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Query: EC:3.4.24.23 (
MMP
)
4,246
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Production of
vascular endothelial growth factor
(
VEGF
) by cancer cells at invasive and metastatic sites is an important aspect of tumor angiogenesis. Although known primarily as a mitogen and a vascular permeability factor (VPF) for endothelial cells,
VEGF
/VPF has been proposed to induce the expression of procoagulant factors in endothelial cells. In this study, we have explored the ramifications of
VEGF
induction of tissue factor (TF) in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) and subsequent activation of progelatinase A. Within 3 hr of incubation with
VEGF
/VPF, endothelial cells accelerate TF generation as measured using chromogenic substrate assays for coagulation factors Xa and thrombin. Incubation of
VEGF
/VPF-pre-treated cells with prothrombin and factors X, Va, and VIIa at 37 degrees C and subsequent generation of thrombin resulted in activation of secreted endothelial progelatinase A as demonstrated by gelatin zymography. Anti-thrombin III or antibodies to TF inhibited thrombin generation and progelatinase A activation.
VEGF
/VPF also directly increased HUVEC secretion of interstitial collagenase, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP-1) and, to a lesser extent, gelatinase A. The effect of thrombin on endothelial proliferation in serum-free media was examined. Thrombin was a growth factor for HUVECs at a lower dose than that required for progelatinase A activation. Whereas TIMP-2 abrogated thrombin-induced progelatinase A activation, it had no significant effect on thrombin-induced endothelial cell growth. We propose that an early step in tumor angiogenesis involves
VEGF
-induced thrombin generation and increased
MMP
production with subsequent activation of endothelial progelatinase A and degradation of the underlying basement membrane.
...
PMID:Vascular endothelial growth factor induces tissue factor and matrix metalloproteinase production in endothelial cells: conversion of prothrombin to thrombin results in progelatinase A activation and cell proliferation. 949 49
Dietary genistein, a natural flavone compound found in soy, has been proposed to be responsible for the low rate of breast cancer in Asian women. The cellular mechanisms of genistein's chemopreventive effects in vio have been largely unexplored. In our previous studies, we found that genistein exerted pronounced antiproliferative effects on both estrogen receptor-positive and -negative human breast carcinoma cells through G2-M arrest, induction of p21WAF1/CIP1 expression, and apoptosis. Because chemopreventive effects need not be limited to antiproliferation, we decided to examine whether genistein exerted other suppressive effects on breast carcinoma progression. Genistein inhibited invasion in vitro of MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells. This inhibition was characterized by down-regulation of
MMP
(matrix metalloproteinase)-9 and up-regulation of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1, the former of which was transcriptionally regulated at activation protein-1 sites in the MMP-9 promoter. Genistein's in vitro effects on MMP-9 and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 were also demonstrated in in vivo studies in nude mouse xenografts of MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7 cells. In these xenograft studies, genistein inhibited tumor growth, stimulated apoptosis, and upregulated p21WAF1/CIP1 expression. In the MDA-MB-231 xenograft, genistein also inhibited angiogenesis by decreasing vessel density and decreasing the levels of
vascular endothelial growth factor
and transforming growth factor-beta1. These in vitro and in vivo studies demonstrate that genistein exerts multiple suppressive effects on breast carcinoma cells, suggesting that its mechanism of chemoprevention is pleiotropic.
...
PMID:Genistein exerts multiple suppressive effects on human breast carcinoma cells. 980 90
We have devised a new drug screening assay to discover anti-cancer drugs which inhibit Ras-mediated cellular signals, by utilizing a Ras-responsive element (RRE)-driven reporter gene system. We found that hypothemycin, an anti-bacterial, reduces RRE-dependent transcription. Treatment of tumor cells with hypothemycin resulted in reduced expression of Ras-inducible genes, including
MMP
(matrix metalloproteinase)-1, MMP-9, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), and
vascular endothelial growth factor
(
VEGF
), but not that of the constitutively expressed gene, MMP-2. The results of zymography demonstrated that hypothemycin reduced the production of MMP-9 and MMP-3, another Ras-inducible
MMP
, in the culture medium. Hypothemycin selectively inhibits anchorage-independent growth of Ras-transformed cells in comparison with anchorage-dependent growth. These findings suggest that hypothemycin inhibits Ras-mediated cellular signaling. Daily treatment of tumor-bearing mice with hypothemycin resulted in significant inhibition of tumor growth. Since MMP-1, MMP-3 and MMP-9 play important roles in tumor invasion and TGF-beta and
VEGF
are involved in tumor angiogenesis, hypothemycin is considered to be an example of a new class of antitumor drugs, whose antitumor efficacy can be at least partly attributed to inhibition of Ras-inducible genes.
