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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)
We have examined the correlation between matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) expression and metastatic properties of a low metastatic osteosarcoma cell line, osteosarcoma takase (OST), under stimulation by tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha). In vivo, OST cells exhibited significantly increased colonization in the lungs of nude mice in a dose-dependent manner when they were treated by TNF alpha prior to injection. In vitro, TNF alpha enhanced tumour cell invasion through the reconstituted basement membrane in a transwell chamber up to 2.5-fold. Gelatin zymography and sandwich enzyme immunoassays demonstrated marked production of MMP-9 [92-kDa gelatinase/type IV collagenase (gelatinase B)] but not MMP-2 [72-kDa gelatinase/type IV collagenase (gelatinase A)], MMP-3 (stromelysin-1) or MMP-7 (
matrilysin
). Motility of the tumour cells and adhesion to cultured endothelial cells were slightly increased by the TNF alpha treatment up to 1.6-fold and 1.4-fold, respectively, while the growth rate was decreased. These results suggest that upregulation of MMP-9 together with enhanced motility and endothelial adhesion contribute to the increased metastatic ability of OST cells induced by TNF alpha treatment.
...
PMID:Expression of matrix metalloproteinase 9 (92-kDa gelatinase/type IV collagenase) induced by tumour necrosis factor alpha correlates with metastatic ability in a human osteosarcoma cell line. 803 35
The expression of the metalloproteinase
matrilysin
in the human colon carcinoma cell lines SW480 and SW620 correlates with the ability of the SW620 cells to invade an artificial basement membrane in vitro and metastasize to the liver following injection into the cecum of nude mice in vivo. Transfection of either wild-type or activated forms of
matrilysin
into the SW480 cells, which do not express endogenous
matrilysin
, did not reproducibly increase in vitro invasion but increased the tumorigenicity of the cells when injected into the cecum of nude mice. Antisense reduction of
matrilysin
levels decreased the tumorigenicity of the SW620 cells and subsequent metastasis to the liver. These results suggest that
matrilysin
gene expression by colon adenocarcinoma cells is not sufficient for tumor invasion and metastasis but contributes to the tumorigenicity and progression of colorectal tumors.
...
PMID:Modulation of matrilysin levels in colon carcinoma cell lines affects tumorigenicity in vivo. 806 82
The metalloproteinase
matrilysin
is widely expressed in the epithelial tumor cells of malignant colorectal adenocarcinomas. Approximately 50% of benign adenomas also express low levels of
matrilysin
that is focally localized. The expression of stromelysin-1, stromelysin-3, and gelatinase A was observed in the stromal component of several carcinomas and was not present in adenomatous tissue. The expression of interstitial collagenase and gelatinase B was observed in occasional adenomas and carcinomas. Stromelysin-2 transcripts were not detectable in any of the samples examined. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 gene expression was widespread and was observed in both epithelial and stromal cells of adenomas and carcinomas. These results indicate that
matrilysin
gene expression is an early event in colorectal tumorigenesis and that the expression of stromelysin-1, stromelysin-3, and gelatinase A is primarily a late event. The observed gene expression patterns suggest that
matrilysin
may participate in early events in tumor progression and that multiple members of the metalloproteinase family may work in concert to facilitate late-stage tumor invasion and metastasis.
...
PMID:Expression and localization of matrix-degrading metalloproteinases during colorectal tumorigenesis. 806 80
Matrix metalloproteinases are a highly regulated family of enzymes, that together can degrade most components of the extracellular matrix. These proteins are active in normal and pathological processes involving tissue remodeling; however, their sites of synthesis and specific roles are poorly understood. Using in situ hybridization, we determined cellular distributions of matrix metalloproteinases and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1, an inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases, in endometrium during the reproductive cycle. The mRNAs for all the metalloproteinases were detected in menstrual endometrium, but with different tissue distributions. The mRNA for
matrilysin
was localized to epithelium, while the others were detected in stromal cells. Only the transcripts for the 72-kD gelatinase and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1 were detected throughout the cycle. Transcripts for stromelysin-2 and the 92-kD gelatinase were only detected in late secretory and menstrual endometrium, while those for
matrilysin
, the 72-kD gelatinase, and stromelysin-3 were also consistently detected in proliferative endometrium. These data indicate that matrix metalloproteinases are expressed in cell-type, tissue, and reproductive cycle-specific patterns, consistent with regulation by steroid hormones, and with specific roles in the complex tissue growth and remodeling processes occurring in the endometrium during the reproductive cycle.
