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)

Regulation in expression and activation of proteinases is one of the most important mechanisms in organ morphogenesis. In this study, we investigated the expression of MMPs in primary hepatocytes and their roles in liver remodeling. A hepatocyte proliferation initiating cytokine, TNFalpha, induced MMP-9 expression in these cells while the expression of MMP-2 did not change by zymography analysis. Interestingly, both the induced MMP-9 expression and hepatocyte proliferation by TNFalpha were synergistically enhanced by HGF in vitro. The increased proliferation was suppressed by MMP inhibitor TIMP-1, suggesting that cytokine-induced MMP regulates proliferation. The increased expression of MMP-9 by the cytokines was inhibited by cytochalasin D or colchicine but not by PI3 kinase inhibitor wortmannin. In addition, co-stimulation by TNFalpha and HGF of spheroidal hepatocytes cultured in 3-dimensional collagen gel drastically induced morphological changes by cell extension and migration in the gel, which was in parallel with the induced expression of MMP-9 and was inhibited by TIMP-1 and -2. The MMP activity was also detected in vivo in the regenerating liver after partial hepatectomy by in situ zymography. These results suggest the roles of MMPs produced by parenchymal cells in liver remodeling.
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PMID:Regulation and significance of hepatocyte-derived matrix metalloproteinases in liver remodeling. 1086 Aug 14

To assess the contribution of the plasmin/matrix metalloproteinase cascade in lattices retraction, human gingival fibroblast-populated collagen lattices were supplemented with plasminogen. The rate of lattice retraction was enhanced by addition of plasminogen. This effect was concomitant to plasmin generation, prostromelysin-1 and procollagenase activation. Plasminogen-mediated initiation of that proteolytic cascade was accompanied by conspicuous changes in cell morphology and collagen fibers organization. At day 1 of culture fibroblasts shifted from a rounded (control) to an elongated (in presence of plgn) shape. At the latest stage of retraction, intense vacuolization around fibroblasts was noticed in plgn-supplemented lattices which paralleled the increased collagen degradation. Plgn-enhancing influence on the initial phase of lattice retraction could be totally annihilated by either aprotinin or Batimastat. Those data emphasize the crucial importance of the plasmin-MMP proteolytic cascade in granulation tissue retraction in a healing wound.
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PMID:Contribution of the plasmin/matrix metalloproteinase cascade to the retraction of human fibroblast populated collagen lattices. 1086 Aug 66

The substrate specificity of human collagenase 3 (MMP-13), a member of the matrix metalloproteinase family, is investigated using a phage-displayed random hexapeptide library containing 2 x 10(8) independent recombinants. A total of 35 phage clones that express a peptide sequence that can be hydrolyzed by the recombinant catalytic domain of human collagenase 3 are identified. The translated DNA sequence of these clones reveals highly conserved putative P1, P2, P3 and P1', P2', and P3' subsites of the peptide substrates. Kinetic analysis of synthetic peptide substrates made from human collagenase 3 selected phage clones reveals that some of the substrates are highly active and selective. The most active substrate, 2, 4-dinitrophenyl-GPLGMRGL-NH(2) (CP), has a k(cat)/K(m) value of 4.22 x 10(6) m(-)(1) s(-)(1) for hydrolysis by collagenase 3. CP was synthesized as a consensus sequence deduced from the preferred subsites of the aligned 35 phage clones. Peptide substrate CP is 1300-, 11-, and 820-fold selective for human collagenase 3 over the MMPs stromelysin-1, gelatinase B, and collagenase 1, respectively. In addition, cleavage of CP is 37-fold faster than peptide NF derived from the major MMP-processing site in aggrecan. Phage display screening also selected five substrate sequences that share sequence homology with a major MMP cleavage sequence in aggrecan and seven substrate sequences that share sequence homology with the primary collagenase cleavage site of human type II collagen. In addition, putative cleavage sites similar to the consensus sequence are found in human type IV collagen. These findings support previous observations that human collagenase 3 can degrade aggrecan, type II and type IV collagens.
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PMID:Substrate specificity of human collagenase 3 assessed using a phage-displayed peptide library. 1090 30

Cell migration is an essential process in physiological and pathological conditions such as wound healing and tumor invasion. This phenomenon involves cell adhesion on the extracellular matrix mediated by integrins, and cell detachment promoted in part by metalloproteinases (MMPs). In the present study, the migration of two HaCaT-ras clones (metastatic or not), was compared with HaCaT cells, and normal human primary cultured keratinocytes. Using colloidal gold migration assay, the migration index on type I and type IV collagen was similar for primary cultured keratinocytes and HaCaT, whereas it was markedly higher for the HaCaT-ras clones. High motility of ras-transfected cells was confirmed from an in vitro wound healing assay. It was not correlated with changes in integrin expression or related to a different adhesion on extracellular matrix. The Marismastat (BB-2516), a MMP inhibitor, inhibited in a dose-dependent effect the migration in both assays, demonstrating the important role of MMPs in the migration process. Under our experimental conditions, MMP-1 activity was not detected in HaCaT and MMP-9 activity was secreted by these cells only after their stimulation by EGF. Here, MMP-2 was the major gelatinolytic activity secreted by all the cells and its secretion was markedly higher for HaCaT-nis clones compared with HaCaT. In addition, Western blotting results confirmed a higher expression of MMP-2 associated with a lower expression of TIMP-2 in HaCaT-ras compared with HaCaT. These results suggest that Ha-ras oncogene could be a stimulating factor of migration and might modified the balance between MMP-2 and TIMP-2 in keratinocyte cell lines.
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PMID:Ras-transfection up-regulated HaCaT cell migration: inhibition by Marimastat. 1091 13

