Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.3 (collagenase)
18,340 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An enzyme capable of digesting native collagen in solution at neutral pH was extracted from the 6 000 times g sediment of the involuting uterus of the mouse and of the back skins of mice and rats. The collagenase could be dissociated at cold-room temperature from the sediment in about equal amounts when neutral Tris buffer containing 1.0M NaCl or 5M urea was used for the extraction step. The enzyme has been concentrated by ammonium sulfate precipitation and the activity was measured by using [14C]collagen in solution at pH 7.5. Collagen breakdown products were identified by disc electrophoresis. The amount of enzyme extracted was a function of temperature and salt concentration. As 5M urea extracted collagenase from the sediment in a relatively short time, this method of extraction seems to be a useful tool for serial experiments in the study of collagenase activity in collagen-rich tissues.
...
PMID:Extraction of collagenase from the 6000 times g sediment of uterine and skin tissues of mice. A comparative study. 17 Jan 81

Platelet adherence in bovine endothelial cultures was studied by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Following incubation with platelet-rich plasma (PRP), platelet adherence to endothelial cell surfaces was rare as compared to similarly-tested fibroblasts which displayed numerous adherent platelets. When endothelial cells were induced to retract from their substrate by exposure to cold or versene and then incubated with PRP, platelets were observed adhering to endothelial cell processes and to an extracellular microfilamentous network, located beneath the cell. Platelets were attached singly, retained their discoidal shape, and showed no evidence of granule release. In contrast, microfilaments and adherent platelets were conspicuously absent in endothelial cultures which were retracted with trypsin or collagenase and incubated with PRP. These preliminary results suggest that the observed interaction between platelets and the subcellular surface of cultured endothelial cells is specific for an extracellular network of microfilaments produced by the cells.
...
PMID:Platelet adherence in endothelial cell cultures. 21 42

Forty-nine dogs were made diabetic by total pancreatectomy. Fifteen untreated pancreatectomized animals survived a mean (+/-S.E.) of 7.0 +/- 1.1 days with a mean (+/-S.E.) plasma glucose level of 402 +/- 26 mg/100 ml before death. The pancreata of 32 dogs were distended with cold (4 degrees ) Hanks' solution, minced, digested with collagenase (600 U/ml tissue) for 15-25 minutes, and autotransplanted either into the splenic artery (three dogs), directly into the splenic pulp (21 dogs), or into the portal vein (ten dogs). Tissue infusion into the splenic artery resulted in infarction and persistent hyperglycemia. Direct implantation into the splenic pulp of tissue digested for 15, 20 and 25 minutes resulted in permanent normoglycemia (fasting plasma glucose < 150 mg/100 ml) in 7 of 8, 7 of 7, and 6 of 6 dogs respectively. Glucose tolerance test mean (+/-S.E.) K values (% decline of plasma glucose concentration/minute) in these groups two weeks after transplantation were 1.20 +/- 0.20%, 1.60 +/- 0.25 and 0.70 0.08% respectively, indicating that 20 minutes digestion was best for intrasplenic transplantation. Tissue prepared in the optimal manner (20 minutes digestion) and embolized into the liver resulted in normoglycemia in three of eight dogs, and a mean (+/-S.E.) K value of 0.77 +/- 0.10%. Both dogs receiving tissue dispersed for 25 minutes into the portal vein remained hyperglycemic. In the dogs subjected to intraportal transplantation, portal pressure rose from a mean (+/-S.E.) of 6.5 +/- 0.6 cm H(2)O before to 21.9 +/- 2.2 cm H(2)O immediately after tissue embolization, but declined to 6.5 +/- 1.0 cm H(2)O by ten weeks in animals becoming normoglycemic. We conclude that in dogs direct implantation of pancreatic tissue into the splenic pulp is superior to embolization into the portal vein or splenic artery because the splenic circulation is not compromized, portal hypertension is obviated, and glucose metabolism is best controlled as judged by glucose tolerance test K values.
...
PMID:Autotransplantation of pancreatic fragments to the portal vein and spleen of totally pancreatectomized dogs: a comparative evaluation. 33 53

