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Query: EC:3.4.24.3 (
collagenase
)
18,340
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cardiac myocytes from adult rat were isolated by heart perfusion in the presence of
collagenase
and incubated in the absence and presence of oxygen. As a result of anoxia, there was a gradual increase in plasma membrane permeability, noted as an increase in succinate-stimulated oxygen uptake, a decrease in trypan blue exclusion frequency, a leakage of cytosolic
lactate dehydrogenase
activity and an increased proportion of swollen, irregularly contracting myocytes. The contractions of the damaged myocytes resembled the known non-physiologic contractions of the heart, i.e. extrasystoles, arrhythmia, fibrillation or block. After different periods of time of anoxia myocyte pellets were fixed in formalin, sectioned and examined by light microscopy. The appearances of the myocytes in suspension were compared with those in paraffin-embedded sections. Special attention was given to the hematoxylin basic fuchsin picric acid stain and it was noted that the basic fuchsin was taken up by contracted or damaged myocytes, which according to their morphology in suspension revealed irregular contractions, but not by undamaged or necrotic myocytes.
...
PMID:Comparison of anoxic changes in isolated rat cardiac myocytes in suspension and in histological sections. 8 68
The influence of prednisolone, azathioprine, and azapropazone on the activity of
collagen peptidase
, acid phosphatase (complete), and the
lactate dehydrogenase
of granulation tissue was studied using a model of proliferative inflammation i.e. the cotton-granuloma in rats. The authors observed significant decreases in the activities of the
collagen peptidase
and acid phosphatase during treatment with prednisone and under combined treatment with azathioprine and azapropazone. In contrast, administration of either azathioprine or azapropazone by itself caused no changes in these enzyme activities as compared with a control group. These studies suggest that the last mentioned drugs potentiate each other in their inhibiting effect upon these enzyme activities. Whether or not these findings are of importance in the clinical treatment of chronic bacterial inflammations must be studied in further trials.
...
PMID:[The potentiating effects of azathioprine and azapropazone on the enzyme activity in experimental inflammation]. 17 44
A microcellular dispersion procedure for the rat neurohypophysis was developed, comprising tissue softening and dissociation using a special sieving sytringe. In preparatory studies the influence of mesh width, and treatment with trypsin, pronase or
collagenase
-hyaluronidase was investigated using light and electron microscopy, as well as with microchemistry by means of protein and
lactate dehydrogenase
activity determinations. Trypsinization gave the best results. In the final adopted procedure, 3 incubated neurohypophyses were sequentially sieved through a 200- and a 50-mum mesh. The resulting 50-mul dispersion was found to contain numerous ultrastructurally well-preserved pinched-off axonal endings (neurosecretosomes), and pituicytes often revealing processes. On the basis of DNA and oxytocin assays 11% of the pituicytes and 28% of the axonal cytoplasm were recovered. Oxytocin immunofluorescence microscopy showed hormone within the neurosecretosomes, but often also in the cytoplasm of pituicytes. Microdensity gradient centrifugation was performed on neurohypophyseal disperions, in order to obtain fractions enriched for neurosecretosomes and pituicytes. Fractions were characterized by means of phase contrast, oxytocin immunofluorescence and electron microscopy, as well as by oxytocin and DNA assays as respective markers. With a 10:14:22% (w/v) Ficoll gradient, fractions were obtained for which the relative purification was by a factor of 4 on the basis of DNA/oxytocin ratios.
...