...
PMID:Patterns of matrix metalloproteinase expression in cycling endometrium imply differential functions and regulation by steroid hormones. 808 80
Matrilysin
is shown to rapidly inactivate alpha 1PI, an inhibitor of elastase, by cleaving the Pro357-Met358 peptide bond of its reactive centre. The rate of inactivation of alpha 1PI by
matrilysin
is four times higher than stromelysin.
Matrilysin
cleaves oxidised alpha 1PI at the Phe352-Leu353 bond, whilst stromelysin cleaves oxidised alpha 1PI at the Met358-Ser359 bond. We conclude that
matrilysin
is a potent serpinase which could play a role in inflammatory tissue damage by proteolytically inactivating alpha 1PI.
...
PMID:Proteolysis of human native and oxidised alpha 1-proteinase inhibitor by matrilysin and stromelysin. 812 72
A process for semicontinuous production of
matrilysin
zymogen secreted from recombinant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells was developed. The zymogen was purified to apparent homogeneity by sequential ion-exchange and metal chelation chromatography. These processes were scaled-up to purify gram quantities of the zymogen. The N-terminus of the secreted zymogen from the recombinant cells was the same as the observed sequence of the zymogen from natural sources. Furthermore, activation and autocatalysis of the recombinant zymogen resulted in a form with an N-terminus identical to that of the corresponding native enzyme. The three C-terminal amino acids of both the recombinant zymogen and the corresponding smaller activated form were missing. Activated
matrilysin
was shown to have activity against a synthetic peptide substrate. The large quantities of
matrilysin
that can be produced and purified from the recombinant CHO cells will be useful in determination of the structure of
matrilysin
.
...
PMID:Production, purification, and characterization of human matrilysin (PUMP) from recombinant Chinese hamster ovary cells. 816 71
In this study, we have used high resolution gel-filtration chromatography and measurements of Ki to compare the capacity of full-length native stromelysin, C-terminal truncated stromelysin (Phe100-Pro273), and
matrilysin
(the only metalloproteinase spontaneously lacking a C-terminal hemopexin-like domain) to bind to the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP). While prostromelysin failed to bind TIMP, active stromelysin bound to the inhibitor avidly, exhibiting an affinity for TIMP (Ki = 8.3 x 10(-10) M) essentially identical to that of active interstitial collagenase as determined by competition experiments. C-terminal truncated stromelysin also formed a higher M(r) complex with TIMP which survived gel filtration. However, when truncated stromelysin was forced to compete with its full-length parent molecule for limiting amounts of TIMP, the full-length enzyme preferentially bound to the inhibitor. Indeed, binding studies indicated a Ki of 5.95 x 10(-9) M for the truncated variant's interaction with TIMP, only 14% as tight as that of full-length stromelysin. We also examined the interaction between TIMP and
matrilysin
, the only metalloproteinase which naturally lacks a C-terminal domain. Promatrilysin failed to bind the inhibitor. However, active
matrilysin
readily bound TIMP, forming a complex that resisted separation by gel filtration. When active
matrilysin
was forced to compete with truncated stromelysin for limiting amounts of TIMP, both enzymes appeared to complex the inhibitor with nearly equivalent efficacy. Indeed, active
matrilysin
exhibited a Ki for TIMP of 4.5 x 10(-9) M, essentially identical to that of truncated stromelysin. These data indicate that, as is true for collagenase, the C-terminal domain of stromelysin contributes significantly to its capacity to bind the physiologic inhibitor, TIMP. Furthermore, since stromelysin readily processes in vitro to a C-terminal truncated form, this enzyme species, as well as the full-length metalloproteinase
matrilysin
, may resist inhibition by TIMP in areas of active inflammation in vivo.
...