Renal remodelling in hyperinsulinic/insulinopenic states is mediated by glucotoxicity, endothelial dysfunction and vascular and nephron collagen turnover. Hypertensive and renal links are renewed by renoprotective interventions of renin-angiotensin. Vasoactive peptide processing and vascular collagen deposition are under the tight control of two zinc metalloproteinase families that regulate vascular tone and trophicity: gluzincins (or vasopeptidases) are convertases of angiotensins, endothelins or atrial natriuretic factors; and metzincins or matrix metalloproteases (MMP, matrixins)] regulate vascular type IV collagen basement membrane proteolysis. Association of natural tissue inhibitors of MMPs, pharmacological inhibitors of vasopeptidases [either conventional (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors) or innovative (omapatrilat)], together with synthetic MMP inhibitors, are currently screened to counteract vascular remodelling and renal scarring. Our studies focused on the 72 kDa (MMP-2) and 92 kDa (MMP-9) matrixin gelatinases and tissue inhibitors involved in basement membrane degradation and rebuilding. Three complementary settings were developed, allowing evaluations from basic to clinical stages. A leucocyte-endothelial transmigration model was designed for transcription and addressing of enzymes and inhibitors, in situ matrix degradation, and blockading by metalloprotease inhibitors (captopril). Insulin-resistant fructose-fed rats showed heavy proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis involving angiotensin II-dependent changes in renal gelatinases and inhibitors. Urinary gelatinolytic profiles from Type 2 diabetic patients with overt nephropathy were compared with those of normal first-degree relatives and age-matched healthy controls. Physiologically, MMP-9 was the primary urinary gelatinolytic enzyme. In Type 2 diabetic proteinuric patients, MMP-9 and MMP-2 releases were significantly increased in the absence of renin-angiotensin blockade, while first-degree relatives showed reduced gelatinase levels suggestive of a genetic control of renal matrix regulation prior to potential glycaemic dysregulation. These preliminary data suggest that local MMP/TIMP imbalance is involved in diabetic renal remodelling. Further studies are needed to define the redundancies and specificities of vasopeptidase and MMP inhibitors, differentiate the antihypertensive effect from target-organ protection, screen for innovative pharmacological compounds, and validate simple, efficient biological markers of renal fibrosis progression and the effect of anti-fibrotic therapeutic interventions.
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PMID:Role of metalloproteases and inhibitors in the occurrence and progression of diabetic renal lesions. 1092 70

Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs, matrixins) are a family of homologous zinc endopeptidases that may play a very important role in many physiological and pathological processes, e.g., the initiation of angiogenesis. Two new matrixin inhibitors were synthesized and characterized. A thiol inhibitor MAG-283 had IC(50) values of 480, 3, 280, 14, 1.1, and 2.3 nM against human interstitial collagenase (MMP-1), gelatinase A (MMP-2), stromelysin (MMP-3), matrilysin (MMP-7), neutrophil collagenase (MMP-8), and gelatinase B (MMP-9), respectively. A sulfodiimine inhibitor YLL-224 had IC(50) values of 180, 63, 4500, 210, 5.9, and 44 nM against MMP-1, -2, -3, -7, -8, and -9, respectively. Human skin microvascular endothelial cells were treated with these two compounds in culture. These inhibitors at very low micromolar concentrations suppressed proliferation of the endothelial cells stimulated by acidic fibroblast growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor. They also partially blocked cell invasion through type IV collagen. These results suggested a correlation between the anti-metalloenzyme activity and the effects of these inhibitors on the growth and invasion of endothelial cells.
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PMID:New thiol and sulfodiimine metalloproteinase inhibitors and their effect on human microvascular endothelial cell growth. 1092 54