...
PMID:Antitumor efficacy of hypothemycin, a new Ras-signaling inhibitor. 1059 43
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.
...
PMID:New thiol and sulfodiimine metalloproteinase inhibitors and their effect on human microvascular endothelial cell growth. 1092 54
Several reports indicate that
vascular endothelial growth factor
(
VEGF
) expression is increased in endometrial glands and stroma during the menstrual phase in the human endometrium. Here we report that
VEGF
receptor type 2 (KDR), normally expressed only in the vascular endothelium, was dramatically up-regulated in the stromal cells of the superficial endometrial zones during the premenstrual phase in both human and macaque endometrium. This increase was detectable by Northern analysis, in situ hybridization, and immunocytochemistry and was cell specific, zone specific, cycle phase specific, and
VEGF
receptor type specific. That is, it only occurred during the premenstrual/menstrual phase, did not occur in glandular epithelium, endothelium, or stromal cells of the deepest endometrial zones, and was not observed for
VEGF
receptor type 1. The upregulation of stromal KDR was induced by progesterone (P) withdrawal in both women and macaques, and adding back P 24 h after P withdrawal in macaques blocked stromal, but not vascular, endothelial KDR expression. Promatrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) was coordinately up-regulated in the same stromal cell population by P withdrawal. Because of reports that
VEGF
can enhance
MMP
expression, we hypothesize that
VEGF
-KDR interactions may influence
MMP
expression in the superficial zones of the primate endometrium during the premenstrual phase, and that these interactions play a role in the induction of menstruation.
...
PMID:Progesterone withdrawal up-regulates vascular endothelial growth factor receptor type 2 in the superficial zone stroma of the human and macaque endometrium: potential relevance to menstruation. 1099 47
During carcinogenesis of pancreatic islets in transgenic mice, an angiogenic switch activates the quiescent vasculature. Paradoxically,
vascular endothelial growth factor
(
VEGF
) and its receptors are expressed constitutively. Nevertheless, a synthetic inhibitor (SU5416) of
VEGF
signalling impairs angiogenic switching and tumour growth. Two metalloproteinases, MMP-2/gelatinase-A and MMP-9/gelatinase-B, are upregulated in angiogenic lesions. MMP-9 can render normal islets angiogenic, releasing
VEGF
.
MMP
inhibitors reduce angiogenic switching, and tumour number and growth, as does genetic ablation of MMP-9. Absence of MMP-2 does not impair induction of angiogenesis, but retards tumour growth, whereas lack of urokinase has no effect. Our results show that MMP-9 is a component of the angiogenic switch.
...
PMID:Matrix metalloproteinase-9 triggers the angiogenic switch during carcinogenesis. 1102 65
Endothelial cells expose receptors for
vascular endothelial growth factor
/vascular permeability factor (VEGF/
VPF
) at the abluminal, basal surface that work as basic regulators of tumor-induced angiogenesis. Their specific localization makes them susceptible to the activity of tumor-released stimulatory factors, like VEGF/
VPF
, which induce proliferation of the endothelial cell toward the extracellular matrix. At the same time, VEGF/
VPF
stimulates endothelial cells to expose tissue factor (TF), the high-affinity transmembrane receptor and cofactor for cellular initiation of the plasma coagulation protease cascades through the extrinsic pathway, so generating thrombin. Thrombin exerts a number of activities: it forms an extracellular fibrin barrier from the VEGF/
VPF
-dependent fibrinogen extravasation; it activates progelatinase-A (pro-MMP-2), which destroys the basal membrane, allowing proliferation of endothelial cells (ECs) in the novel tumoral fibrin matrix; finally, it induces EC proliferation, potentiating the VEGF effect. Another important factor exposed at the abluminal endothelial cell surface is membrane type 1 matrix metalloproteinase (MT1-MMP), a membrane-bound metalloproteinase, which also activates progelatinase-A, allowing an alternative pathway to that of thrombin to destroy the basal membrane. In addition, we will see that MT1-
MMP
is also engaged in a direct, cell-associated fibrinolytic activity, essential for tubulogenesis of the novel outsprouting capillary.
...
