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)

Left ventricular (LV) pressure (PO) or volume (VO) overload is accompanied by myocardial remodeling, but mechanisms that contribute to this progressive remodeling process remain unclear. The matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) contribute to tissue remodeling in a number of disease states. This study tested the hypothesis that increased MMP expression and activity occur after the induction of an LV overload, which is accompanied by a loss of endogenous MMP inhibitory control. LV MMP zymographic activity and species abundance were measured in dogs under the following conditions: acute PO induced by ascending aortic balloon inflation (6 h, n = 9), prolonged PO by aortic banding (10 days, n = 5), acute VO through mitral regurgitation secondary to chordal rupture (6 h, n = 6), prolonged VO due to mitral regurgitation (14 days, n = 7), and sham controls (n = 11). MMP zymographic activity in the 92-kDa region, indicative of MMP-9 activity, increased over threefold in acute PO and VO and fell to control levels in prolonged PO and VO. The MMP-9 activity-to-abundance ratio increased by over fourfold with acute VO and twofold in acute PO, suggesting a loss of inhibitory control. Endogenous MMP inhibitor content was unchanged with either PO or VO. Interstitial collagenase (MMP-1) content decreased by 50% with acute VO but not with acute PO. Stromelysin (MMP-3) levels increased by 40% with acute VO and increased by 80% with prolonged PO. Although changes in LV myocardial MMP activity and inhibitory control occurred in both acute and prolonged PO and VO states, these changes were not identical. These results suggest that the type of overload stimulus may selectively influence myocardial MMP activity and expression, which in turn would affect the overall LV myocardial remodeling process in LV overload.
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PMID:Differential effects of pressure or volume overload on myocardial MMP levels and inhibitory control. 1064 94

Increased numbers of mast cells have been reported in explanted human hearts with dilated cardiomyopathy and in animal models of experimentally induced hypertension, myocardial infarction, and chronic volume overload secondary to aortocaval fistula and mitral regurgitation. Accordingly, mast cells have been implicated to have a major role in the pathophysiology of these cardiovascular disorders. In vitro studies have verified that mast cell proteases are capable of activating collagenase, gelatinases and stromelysin. Recent results have shown that with chronic ventricular volume overload, there is an elevation in mast cell density, which is associated with a concomitant increase in matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity and extracellular matrix degradation. However, the role of the cardiac mast cell is not one dimensional, with evidence from hypertension and cardiac transplantation studies suggesting that they can also assume a pro-fibrotic phenotype in the heart. These adverse events do not occur in mast cell deficient rodents or when cardiac mast cells are pharmacologically prevented from degranulating. This review is focused on the regulation and dual roles of cardiac mast cells in: (i) activating MMPs and causing myocardial fibrillar collagen degradation and (ii) causing fibrosis in the stressed, injured or diseased heart. Moreover, there is strong evidence that premenopausal female cardioprotection may at least partly be due to gender differences in cardiac mast cells. This too will be addressed.
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PMID:Cardiac mast cells: the centrepiece in adverse myocardial remodelling. 2073 39

Mitral valve regurgitation is a challenging clinical condition that is frequent, highly varied, and poorly understood. While the causes of mitral regurgitation are multifactorial, how the hemodynamics of regurgitation impact valve tissue remodeling is an understudied phenomenon. We employed a pseudo-physiological flow loop capable of long-term organ culture to investigate the early progression of remodeling in living mitral valves placed in conditions resembling mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and functional mitral regurgitation (FMR). Valve geometry was altered to mimic the hemodynamics of controls (no changes from native geometry), MVP (5 mm displacement of papillary muscles towards the annulus), and FMR (5 mm apical, 5 mm lateral papillary muscle displacement, 65% larger annular area). Flow measurements ensured moderate regurgitant fraction for regurgitation groups. After 1-week culture, valve tissues underwent mechanical and compositional analysis. MVP conditioned tissues were less stiff, weaker, and had elevated collagen III and glycosaminoglycans. FMR conditioned tissues were stiffer, more brittle, less extensible, and had more collagen synthesis, remodeling, and crosslinking related enzymes and proteoglycans, including decorin, matrix metalloproteinase-1, and lysyl oxidase. These models replicate clinical findings of MVP (myxomatous remodeling) and FMR (fibrotic remodeling), indicating that valve cells remodel extracellular matrix in response to altered mechanical homeostasis resulting from disease hemodynamics.
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PMID:Regurgitation Hemodynamics Alone Cause Mitral Valve Remodeling Characteristic of Clinical Disease States In Vitro. 2622 24

Mitral regurgitation (MR) imposes left ventricular volume overload, triggering rapid ventricular dilatation, increased myocardial compliance, and, ultimately, cardiac dysfunction. Breakdown of the extracellular matrix has been hypothesized to drive these rapid changes, partially from an imbalance in the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and their tissue inhibitors [tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinase (TIMPs)]. In the present study, we developed a rat model of severe MR that mimics the human condition and investigated the temporal changes in extracellular matrix-related genes, collagen biosynthesis proteins, and proteolytic enzymes over a 20-wk period. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized to a surgical plane with mechanical ventilation, and a thoracotomy was performed to expose the apex. Using transesophageal ultrasound guidance, a needle was inserted into the beating heart to perforate the anterior mitral leaflet and create severe MR. Animals were survived for 20 wk, with some animals terminated at 2, 10, and 20 wk for analysis of left ventricular tissue. A sham group that underwent the same surgery without mitral leaflet perforation and MR were used as controls. At 2 wk post-MR, increased collagen gene expression was measured, but protein levels of collagen did not corroborate this finding. In parallel, MMP-1-to-TIMP-4, MMP-2-to-TIMP-1, and MMP-2-to-TIMP-3 ratios were significantly elevated, indicating a proteolytic milieu in the myocardium, possibly causing collagen degradation. By 20 wk, many of the initial differences seen in the proteolytic ratios were not observed, with an increase in collagen compared with the 2-wk time point. Altogether, this data indicates that an imbalance in the MMP-to-TIMP ratio may occur early and potentially contribute to the early dilatation and compliance observed structurally. NEW & NOTEWORTHY In this rodent model of severe mitral regurgitation that mimics the human condition, eccentric left ventricular dilatation occurred rapidly and persisted over the 20-wk period with parallel changes in myocardial collagen and matrix metalloproteinases that may drive the extracellular matrix breakdown.
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PMID:Temporal changes in myocardial collagen, matrix metalloproteinases, and their tissue inhibitors in the left ventricular myocardium in experimental chronic mitral regurgitation in rodents. 3014 79