factors required by cancer cells for dissemination helps to explain the minute fraction of cancer cells from a primary tumor that ever develop into a metastasis.
Int J Cancer 1992 Sep 30
PMID:Secretion of gelatinases and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases by human lung cancer cell lines and revertant cell lines: not an invariant correlation with metastasis. 139 11

Twenty-five surgical specimens of malignant human prostate, 3 lymph nodes with metastatic prostate carcinoma, 11 normal human prostates, as well as 3 human prostate cell lines (DU-145, PC3 and LNCaP) were examined for the expression of the human matrix metalloproteinase-7 gene (MMP-7) from the human collagenase family (originally called PUMP-1 for putative metalloproteinase-1) [Quantin et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28:5327-5334; Muller et al. (1988) Biochem J 253:187-192; Matrisian and Bowden (1990) Semin Cancer Biol 1:107-115]. Northern blots were prepared using total RNA extracted from 18 prostate adenocarcinomas, 2 lymph nodes with metastatic prostate carcinoma and 11 normal human prostates. When the northern blots were hybridized with a 32P-labeled MMP-7 cDNA probe, a 1.2-kb mRNA was detected in 14 out of 18 prostate adenocarcinomas, 1 out of 2 metastatic lymph nodes, and 3 out of 11 normal prostates. The 3 human prostate cell lines did not show any evidence of the MMP-7 transcript. In situ hybridization was conducted to localize the MMP-7 mRNA to individual cells using a 35S-labeled MMP-7 cRNA. In situ hybridization was carried out on snap-frozen tissue sections of 7 prostate adenocarcinomas and 3 lymph nodes containing metastatic prostate adenocarcinoma using the same tissues previously probed by northern analysis as well as new samples. In situ hybridization revealed that the MMP-7 gene was expressed in the epithelial cells of primary prostate adenocarcinoma as well as in invasive and metastatic cells. MMP-7 expression was also seen focally in some dysplastic glands but not in stroma. Additional northern blot analysis was performed using probes to human type-IV collagenase, type-I collagenase and stromelysin I in human prostate adenocarcinoma as well as normal prostate tissue. Our results indicated that 6 out of 10 adenocarcinoma samples and none of the 4 normal samples were positive for type-IV collagenase transcripts. Tissue samples were also examined for the expression of type-I collagenase (9 adenocarcinomas and 4 normal) and stromelysin I (13 adenocarcinomas) by northern analysis. None of the tissues was found to express the transcripts of interest at detectable levels. These data suggest that certain metalloproteinases are present in prostatic adenocarcinoma and may play a role in invasion and metastasis.
J Cancer Res Clin Oncol 1991
PMID:Expression of metalloproteinase genes in human prostate cancer. 184 60

Collagenolytic activity, extracted from 55 tumor and healthy corresponding intestinal control samples, was determined by 3 different assays using soluble type I and fibrillar type I and III collagen, respectively, as substrate. The enzyme extracted from tumor-digested collagen type I reconstituted fibrils and yielded the three-quarter segments characteristic for the action of one of the matrix metalloproteinases: MMP-I or mammalian collagenase. Metal-chelating agents such as EDTA and O-phenanthrolin indeed inhibited this activity. Collagenolytic activities were calculated on the basis of wet weight, total DNA and total extracted protein. Correlations were sought between levels of activity and both clinicopathological stage (Dukes' staging) and grade of histological differentiation. In all the assays applied, significant correlations were found between grade of histological differentiation and collagenolytic activity expressed as the tumor/control ratios: poorly differentiated tumors exhibited a higher tumor/control ratio than well-differentiated tumors. Also, tumors penetrating into the serosa showed a higher tumor/control ratio than tumors invading the muscularis propria only. A relation between collagenolytic activity and clinico-pathological stage was observed only if activities were calculated on a DNA basis. These results confirm a relationship between the histological appearance of a tumor and its enzymatic potential to degrade interstitial collagens.
Int J Cancer 1990 Jun 15
PMID:Correlation between collagenolytic activity and grade of histological differentiation in colorectal tumors. 216 97

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.
Cancer Res 1990 Dec 15
PMID:Purification and characterization of extracellular matrix-degrading metalloproteinase, matrin (pump-1), secreted from human rectal carcinoma cell line. 225 19