We have identified a human placenta cDNA coding for a new member of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family. The isolated cDNA encodes a polypeptide of 261 amino acids, the smallest MMP identified to date, which contains several structural features of MMPs including the signal sequence, the prodomain involved in enzyme latency, and the catalytic domain with the zinc-binding site. However, it lacks the hinge region and hemopexin-domain present in most MMPs. According to these structural characteristics, the human MMP described herein has been called matrilysin-2 (MMP-26), because it exclusively shares with matrilysin this minimal domain organization required for secretion, latency, and activity. The amino acid sequence of matrilysin-2 also contains a threonine residue adjacent to the Zn-binding site that has been defined as a specific feature of matrilysin. Chromosomal location of the matrilysin-2 gene showed that it maps to the short arm of chromosome 11, a location distinct to that of other MMP genes. Matrilysin-2 was expressed in Escherichia coli, and, after purification and refolding, the recombinant protein was found to degrade synthetic substrates commonly used for assaying MMPs. Furthermore, this protein hydrolyzed type IV collagen, fibronectin, fibrinogen, and gelatin, which indicated that matrilysin-2 is a potent enzyme with a wide substrate specificity. In addition, it was found that matrilysin-2 is able to activate progelatinase B. Proteolytic activity of matrilysin-2 against all of these substrates was abolished by synthetic inhibitors and by tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases. Expression analysis revealed that matrilysin-2 is detected not only in placenta and uterus but is widely expressed in malignant tumors from different sources as well as in diverse tumor cell lines. These data together with its broad spectrum of proteolytic activity, suggest that matrilysin-2 may play a role in some of the tissue-remodeling events associated with tumor progression.
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PMID:Matrilysin-2, a new matrix metalloproteinase expressed in human tumors and showing the minimal domain organization required for secretion, latency, and activity. 1098 80

The collagen alterations in the vascular wall remodeled by hemodynamic change were investigated by electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry. The left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) without a myocardial bridge (MB) showed both lower matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) expression and a smaller extent of spiraled collagen (SC) distribution than the LAD wall with MB, in which the intima was influenced by high shear stress. In the wall of the varicose great saphenous vein (GSV) the expression of MMP-1 was lower, while the expression of prolyl 4-hydroxylase was higher, than in the normal GSV. The extent of SC distribution in the intima and media of the varicose GSV was smaller than that in the normal GSV. An analogous difference in results was demonstrated between the portal vein (PV) of patients with liver cirrhosis and normal PV. However, the levels of expression of MMP-2, MMP-9 and tissue inhibitors of MMP (TIMPs) in these pathologic vessels were not different from those in the corresponding normal vessels. The results indicate that hemodynamic forces such as shear stress and increased intravascular blood pressure contribute to the collagen alterations in the vascular wall, which may lead to vascular wall remodeling.
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PMID:Collagen alteration in vascular remodeling by hemodynamic factors. 1099 74

We have isolated a novel 75-kDa gelatinase from a chicken macrophage cell line, HD11. Biochemical and immunological characterization of the purified enzyme demonstrated that it is distinct from the chicken 72-kDa gelatinase A (MMP-2). The enzyme is capable of specific gelatin binding and rapid gelatin cleavage. Incubation with an organomercurial compound (p-aminophenylmercuric acetate) induces proteolytic processing and activation of this enzyme, and the resultant gelatinolytic activity is sensitive to both zinc chelators and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases. A full-length cDNA for the enzyme has been cloned, and sequence analysis demonstrated that the enzyme possesses the characteristic multidomain structure of an MMP gelatinase including a cysteine switch prodomain, three fibronectin type II repeats, a catalytic zinc binding region, and a hemopexin-like domain. The 75-kDa gelatinase is produced by phorbol ester-treated chicken bone marrow cells, monocytes, and polymorphonuclear leukocytes, cell types that charac- teristically produce the 92-kDa mammalian gelatinase B (MMP-9). The absence of a 90-110-kDa gelatinase in these cell types indicates that the 75-kDa gelatinase is likely the avian counterpart of gelatinase B. However, the protein is only 59% identical to human gelatinase B, whereas all previously cloned chicken MMP homologues are 75-90% identical to their human counterparts. In addition, the new 75-kDa chicken gelatinase lacks the type V collagen domain that is found in all mammalian gelatinase Bs. Furthermore, the secreted enzyme appears structurally distinct from known gelatinase Bs and the activated enzyme can cleave fibronectin, which is not a substrate for mammalian gelatinase B. Thus the results of this study indicate that a second MMP gelatinase exists in chickens, and although it is MMP-9/gelatinase B-like in its overall domain structure and expression pattern, it appears to be biochemically divergent from mammalian gelatinase B.
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PMID:The isolation, characterization, and molecular cloning of a 75-kDa gelatinase B-like enzyme, a member of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family. An avian enzyme that is MMP-9-like in its cell expression pattern but diverges from mammalian gelatinase B in sequence and biochemical properties. 1101 Sep 69

MMP activity with disruption of structural collagen has been implicated in the pathophysiology of dilated cardiomyopathy. To examine the role of this enzyme in cardiac function, a transgenic mouse was created that constitutively expressed human collagenase (MMP-1) in the heart. At 6 months of age, these animals demonstrated compensatory myocyte hypertrophy with an increase in the cardiac collagen concentration due to elevated transcription of type III collagen. Chronic myocardial expression of MMP-1 produced loss of cardiac interstitial collagen coincident with a marked deterioration of systolic and diastolic function at 12 months of age. This is the first animal model demonstrating that direct disruption of the extracellular matrix in the heart reproduces the changes observed in the progression of human heart failure.
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PMID:Disruption of the myocardial extracellular matrix leads to cardiac dysfunction. 1101 69


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