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)

Matrilysin (PUMP, MMP-7) is a member of the metalloprotease gene family, whose constituents are responsible for the remodeling of extracellular matrix. The matrilysin protein is a 28-kDa zymogen possessing catalytic activities against a broad range of extracellular matrix substrates including proteoglycans, gelatin, fibronectin, laminin, and elastin. To gain insights into the biological expression of matrilysin in human cell types, we generated a monospecific, polyclonal antibody against a 16-amino acid sequence derived from its catalytic domain, a region which lacked significant homology with other matrix metalloenzymes. We found this antibody capable of precipitating a 28-kDa protein from the conditioned media of human bone marrow-derived promonocytes and human peripheral blood monocytes cultivated in vitro. Promonocyte matrilysin was rapidly converted to a 19-kDa form by organomercurial activation. While matrilysin was constitutively synthesized by bone marrow-derived promonocytes, its secretion was markedly up-regulated by the mononuclear phagocyte activator, lipopolysaccharide. Furthermore, despite its expression in monocyte precursors, blood monocytes, and monocyte-derived macrophages, matrilysin was not synthesized by human alveolar macrophages under any tested condition. In situ hybridization studies with matrilysin cRNA confirmed the presence of specific mRNA in both human promonocytes and monocytes. Moreover, a marked increase in hybridizable mRNA was observed with lipopolysaccharide treatment suggesting that matrilysin synthesis is pretranslationally regulated. In summary, this represents the first report documenting constitutive and regulated synthesis of matrilysin by a normal human cell type and suggests that matrilysin is expressed as a significant secreted product of mononuclear phagocytes at an intermediate stage of cellular differentiation.
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PMID:The matrix metalloprotease matrilysin (PUMP) is expressed in developing human mononuclear phagocytes. 137 84

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

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

A small metalloproteinase that digests Azocoll was found in the uterus of the rat. Its activity increased to high levels during the postpartum period in parallel with the breakdown of the extracellular matrix exclusive of collagen (Sellers, A., and Woessner, J.F., Jr. (1980) Biochem. J. 189, 521-531). This enzyme has now been purified almost 7,000-fold to homogeneity from 12 g of tissue using molecular sieve chromatography, blue sepharose chromatography, and zinc-chelate chromatography. Gel electrophoresis with sodium dodecyl sulfate and dithiothreitol gives Mr = 28,000 for the latent form of the enzyme and Mr = 19,000 for the active form that arises spontaneously or by treatment with aminophenylmercuric acetate. The enzyme digests components of the extracellular matrix including gelatins of types I, III, IV, and V, fibronectin, and proteoglycan. It digests the alpha 2(I) chain of gelatin in preference to the alpha 1(I) chain and cleaves dinitrophenyl-Pro-Leu-Gly-Ile-Ala-Gly-Pro-D-Arg. It cleaves the B chain of insulin at two points: Ala14-Leu15 and Tyr16-Leu17. It has no action on collagens of types I, III, IV, or V at 26 degrees C and no action on elastin or phenylazo-Pro-Leu-Gly-Pro-D-Arg. The pH optimum is at pH 7 and the pI at 5.9. The enzyme requires zinc and calcium ions for activity; cobalt and strontium can partially replace these metal ions. The enzyme is not inhibited by low levels of phosphoramidon or Zincov. Its properties clearly distinguish it from collagenase, gelatinase (matrix metalloproteinase 2), and stromelysin (matrix metalloproteinase 3); it therefore constitutes a further member of the family of extracellular matrix metalloendopeptidases. The name matrix metalloproteinase 7 is proposed.
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PMID:Purification and properties of a small latent matrix metalloproteinase of the rat uterus. 318 22

Rabbit synovial fibroblasts (RSF) express basal levels of the metalloproteinases (MMP) collagenase, stromelysin-1 and 92-kD gelatinase when plated on intact fibronectin (FN), but elevated levels when plated on either the central RGD-containing cell-binding region of FN (120FN) or antibody against the alpha 5 beta 1 integrin, suggesting that domains outside 120FN may suppress the induction of MMP (Werb, Z., P. M. Tremble, O. Behrendtsen, E. Crowley, and C.H. Damsky. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 109:877-889). We therefore attempted to reconstitute the basal signaling of intact FN by plating RSF on 120FN together with domains of FN outside this region. Large COOH-terminal fragments containing both the heparin-binding and HICS domains suppressed MMP when combined with 120FN. To map the active sequences, peptides from this region and larger fragments that did, or did not, include the CS-1 portion of IIICS were tested. Only CS-1 peptide, or larger fragments containing CS-1, suppressed MMP expression induced by 120FN. In contrast, peptide V from the heparin-binding region, shown previously to stimulate focal contact formation, further enhanced MMP expression by RSF when present on the substrate with 120FN. RSF expressed alpha 4 beta 1 integrin, the receptor for CS-1, and the anti-alpha 4 mAb blocked the ability of CS-1 to suppress MMP induction by 120FN. These results show that signals modulating MMP expression and focal contact assembly are regulated independently, and that cooperative signaling by alpha 5 beta 1 and alpha 4 beta 1 integrins plays a dominant role in regulating expression of these extracellular matrix-remodeling genes in response to FN. This work demonstrates directly the modular way in which information in the extracellular matrix is detected and processed by cell surface receptors.
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PMID:Cooperative signaling by alpha 5 beta 1 and alpha 4 beta 1 integrins regulates metalloproteinase gene expression in fibroblasts adhering to fibronectin. 753 77

