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)

Collagenolytic activity has been demonstrated in the early phase of chemical carcinogenesis of mouse skin following 3-methylcholanthrene application dropwise in acetone or painted on the skin in benzene. In addition very high levels of collagenase could be detected in mouse skin papillomas and carcinomas. In all the tissues investigated, collagenase activity was extracted from the 6000 X g sediment of tissue homogenates with 5 M urea in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.5. After dialyzing the extract, the enzyme was precipitated with ammonium sulfate and the activity determined against 14C-collagen substrate in solution. This procedure was found suitable for the detection and estimation of collagenase activity in skin tissues with high turnover of collagen and thus offers an attractive alternative to tissue culture methods.
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PMID:Extractable collagenase and carcinogenesis of the mouse skin. 20 Mar 99

Isolation of preneoplastic cell populations would greatly facilitate analysis of the development of liver carcinogenesis. Suspensions of intact single cells can be prepared in an almost quantitative yield by two-step perfusion of the isolated liver. In the first step the liver is perfused with a Ca2+-free buffer (or with EGTA) in order to irreversibly cleave the desmosomes; in the second step perfusion with Ca2+-activated collagenase dissolves the collagenous extracellular matrix. The resulting single-cell suspension will be a mixture of intact normal and preneoplastic hepatocytes, other liver cell types (mostly Kupffer and endothelial cells), damaged cells, and subcellular debris. Intact hepatocytes can be purified--e.g., by differential centrifugation--but separation of preneoplastic from normal cells has not yet been achieved. Density gradient separation or selection in culture on the basis of the unique properties of preneoplastic hepatocytes (e.g., drug resistance) may prove useful. The use of hepatocyte cultures and liver-derived epithelial cell lines as test systems and models for chemical carcinogenesis in vitro is briefly reviewed.
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PMID:Hepatocyte suspensions and cultures as tools in experimental carcinogenesis. 22 9

A method was developed for obtaining direct chromosome preparations from SENCAR mouse skin tumors induced by chemical carcinogenesis protocols. Papillomas and squamous cell carcinomas were mechanically dispersed immediately after resection and were placed in a modified Hanks' solution with collagenase, trypsin, hyaluronidase, bovine albumin, and Colcemid. Total exposure to Colcemid did not exceed 1 hr. Metaphases were obtained in 100% of the analyzed specimens, allowing chromosome counting screening for double minutes and, in 50% of the cases, useful G-banded slides. The technique described has produced, for this type of tumor, a higher number of successful G-banded preparations than other previously reported methods for solid tumors. This procedure may be applicable for the study of human solid tumors that are histologically similar to our murine model, such as squamous cell carcinoma of cervix or lung.
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PMID:A direct cytogenetic technique for mouse skin carcinomas and papillomas. 394 63

The in situ two-step collagenase perfusion technique used for the isolation of hepatocytes from rat liver was adapted into a procedure applicable to pieces of human liver obtainable from surgical procedures. Human hepatocytes obtained by this method were maintained in primary culture for 10 days. The cellular changes observed at the light microscopic and electron microscopic levels are described. The changes in microsomal enzymes as a function of the age of the cultures were also measured. Exposure of the human hepatocytes to procarcinogens known to be metabolized by rodent liver resulted in unscheduled DNA synthesis. The isolated hepatocytes were also transplanted into two-thirds partially hepatectomized athymic nude mice. The transplanted cells formed nodules with characteristic hepatic architecture. These studies demonstrate that hepatocytes obtained from human liver by the described modified collagenase technique can be used for in vitro studies in chemical carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Isolation, culture, and transplantation of human hepatocytes. 704 Jul 71