Fibronectin, the major cell surface glycoprotein of fibroblasts, is absent from differentiated cartilage matrix and chondrocytes in situ. However, dissociation of embryonic chick sternal cartilage with collagenase and trypsin, followed by inoculation in vitro reinitiates fibronectin synthesis by chondrocytes. Immunofluorescence microscopy with antibodies prepared against plasma fibronectin (cold insoluble globulin [CIG]) reveals fibronectin associated with the chondrocyte surface. Synthesis and secretion of fibronectin into the medium are shown by anabolic labeling with [35S]methionine or [3H]glycine, and identification of the secreted proteins by immunoprecipitation and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-disc gel electrophoresis. When chondrocytes are plated onto tissue culture dishes, the pattern of surface-associated fibronectin changes from a patchy into a strandlike appearance. Where epithelioid clones of polygonal chondrocytes develop, only short strands of fibronectin appear preferentially at cellular interfaces. This pattern is observed as long as cells continue to produce type II collagen that fails to precipitate as extracellular collagen fibers for some time in culture. Using the immunofluorescence double-labeling technique, we demonstrate that fibroblasts as well as chondrocytes which synthesize type I collagen and deposit this collagen as extracellular fibers show a different pattern of extracellular fibronectin that codistributes in large parts with collagen fibers. Where chondrocytes begin to accumulate extracellular cartilage matrix, fibronectin strands disappear. From these observations, we conclude (a) that chondrocytes synthesize fibronectin only in the absence of extracellular cartilage matrix, and (b) that fibronectin forms only short intercellular "stitches" in the absence of extracellular collagen fibers in vitro.
...
PMID:Synthesis and extracellular deposition of fibronectin in chondrocyte cultures. Response to the removal of extracellular cartilage matrix. 36 26

The uptake and metabolism of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT) and l-norepinephrine (NE) were measured in endothelial cells of pig pulmonary artery and aorta, as well as in lung slices. Evidence for oxidative deamination and for a saturable uptake mechanism, sensitive to cold, imipramine, and NA+-free medium was obtained for 5HT in lung slices and in the pulmonary as well as in the aortic endothelium, separated from the lumen by absorption to Millipore filters or by exposure to collagenase. For NE, however, a similar type of uptake could be deomonstrated in lung slices only. In the aortic and pulmonary endothelium, NE was metabolized, but its uptake was not influenced by imipramine, Na+-free medium, and high substrate concentration. The aortic and pulmonary endothelium have, therefore, similar properties and exhibit for 5HT, but not for NE, a type of uptake similar to that existing in lung capillaries.
...
PMID:Amine uptake and metabolism by endothelium of pig pulmonary artery and aorta. 84 58

Spontaneously contracting myocytes were isolated from ventricles of the adult rat heart. Hearts were perfused retrogradally via the aorta for 30 minutes at 37 degrees C with Ca2+-free phosphate-buffered saline containing collagenase and hyaluronidase. The venticles were divided into pieces and incubated 15 minutes with the enzymes. Dislodged cells were decanted, diluted with cold buffer and allowed to settle. The washed cells were then sedimented through 3% Ficoll. This procedure yielded approximately 50 mg of protein from 1 gm of heart. Viability measured by trypan-glue exclusion is 90-95%. Approximately 80% of the cells were beating. Scanning electron microscopic studies suggest that the isolated myocytes are morphologically intact. The cells oxidize glucose, pyruvate, citrate and palmitate to CO2 and synthesize protein and RNA. Uptake of glucose, 2-deoxyglucose, leucine and taurine was saturable. Glucose uptake was stimulated by insulin. The cells retained LDH and CPK as well as their capacity to oxidize substrates after 24 hours at 4 degrees C or 4 hours at 37 degrees C. After 24 hours at 4 degrees C the cells resume contracting when returned to room temperature. The procedure reported here for the isolation of spontaneously contracting, adult, rat heart myocytes provides cells with a high index of viability and greater yield than previously reported methods. The cells retain metabolic activity and withstand storage for longer periods than other described preparations.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of myocytes from the adult rat heart. 91 20

1. Postsynaptic responses to acetylcholine released from nerve terminals and from iontophoretic micropipettes were investigated in skeletal twitch-muscle fibers of the snake. The preparation consists of thin sheets of muscle fibers in which details of the end plate, including the outlines of individual synaptic boutons, are clearly seen in the living state. After treatment with collagenase, the motor nerve and its terminal boutons can be removed to expose the intact subsynaptic membrane to direct application of ACh by iontophoretic pipettes. 2. The number of ACh molecules in a quanta was estimated to be fewer than 10,000. This was done by developing a sensitive bioassay to measure the output of ACh from iontophoretic pipettes needed to produce synaptic responses closely resembling nerve-released miniature postsynaptic potentials. 3. Postsynaptic receptors are not saturated by the ACh in a quantum, since the peak of the quantal response produced by an appropriate background concentration of ACh from a pipette. 4. When acetylcholine esterase is inhibited, two or more quanta can act upon partially overlapping postsynaptic membrane areas and potentiate each other's effects. This potentiation reveals itself as a prolongation of the synaptic current. Postsynaptic potentiation is a consequence of the nonlinear dose-response characteristics of ACh receptors and can also be demonstrated in a model system in which ACh micropipettes substitute for quantal release from the nerve. 5. With AChE fully active, however, each quantum is functionally isolated from its neighbors and no postsynaptic potentiation is seen. 6. It is suggested that postsynaptic potentiation between quantum may play a role in signaling at synapses which have nonlinear dose-response characteristics and where transmitter is not so rapidly inactivated as at the neuromuscular synapse.
Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol 1976
PMID:The number of acetylcholine molecules in a quantum and the interaction between quanta at the subsynaptic membrane of the skeletal neuromuscular synapse. 106 24