Over-production of gelatinase A (MMP-2) or under-production of its inhibitor (TIMP-2) may result in the matrix degradation crucial for metastasis, and early evaluation of their expression in primary tumor would offer important prognostic informations. RT-PCR amplicons of MMP-2 and TIMP-2 mRNA from tissue biopsies of 13 breast carcinomas and one fibrocystic mastopathy were quantitated. In comparison with their normal-tissue counterparts, their expression trends were not uniform: in some cases MMP-2 increased in the tumor without changes in TIMP-2, in others TIMP-2 expression also increased, although to a lesser extent than MMP-2; only in 2 cases was it slightly lower in the tumor tissue. Nevertheless, clearer insights were gained from the comparison of the ratio (R) between MMP-2tumor/normal and TIMP-2tumor/normal: as in the fibrocystic mastopathy, the R in carcinomas without lymph-node involvement (LN-) was usually lower than I in most cases. In contrast, in 5 out of 6 patients with lymph-node metastasis (LN+), the ratio ranged between 2 and 4. While the R magnitude was not related to the frequency of positive lymph nodes out of the total analyzed, nor to relapse status at follow-up (all relapse-free), the clear-cut difference between the LN- and LN+ groups was statistically significant. Results suggest that evaluation of MMP-2/TIMP-2 mRNA balance may constitute an early prognostic approach, which may also be more reliable concerning cancer aggressiveness as compared with the MMP-2 alone, and that boosting TIMP-2 expression may be a therapeutic strategy to prevent metastasis.
Int J Cancer 1995 Nov 27
PMID:Gelatinase A/TIMP-2 imbalance in lymph-node-positive breast carcinomas, as measured by RT-PCR. 759 Dec 76

Matrix Metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) is secreted as a zymogen, the activation of which has been associated with metastatic progression in human breast cancer (HBC). Concanavalin A (Con A) has been found to induce activation of MMP-2 in invasive HBC cell lines. Con A effects on the expression of mRNA for membrane-type matrix metalloproteinase (MT-MMP), a newly described cell surface-associated MMP, showed a close temporal correlation with induction of MMP-2 activation. It is surprising that MT-MMP mRNA is constitutively present in the uninduced MDA-MB-231 cell, despite a lack of MMP-2 activation. We have used actinomycin D to demonstrate a partial requirement for de novo gene expression in the induction of MMP-2 activation by Con A in MDA-MB-231 HBC cells. Furthermore, this transcriptional response to Con A appeared to require the continued presence of Con A for its manifestation. The nontranscriptional component of the Con A induction manifests rapidly, is quite substantial, and persists strongly despite actinomycin D abrogation of both constitutive and Con A-induced MT-MMP. Cycloheximide analyses suggest that protein synthesis may be involved in this rapid transcription-independent response. These studies suggest that Con A induces MMP-2-activation in part by up-regulation of MT-MMP expression but has a more complicated mode of action, involving additional nontranscriptional effects, which apparently require protein synthesis.
Cancer Res 1995 Aug 01
PMID:Complex regulation of membrane-type matrix metalloproteinase expression and matrix metalloproteinase-2 activation by concanavalin A in MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells. 761 61