PMID:Enzymic preparation of neurosecretosome- and pituicyte-enriched fractions from the rat neurohypophysis. 18 63
1. A method is described for the isolation of rat parotid acinar cells by controlled digestion of the gland with trypsin followed by
collagenase
. As judged by Trypan Blue exclusion, electron microscopy, water, electrolyte and ATP concentrations and release of amylase and
lactate dehydrogenase
, the cells are morphologically and functionally intact. 2. A method was developed for perifusion of acinar cells by embedding them in Sephadex G-10. Release of amylase was stimulated by adrenaline (0.1-10muM), isoproternol (1 or 10 MUM), phenylephrine (1 muM), carbamoylcholine (0.1 or 1 muM), dibutyryl cycle AMP (2 MM), 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (1mM) and ionophore A23187. The effects of phenylephrine, carbamoylcholine and ionophore A23187 required extracellular Ca2+, whereas the effects of adrenaline and isoproterenol did not. 3. The incorporation of 45Ca into parotid cells showed a rapidly equilibrating pool (1-2 min) corresponding to 15% of total Ca2+ and a slowly equilibrating pool (greater than 3h) of probably a similar dimension. Cholinergic and alpha-adrenergic effectors and ionophore A23187 and 2,4-dinitrophenol increased the rate of incorporation of 45Ca into a slowly equilibrating pool, whereas beta-adrenergic effectors and dibutyryl cyclic AMP were inactive. 4. The efflux of 45Ca from cells into Ca2+-free medium was inhibited by phenylephrine and carbamoylcholine and accelerated by isoproterenol, adrenaline (beta-adrenergic effect), dibutyryl cyclic AMP and ionophore A23187. 5. A method was developed for the measurement of exchangeable 45Ca in mitochondria in parotid pieces. Incorporation of 45Ca into mitochondria was decreased by isoproterenol, dibutyryl cyclic AMP or 2,4-dinitrophenol, increased by adrenaline, and not changed significantly by phenylephrine or carbamoylcholine. Release of 45Ca from mitochondria in parotid pieced incubated in a Ca2+-free medium was increased by isoproterenol, adrenaline, dibutyryl cyclic AMP or 2,4-dinitrophenol and unaffected by phenylephrine or carbamoylcholine. 6. These findings are compatible with a role for Ca2+ as a mediator of amylase-secretory responses in rat parotid acinar cells, but no definite conclusions about its role can be drawn in the absence of knowledge of the molecular mechanisms involved, their location, and free Ca2+ concentration in appropriate cell compartment(s).
...
PMID:Calcium metabolism and amylase release in rat parotid acinar cells. 18 53
(1) In order to determine the cellular localization of the secretin- and pancreozymin-sensitive adenylate cyclase in rat pancreas, the occurence of this enzyme system has been investigated in isolated pancreatic cells. (2) Digestion of rat pancreatic lobules with
collagenase
yields a preparation of isolated cells which upon differential morphological analysis appears to consist for 97% of acinar cells and to contain for fewer centro-acinar and ductal cells than undissociated lobules. (3) Expressed per mg protein, the isolated cells contain the same amount of DNA, chymotrypsin and
lactic dehydrogenase
as the undissociated tissue. The stimulated adenylate cyclase activity is nearly entirely recovered in the isolated acinar cells, as is also the case for the low Km adenosine 3',5-cyclic monophosphate phosphodiesterase activity and the adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) content. Marked losses are noted for the basal adenylate cyclase and the high Km cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activities. (4) Washing the isolated acinar cells in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate medium containing 10 mM 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine causes a cyclic AMP level 2.6 times that in cells washed in Krebs-Ringer bicarbonate alone. The cyclic AMP level is further increased by subsequently incubating the cells for 10 min in the presence of 3-10(-7) M pancreozymin-C-octapeptide or secretin to values 1.7 or 4.7 times the control level in cells incubated for 10 min with 1-methyl-3-isobutylxanthine alone. (5) It is suggested that the adenylate cyclase of the acinar cells may be involved, with another factor, in the stimulation of enzyme secretion, whereas a ductular cyclase would function in the regulation of the bicarbonate-dependent fluid secretion.
...