For continued studies of GnRH receptor regulation in the winter flounder, we have developed an in vitro system consisting of cultured pituitary cells dissociated by collagenase. Using immunocytochemical staining methods for gonadotropin, growth hormone, and prolactin, these cell types were represented at the levels of 25, 20, and 19.5% of total pituitary cell population, respectively. Receptors for GnRH were characterized in intact monolayered attached pituitary cells, maintained in RPMI culture medium. The cell GnRH receptor characteristics were compared with those previously described using pituitary homogenates. The cells were capable of binding GnRH in a similar manner on Day 2 or Day 3 of culture, indicating the integrity of GnRH receptors. The specificity of binding was demonstrated since only high doses of cold GnRHa competed with 125I-GnRHa uptake, different peptides being without effect. The specific binding is saturable and the data suggest the presence of a single class of high-affinity (apparent Ka = 1.50 x 10(9) M-1), high-capacity sites (binding capacity = 25.03 fmol/2.5 x 10(5) cells or 242.23 x 10(3) sites/gonadotroph) which is in accordance with the characteristics of GnRH receptors present in homogenates of pooled male and female pituitary glands. All these observations suggest that such an in vitro pituitary cell system would be appropriate for studying GnRH receptor characteristics under different physiological conditions.
...
PMID:Evidence of GnRH receptors in cultured pituitary cells of the winter flounder (Pseudopleuronectes americanus W.). 131 5

Density-gradient purification of human pancreatic islets from the collagenase-digested pancreas relies on the exocrine tissue being denser than the islets. Cold storage of the pancreas before and after digestion causes cell swelling, which can decrease the density of pancreatic exocrine tissue and adversely affect subsequent purification. Using 14 human pancreata (seven perfused in situ with hyperosmolar citrate (HOC) and seven with University of Wisconsin solution (UW)), it is shown that storage of the pancreatic digest in UW significantly increases the density of pancreatic exocrine tissue compared with storage in minimal essential medium (MEM) (P = 0.009). This results in an improvement in islet purity (P = 0.036) for HOC- but not UW-perfused pancreata. Storage in UW for 1 h not only prevented the deterioration that occurred in MEM, but resulted in an improvement in islet purity for five of the seven HOC-perfused pancreata. Most pancreata in the UK are perfused with HOC, but storage of the digest in UW results in significantly better islet purity and, when islets cannot be purified immediately, a period of storage will often improve separation and allow islets to be purified.
...
PMID:Storage of human pancreatic digest in University of Wisconsin solution significantly improves subsequent islet purification. 142 50

Gel electrophoretic analysis of the avian tectorial membrane under non-reducing conditions reveals the presence of 2 major proteins with apparent molecular masses of 195 and 41 kDa on 8.25% gels. Under reducing conditions, 6 polypeptides with apparent molecular masses of 146, 60, 56, 43, 35 and 31 kDa are consistently observed. None of these six polypeptides observed under reducing conditions are sensitive to digestion with collagenase, and all, except for the 43 kDa component, are degraded by treatment with cold acidic pepsin. The 60, 56 and 43 kDa polypeptides bind the peroxidase conjugated lectins from Canavalia ensiformis and Triticum vulgaris, indicating the presence of mannose, N-acetyl glucosamine and/or sialic acid. The 146, 60 and 56 kDa bands undergo a shift in electrophoretic mobility after treatment of native tectorial membranes with the enzyme neuroaminidase. Fibronectin and Type II collagen cannot be detected in the avian tectorial membrane by either immunoblotting or immunofluorescence techniques. Polyclonal antisera raised against the different polypeptides after partial purification by one dimensional gel electrophoresis confirm that these proteins are all components of the tectorial membrane, and show that they are restricted to the otolithic and tectorial membranes within the inner ear. Analysis of a wide variety of other tissue types indicates that the 60, 43 and 35 kDa components can only be detected within the inner ear, and that the antisera recognising the 146 and 31 kDa components only show cross-reactivity within the head, with the anti-146 kDa antibodies staining the mucus ducts supplying the olfactory epithelium and the anti-31 kDa antibodies staining granular elements in the cells of the respiratory epithelium. The results suggest that certain of the tectorial membrane components may be novel matrix molecules unique to the inner ear, and that some of the other proteins may be antigenically related to mucins.
...
PMID:The protein composition of the avian tectorial membrane. 149 Aug 98


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>