PMID:Contribution of the C-terminal domain of metalloproteinases to binding by tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases. C-terminal truncated stromelysin and matrilysin exhibit equally compromised binding affinities as compared to full-length stromelysin. 817 79
The activation of human progelatinase A by other matrix metalloproteinases was studied by following both the loss of its N-terminal propeptide and the accompanying increase in the rate of hydrolysis of a synthetic substrate. Activated stromelysin 1 was unable to cause any activation of progelatinase A beyond that slowly occurring by autolysis, but an 8 h incubation with activated
matrilysin
was able to produce 64% of the activity generated by incubation with (4-aminophenylmercuric)acetate (APMA). Wild-type progelatinase A and a mutant proenzyme that cannot become active were both cleaved by
matrilysin
to a lower molecular weight species that had lost the propeptide. This shows that
matrilysin
activates progelatinase A by removing the propeptide in a process that does not require any autolytic cleavages.
...
PMID:Human progelatinase A can be activated by matrilysin. 819 91
The actions of recombinant human fibroblast collagenase (MMP1), purified polymorphonuclear leucocyte collagenase (MMP8) and their N-terminal catalytic domain fragments against cartilage aggrecan and an aggrecan G1-G2 fragment have been investigated in vitro. After activation with recombinant human stromelysin and typsin, both collagenases were able to degrade human and porcine aggrecans to a similar extent. An N-terminal G1-G2 fragment (150 kDa) was used to identify specific cleavage sites occurring within the proteinase-sensitive interglobular domain between G1 and G2. Two specific sites were found; one at an Asn341-Phe342 bond and another at Asp441-Leu442 (human sequence). This specificity of the collagenases for aggrecan G1-G2 was identical with that of the truncated metalloproteinase
matrilysin
(MMP7), but different from those of stromelysin (MMP3) and the gelatinases (MMP2 or gelatinase A; MMP9 or gelatinase B) which cleave at the Asn-Phe site, but not the Asp-Leu site. In addition, collagenase catalytic fragments lacking C-terminal hemopexin-like domains were tested and shown to exhibit the same specificities for the G1-G2 fragment as the full-length enzymes. Thus the specificity of the collagenases for cartilage aggrecan was not influenced by the presence or absence of the C-terminal domain. Together with our previous findings, the results show that stromelysin-1,
matrilysin
, gelatinases A and B and fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases cleave at a common, preferred site in the aggrecan interglobular domain, and additionally that both fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases cleave at a second site in the interglobular domain that is not available to stromelysin or gelatinases.
...
PMID:Fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases cleave at two sites in the cartilage aggrecan interglobular domain. 821 28
The cleavage of recombinant mouse nidogen in its native form was examined with granule-stored proteases (leucocyte elastase, mast-cell chymase), blood proteases (thrombin, plasmin, kallikrein), matrix metalloproteinases (stromelysin,
matrilysin
, collagenases) and, for comparison, with trypsin and the endoproteinase Glu-C. More than 50 major cleavage sites were identified by Edman degradation of several large fragments and smaller peptides. The data show an almost exclusive localization of protease-sensitive sites to the flexible segment, connecting the N-terminal globular domains G1 and G2, and within the C-terminal, laminin-binding domain G3. Domains G1, G2 and the rod-like segment were much more stable against proteolysis. Kinetic analysis indicated a fast cleavage of several different sites in the link region followed by destruction of G3 but this was to some extent variable depending on the particular protease. Leucocyte elastase was identified as the most active protease in the cleavage of nidogen whilst stromelysin,
matrilysin
, plasmin and kallikrein were of distinctly lower activity. No cleavage could be detected with interstitial collagenase and gelatinase A. The peptide analyses also allowed the location of two disulfide bridges within the G3 domain. Complex formation between nidogen and laminin fragments caused some protection against cleavage by thrombin, leucocyte elastase and stromelysin particularly in domain G3. The data indicate a relatively uniform cleavage pattern of nidogen which may be relevant in the context of protein/ligand-binding activities associated with domains G2 and G3. The proteolytic processes involved in remodelling and the cellular penetration of basement membranes could therefore be essential for the modulation of the mediator function of nidogen.
...
PMID:Sites of nidogen cleavage by proteases involved in tissue homeostasis and remodelling. 822 43
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