PMID:Rat pancreas adenylate cyclase V. Its presence in isolated rat pancreatic acinar cells. 18 46
1. A method is described for the preparation of isolated cells from guinea pig liver. This involved perfusion in situ, in the non-physiological direction, with
collagenase
. 2. The cell yield was 20--30%, comparable with those from the livers of other species. 3. The ratio of
lactate dehydrogenase
to glutamate dehydrogenase in the cells was similar to that in vivo, indicating that there was negligible leakage of cytoplasmic enzymes. 4. The concentrations of K+ and adenine nucleotides were initially lower than in the perfused liver; normal values were obtained on incubation, particularly in the presence of substrate. 5. The L-lactate: pyruvate ratio is 16:1, close to established values. The total beta-hydroxybutyrate: acetoacetate ratio indicates that the mitochondrial redox state is more oxidised than in the perfused liver, but the intracellular ratio is similar to that of the intact liver. 6. Rates of gluconeogenesis and ureogenesis, are within the physiological range. Maximal gluconeogeneis from L-lactate was preceded by a lag period. L-lysine stimulated glucose production from L-lactate but did not abolish the lag phase. 7. The effects of aminooxyacetate and octanoate on L-lactate gluconeogenesis were similar to those in the perfused liver.
...
PMID:Preparation and characterization of isolated parenchymal cells from guinea pig liver. 19 81
To evaluate extracellular hydrolytic enzymes in an in vivo system, plastic chambers were glued over rabbit dermal BCG lesions in various stages of development, after the central epithelium was removed with a scalpel. They were filled with tissue culture medium and left in place 2 days. The following enzymes in the fluid were assayed:
collagenase
(an enzyme secreted but not stored in macrophages); lysozyme (both secreted and stored); DNase and RNase (released on cell death and possibly regurgitated but not secreted); and, as a control,
lactic dehydrogenase
(released only on cell death). Tissue sections were prepared and studied histologically for the type of cell infiltrate, for beta-galactosidase (our marker enzyme for macrophage activation), and for necrosis. At 11 and 18 days of age the BCG lesions were largest and the number of activated macrophages in the chamber beds was highest. At this time the levels of the five enzymes assayed in the chamber fluids reached their peaks, tuberculin hypersensitivity was well developed, and the bacilli components would still be plentiful. In general, the chamber fluids from 11- and 18-day BCG lesions contained higher enzyme levels than chamber fluids from tuberculin reactions. Active
collagenase
was only detected in fluids from such BCG lesions. Evidently, the serum in the chamber fluids was sufficient to inhibit the lower amounts of
collagenase
probably released from smaller BCG lesions and tuberculin reactions (and from the 2-week polystyrene lesions that were also evaluated). These studies demonstrate that in chronic inflammatory reactions, both acid-acting and neutral-acting hydrolytic enzymes are released extracellularly. Tissue components would be hydrolyzed locally wherever the acid-acting hydrolytic enzymes encounter a drop in pH and wherever the concentration of neutral-acting hydrolytic enzymes exceeds the concentration of their inhibitors.
...
PMID:Extracellular hydrolytic enzymes of rabbit dermal tuberculous lesions and tuberculin reactions collected in skin chambers. 20 93
The hepatocyte and haematopoietic cell contents of the liver of the foetal guinea pig were measured over the latter half of gestation. Hepatocytes represented about 30% of liver volume at mid-gestation and this increased to 70-80% by term; cell volume remained fairly constant until 5-7 days before term, then more than doubled. Haematopoietic cells represented about 5% of liver volume at mid-gestation and this progressively fell to <1% by term. At 75% of gestation hepatocytes and haematopoietic cells were prepared from perfused foetal livers by
collagenase
digestion. Enzyme activity of the hepatocyte was, without exception, similar to that of the whole liver. In general, enzyme activity in the haematopoietic cells was similar to that in erythrocytes, with relatively low values for aldolase, glycerol 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, phosphoglycerate mutase, enolase,
lactate dehydrogenase
, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase, isocitrate dehydrogenase, ;malic' enzyme, glutamate dehydrogenase and aspartate aminotransferase. The haematopoietic cell contribution to total enzyme activity in the foetal liver was usually much less than 10% and could thus not account for the major changes in hepatic enzyme activity over the latter half of gestation. Hepatocytes contained hexokinase isoenzymes I and III, aldolase isoenzymes A and B and pyruvate kinase isoenzymes 1, 2 and 4. The haematopoietic cells contained hexokinase isoenzyme I and two additional bands of activity with slightly greater mobility, aldolase isoenzyme A and pyruvate kinase isoenzymes 2 and 4.
...