Matrilysin is a metalloproteinase expressed in a variety of tumors as well as in some types of normal tissue. In addition to regulating normal tissue remodelling, metalloproteinases are believed to play a role in tumor cell invasion and metastasis by degrading components of the extracellular matrix, for example the highly insoluble fibronectin fibrils found in the interstitial stroma. In this study we examined whether matrilysin can degrade fibronectin fibrils produced by human foreskin fibroblasts and characterized the degradation products of soluble fibronectin. Using indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, we demonstrate for the first time degradation of the fibronectin fibrils upon incubation with 15 nM active matrilysin. Removal of matrilysin resulted in regrowth of the fibrils, suggesting that matrilysin was not cytotoxic. Immunoblotting with specific monoclonal antibodies revealed initial degradation of soluble fibronectin within 1 h. Further degradation occurred over a period of 20 h. Degradation of soluble fibronectin resulted in one fragment of 58 kDa containing the gelatin-binding domain, two fragments of 37 and 38 kDa, which were part of the cell attachment domain, and three fragments of 36, 33, and 30 kDa recognized by an antibody raised against the C-terminal heparin-binding domain. In addition to most of these fragments, several intermediates and unique fragments of 31 and 34 kDa could be found in the conditioned medium of human foreskin fibroblasts treated with matrilysin. Isolation of these fragments may allow further studies to determine their influences on cell migration, attachment, and signal transduction, which are expected to be different from the effects of undegraded fibronectin.
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PMID:Degradation of fibronectin fibrils by matrilysin and characterization of the degradation products. 758 59

A small uterine metalloproteinase of the rat has been shown by amino acid and cDNA sequencing to be orthologous to human pump-1. Both proteinases are now designated as matrilysin or matrix metalloproteinase 7. The properties of purified uterine metalloproteinase and recombinant pump-1 were compared. Their specificities on substrates (gelatins, fibronectin, transferrin, elastin, Azocoll, and (7-methoxycoumarin-4-yl)acetyl-Pro-Leu-Gly-Leu-(3,[2, 4-dinitrophenyl]-L-2, 3-diaminopropionyl)-Ala-Arg-NH2) are similar and distinct from those of the stromelysins and gelatinases. The two matrilysins have similar sensitivity to hydroxamate and pseudopeptide inhibitors. Rat matrilysin selectively cleaves the alpha 2(I) chain of rat gelatin, producing major cuts at Gly713-decreases-Ile714, Gly775-decreases-Leu776, and Gly809-decreases-Ile810. Rat matrilysin produces maximum activation of latent human interstitial collagenase 1 (pro-matrix metalloproteinase 1) when added in the presence of 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate (APMA) by cleaving the Gln80-decreases-Phe81 bond. Rat and human matrilysin do not directly activate latent rat collagenase 3 (matrix metalloproteinase 13) and do not enhance its activation when added together with APMA. Autoactivation of collagenase 3 in the presence of APMA results in cleavage at Val81-decreases-Tyr82 corresponding to the Gln80-decreases-Phe81 cleavage in collagenase 1. Thus collagenase 3 is capable of maximal autoactivation, whereas collagenase 1 is dependent upon another matrix metalloproteinase in order to be activated to its full potential.
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PMID:Characterization of rat uterine matrilysin and its cDNA. Relationship to human pump-1 and activation of procollagenases. 760 62