The gene expression of five matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and two tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) was studied in human gliomas in vivo and in vitro to evaluate their roles in glioma invasion. Simultaneous expression of one to four MMP genes and two TIMP genes was found in 17 surgical glioma specimens, and one MMP (gelatinase A) gene and two TIMP genes were simultaneously expressed in tissue of three brains. The concomitant overexpression of gelatinase A, gelatinase B, and occasional matrilysin genes was associated with the malignancy of gliomas and accompanied by overexpression of the TIMP-1 gene. In five human glioma cell lines, gelatinase A, TIMP-1, and TIMP-2 genes were constitutively expressed in alll cell lines: the matrilysin gene in three cell lines; the stromelysin gene in two cell lines; and the interstitial collagenase gene in one cell line. There was a clear difference in the expression of gelatinase B and stromelysin genes between surgical glioma specimens and glioma cell lines: the gelatinase B gene was not expressed constitutively in vitro but was overexpressed in vivo, whereas the stromelysin gene was not expressed in vivo but was expressed in some cell lines. To find the cause of that difference in vivo and in vitro, the transcriptional regulations of MMP and TIMP genes by tumor promoter, growth factors, or cytokines were studied in vitro. Interstitial collagenase, gelatinase B, stromelysin, and TIMP-1 genes were upregulated in many cell lines by phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) and in some cell lines by epidermal growth factor, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, or interleukin-1 beta. Transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF beta 1) upregulated gelatinase A and matrilysin genes in some cell lines, and there were no clear responses from any MMP and TIMP genes to interleukin-6. Thus, the transcriptional modulation of MMP genes by these growth factors and cytokines seemed insufficient to explain the difference in gelatinase B and stromelysin gene expressions in vivo and in vitro and was suggestive of the genetic alteration of glioma cells in vitro, the heterogeneous cell population in glioma tissues, or both. Furthermore, the in vitro invasion of glioma cells through Matrigel in response to PMA, TGF beta 1, or TIMP-1 was assessed by chemoinvasion assay. In most cell lines, invasion was significantly stimulated by PMA or TGF beta 1 but suppressed by TIMP-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Matrix metalloproteinases and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases in human gliomas. 761 76

Malignant glioma is a local invasive tumor in the central nervous system. The mRNA expression of five matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and two tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) was examined in surgical specimens of three brain tissues, two astrocytomas, four anaplastic astrocytomas and eleven glioblastomas, including recurrent one anaplastic astrocytoma and two glioblastomas. In the control brain tissues, mRNA expression was high for TIMP-2, low for gelatinase A and TIMP-1, and undetectable for gelatinase B, interstitial collagenase, stromelysin and matrilysin. Gelatinase B and TIMP-1 were concomitantly overexpressed in primary glioblastomas. In addition, the average expression level of gelatinase A increased 3.0 fold in astrocytomas and anaplastic astrocytomas and 6.0 fold in glioblastomas, compared to the brain tissues. Matrilysin was induced variably in more than half of the primary glioblastomas, and interstitial collagenase was slightly induced in some primary and recurrent glioblastomas. Stromelysin was characteristically not expressed in any gliomas, and the expression level of TIMP-2 did not significantly change in the gliomas. These results suggest that the concomitant increased expression of gelatinase A, gelatinase B and occasional matrilysin genes is associated with the malignancy of gliomas and accompanied by the increased expression of TIMP-1 gene.
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PMID:[Increased expression of gelatinases A and B, matrilysin and TIMP-1 genes in human malignant gliomas ]. 763 25

In this study, we investigated the correlation between the expression of MMP-2 and lymph node metastasis by analyzing 58 cases of primary lung cancer. Furthermore we studied expression of membrane-type MMP (MT-MMP) which was identified as an activator of MMP-2 and its relation to the activation ratio of MMP-2 in tumor tissues. Activated form of MMP-2 was detected specifically in the tumor tissues by zymography, and the activation ratio was significantly higher in 20 cases of the lymph node metastasis positive group than in other 38 cases. Additionally, northern blott analysis showed that MT-MMP was overexpressed in cancer tissues and that the expression of MT-MMP was closely related to the amount of activated form of MMP-2. These results indicated that MMP-2, which is activated by MT-MMP expressed on the surface of tumor cells, play a role in tumor metastasis by degrading surrounding basement membranes.
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PMID:[Expression of membrane-type matrix metalloproteinase (MT-MMP) and activation of MMP-2 in lung cancer]. 763 26

The gene expression of two type IV collagenases (matrix metalloproteinase [MMP]-2, a 72 kd type IV collagenase, and MMP-9, a 92 kd type IV collagenase) was investigated in carcinomas of the hypopharynx. We examined 27 cases operated on in our hospital by an in situ hybridization technique to detect their messenger RNA signals in cancer cells and surrounding stroma. Both signals were detected in all cancer nests and in stromal cells in the same specimens. Clinicopathologic studies showed a significant relationship between MMP-2 expression in the primary cancer and the outcome of treatment. Our present study suggests that hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma producing MMP-2 has a high potential for invasion and metastasis and a poor outcome. The analysis of MMPs will be useful for treatment planning in hypopharyngeal carcinoma and for prognosis.
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PMID:Analysis of expression of matrix metalloproteinases-2 and -9 in hypopharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma by in situ hybridization. 766 15


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