PMID:The distribution of enzyme and isoenzyme activities between parenchymal and haematopoietic cells in the liver of the foetal guinea pig. 43 88
Complex carbohydrates on the surfaces of eukaryotic cells are thought to participate in a wide variety of cell-cell interactions. A model system has therefore been developed to study these processes. In the present experiments, the ability of chicken hepatocytes to recognize and adhere to sugars covalently linked to polyacrylamide gels was investigated. The gels were snythesized by two methods. Type I gels were prepared from a co-polymer of an active ester of acrylic acid (N-succinimidyl acrylate), acrylamide, and bisacrylamide. The "activated" polyacrylamide gel was then treated with the desired ligand containing an amino group, such as 6-aminohexyl O- or S-glycoside. Type II gels were formed by treating similar ligands with acryloyl chloride, followed by co-polymerization of the resulting N-substituted acrylamide with acrylamide and N,N'-methylenebisacrylamide. These polyacrylamide derivatives offer many advantages for studies with intact cells. They are not toxic to any cell type studied, can be cast in any desired shape, are transparent and stable over a wide range of pH values, and contain no cationic and low to negligible levels of anionic charge (charged groups can be introduced if desired), and the polyacrylamide matrix is stable to common biological agents such as bacteria and enzymes. In addition, type I gels can be synthesized using a broad range of molecules containing amino groups, such as glycopeptides, proteins, etc. The hepatocytes were prepared by
collagenase
perfusion of intact chicken livers. The rate and extent of adhesion of the cells to the derivatized gels was determined by measuring
lactate dehydrogenase
in these cells. This enzyme was also used to assay viability and cell "leakiness." At 37 degrees C, 70 to 100% of the cells adhered within 60 min to gels derivatized with N-acetylglucosamine, i.e. gels derivatized with 6-aminohexyl 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta-D-glucopyranoside (or the corresponding thioglycoside). By contrast, less than 5% of the cells adhered to polyacrylamide or to gels derivatized with 6-aminohexanol or the 6-aminohexyl glycosides of beta-D-glucose, beta-D-galactose, alpha-D-mannose, beta-D-maltose, beta-D-melibiose, beta-D-cellobiose, and (alpha or beta)-D-lactose. Kinetic studies with the chicken hepatocytes and N-acetylglucosamine gels showed that cell-gel binding was dependent upon Ca2+ and was decreased at low temperatures. Binding was inhibited by N-acetylglucosamine or by glycosides of this sugar, the most effective inhibitor being orosomucoid (alpha1-acid glycoprotein) pretreated with sialidase and beta-galactosidase. The cell surface receptor(s) involved in this interaction is not known, but may be related or identical to the chicken liver binding protein described by Lunney and Ashwell (Lunney, J., and Ashwell, G. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 73, 341--343). The present results suggest that this model system should prove useful in delineating cell surface interactions with carbohydrates.
...
PMID:Adhesion of chicken hepatocytes to polyacrylamide gels derivatized with N-acetylglucosamine. 70 Dec 94
Rat hepatocytes were isolated by liver perfusion in the presence of
collagenase
and hyaluronidase and incubated in the absence or presence of oxygen. As a result of anoxia, there was a gradual increase in plasma membrane permeability, noted as an increase in succinate-stimulated oxygen uptake, a decrease in trypan blue exclusion frequency, a leakage of cytosolic
lactate dehydrogenase
activity and an increased proportion of swollen and disrupted cells. After anaerobic incubation for 30 minutes--but not for 60 minutes--there were signs of recovery from anoxic cell injury upon re-oxygenation. The changes in plasma membrane permeability properties in anoxia seemed to be preceded by a marked decrease in cellular ATP level; aerobic incubation of hepatocytes in the presence of an uncoupler of phosphorylation from respiration led to a similar decrease in cellular ATP concentration followed by similar disturbances in plasma membrane permeability properties. It is suggested that a distrubed plasma membrane function caused by a decreased energy level is of primary importance for the initiation of cell death in anoxia.
...
PMID:Isolated rat hepatocytes as an experimental tool in the study of cell injury. Effect of anoxia. 100 75
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