Matrilysin is a recently described metalloproteinase with strong catalytic activity against a variety of extracellular matrix substrates including proteoglycans, elastin, laminin, fibronectin, gelatin, and entactin. Production of this metalloproteinase appears to be limited only to a few normal human cell types including glandular epithelium, mononuclear phagocytes, and renal mesangial cells. Furthermore, matrilysin expression in vivo has been demonstrated only in glandular epithelium, especially the endometrium. In the process of examining various cutaneous and lung inflammatory disorders for matrilysin expression by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization, we occasionally found monocytes within blood vessels and newly extravasated tissue-associated macrophages that exhibited matrilysin production. In specimens characterized by severe inflammation and, in particular, cystic fibrosis, this feature was commonly observed. We therefore studied the production of matrilysin by monocyte-derived macrophages in vitro in response to various physiologic signals such as endotoxin, phagocytosable material, cytokines, and hormones. We found that matrilysin expression was stimulated by LPS and opsonized zymosan. Up-regulation of matrilysin by LPS was PGE2-dependent, because indomethacin blocked production, an effect at least partially reversed by the addition of exogenous prostaglandin. LPS stimulated matrilysin production pretranslationally and, furthermore, when cultured cells were subjected to in situ hybridization after LPS exposure, considerable variability in matrilysin mRNA expression was observed on an individual cell basis, with some cells having strong signal and others being completely negative. We also found that matrilysin biosynthesis was inhibited by the lymphokines IL-4, IL-10, and IFN-gamma. Other cytokines such as IL-1, TNF-alpha, and IL-6 failed to modulate the production of matrilysin. Finally, matrilysin biosynthesis was suppressed by glucocorticoids and retinoids. Our studies indicate that matrilysin is produced in vivo by mononuclear phagocytes and is a highly regulated metalloproteinase whose production can be modified by a variety of physiologic and pharmacologic signals.
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PMID:Matrilysin expression by human mononuclear phagocytes and its regulation by cytokines and hormones. 775 83

The purpose of this investigation was to examine the role that keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) plays in the control of matrix-degrading protease activity in epithelial cells. The culture conditions had a significant effect on cellular responses to the growth factor. In histiotypic culture on porous-polycarbonate membranes, porcine periodontal ligament epithelial cells responded to KGF with increased 92-kDa gelatinase (matrix metalloproteinase [MMP]-9) activity. No such response was observed in cells maintained on plastic plates. Epidermal growth factor and platelet-derived growth factor also increased MMP-9 activity in the histiotypic cultures of epithelial cells. Addition of heparin with KGF produced a further increase in MMP-9 activity, with heparin alone having no effect. Precoating of polycarbonate membranes with matrix components showed that fibronectin and an engineered poly-RGD molecule substrate were required for KGF plus heparin to increase MMP-9 activity. Precoating plastic culture plates with the same proteins did not generate the same response. Concomitant with gelatinase activity, KGF also increased urokinase-type plasminogen activator in the epithelial cells. Thus, KGF appears to be an important regulator of protease secretion in epithelial cells.
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PMID:Keratinocyte growth factor stimulation of gelatinase (matrix metalloproteinase-9) and plasminogen activator in histiotypic epithelial cell culture. 776 70

Matrix metalloproteinase 7 (MMP-7) has been purified as an inactive zymogen of M(r) 28,000 (proMMP-7) from the culture medium of CaR-1 human rectal carcinoma cells. The NH2-terminal sequence of proMMP-7 is Lys-Pro-Lys-Pro-Gln-Glu, which is identical to that of matrilysin. The zymogen is activated by 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate (APMA), yielding an intermediate form of M(r) 21,000 and an active species of M(r) 19,000 which shows the new NH2-terminal sequence of Tyr78-Ser-Leu-Phe-Pro-Asn-Ser. Although trypsin fully activates the zymogen, the activation rate by plasmin or leukocyte elastase is confined to approximately 50%. ProMMP-7 can be activated by MMP-3 (stromelysin 1) to its full activity in a single-step mechanism and generates the same NH2 terminus obtained by APMA activation, whereas MMP-1 (tissue collagenase), MMP-2 (gelatinase A), and MMP-9 (gelatinase B) do not have such an effect. On the other hand, proMMP-1 is activated by MMP-7 to an activity similar to that obtained by APMA and the activation by MMP-7 is enhanced up to approximately 6.5 fold in the presence of APMA. This enhanced activity is donated by specific cleavage at the Gln80-Phe81 bond of proMMP-1. MMP-7 can also activate proMMP-9 up to approximately 50% of the full activity with a new NH2 terminus of Leu16-Arg-Thr-(Asn)-Leu. Incubation of proMMP-2 or proMMP-3 with MMP-7 results in no activation of these proMMPs. MMP-7 degrades type IV collagen, laminin-1, fibronectin, proteoglycan, type I gelatin, and insoluble elastin. These results suggest that in vivo MMP-7 may play a role in degradation of extracellular matrix macromolecules in concert with MMP-1, -3, and -9 under pathological conditions.
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PMID:Matrix metalloproteinase 7 (matrilysin) from human rectal carcinoma cells. Activation of the precursor, interaction with other matrix metalloproteinases and enzymic properties. 789 11


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