PMID:Molecular polarity in endothelial cells and tumor-induced angiogenesis. 1106 39
Wound healing is a complex process involving the interactions of many different cell types, matrix components and biological factors, including proteinases and cytokines. This study compared the levels of proteinases (matrix metalloproteinases and plasminogen activators), proteinase inhibitors (tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases and plasminogen activator inhibitors), inflammatory cytokines and growth factors in acute wound fluid samples collected from the surgical drains of elective breast (n = 24) and colorectal (n = 26) patients on the first postoperative day. Gelatin zymography was used to determine matrix metalloproteinase-2 and -9 levels, quenched fluorescence substrate hydrolysis was applied for total
MMP
activity and enzyme-linked immunoassays were used to quantitate other factors. Colorectal wound fluid samples showed significantly (p < 0.05) greater levels of the matrix metalloproteinases (MMP-1, 2, 3, and 9), tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1, urokinase plasminogen activator receptor and the inflammatory cytokines (interleukin-1beta, -6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha); e.g., matrix metalloproteinase-3 colon; median 275 (range 11-2.530) ng/ml; breast; 530-400. However, tissue plasminogen activator and growth factor levels (epidermal growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, basic fibroblast growth factor, transforming growth factor-beta1) were significantly greater in breast samples; e.g., epidermal growth factor breast 468 (103-1, 444) pg/ml; colon 57(1-573). There was no difference in the levels of urokinase type plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 and -2, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases -2 or
vascular endothelial growth factor
. Acute wound fluid from different surgical wounds showed different profiles of proteinases, proteinase inhibitors, and cytokines. This may lead to differences in the rate of tissue remodeling and therefore healing in these two wounds in vivo.
...
PMID:Proteinases, their inhibitors, and cytokine profiles in acute wound fluid. 1111 51
We examined the expression level of several genes that regulate distinct steps of metastasis in 55 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded, archival specimens of primary human ovarian carcinoma from patients undergoing curative surgery. The expression of
vascular endothelial growth factor
/vascular permeability factor (VEGF/
VPF
), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), E-cadherin, type IV collagenase, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP-2 and MMP-9), and interleukin 8 (IL-8) was examined by a colorimetric in situ mRNA hybridization technique. The expression level of E-cadherin, MMP-2, MMP-9, VEGF, and IL-8 mRNA correlated with disease stages. The ratio of type IV collagenase expression (mean of the expression of MMP-2 and MMP-9) to E-cadherin expression (
MMP
:E-cadherin ratio) increased with increasing stage of disease (p<0.0001). Death rates significantly increased with high
MMP
:E-cadherin ratio (p=0.0005). Multivariate analysis of overall survival showed that the
MMP
:E-cadherin ratio was a significant independent prognostic factor, even after adjustment for known prognostic factors, such as histology, stage, and age.
...
PMID:Expression of metastasis-related genes in human epithelial ovarian tumors. 1174 36
We studied the promigratory effect of angiotensin II (ANG II) on cultured bovine retinal microvascular pericytes. ANG II stimulated migration of pericytes by 86% at 10(-8) M, but this effect was lost at 10(-4) M. Migratory responses were inhibited by the ANG II type 1 (AT(1)) receptor antagonist losartan but not by PD-123319, an AT(2) antagonist. Addition of PD-123319 to the 10(-4) M ANG II dose restored migratory responses. The promigratory effect of ANG II (10(-7) M) was reduced by 59% in absence of gradient. Although ANG II augmented the latent matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) activity of the pericyte by 35%, it also doubled tissue inhibitors of MMPs. ANG II-induced migration was not altered by a broad-spectrum
MMP
inhibitor (GM6001); it was inhibited by ~50% by antibodies against transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta(1/2/3) and was abolished by antibodies against platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-BB. We conclude that ANG II induces chemotactic responses on retinal microvascular pericytes acting through the AT(1) receptor. This effect is opposed by the AT(2) receptor. ANG II-induced chemotaxis is mediated by PDGF-BB and involves TGF-beta, but it is independent of
MMP
activity. It is also independent of
vascular endothelial growth factor
(
VEGF
) because
VEGF
did not stimulate pericyte migration. ANG II can contribute to the regulation of retinal neovascularization by stimulating pericyte migration.
...
PMID:Angiotensin II stimulates migration of retinal microvascular pericytes: involvement of TGF-beta and PDGF-BB. 1178 25
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