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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)
Preparations of human glomerular basement membrane (GBM) were digested with
collagenase
, and a Goodpasture (GP) antigen rich pool from gel filtration column runs was identified by antibody inhibition radioimmunoassay. The components of the GP antigen pool were separated on polyacrylamide gels, and transferred to nitrocellulose sheets by the 'western' blotting technique. The blots were separately reacted with thirteen GP sera as primary antibody, followed by
peroxidase
labelled goat anti-human IgG and revealed 45-50K (two bands) and 25-28K (one-three bands) components. No corresponding reactivity was observed using convalescent GP sera or other control sera (normal human serum, rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis with or without pulmonary haemorrhage, and lupus erythematosus) as primary antibody.
...
PMID:Detection of Goodpasture antigen in fractions prepared from collagenase digests of human glomerular basement membrane. 631 59
Two monoclonal antibodies that cause changes in the morphology of cultured chick myogenic cells have been described previously [8]. In this paper, these antibodies are shown to interact with the same 140Kd protein. The 140Kd protein has been further characterized as a cell-surface glycoprotein by
lactoperoxidase
-catalyzed iodinations and lectin affinity chromatography. The protein is resistant to digestion by trypsin and
collagenase
and has been shown to be unrelated to fibronectin by immunoprecipitation studies and by peptide mapping. A second protein, of approximately 170Kd MW, is also immunoprecipitated by the monoclonal antibodies. This protein is probably unrelated to the 140Kd protein since the peptide maps are quite distinct.
...
PMID:Characterization of a 140Kd cell surface glycoprotein involved in myoblast adhesion. 638 44
Sertoli cells are a primary target for the action of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in the testis. The purpose of this investigation was to verify ultrastructurally that FSH binds to receptors on the plasma membrane of isolated rat Sertoli cells. A relatively pure aliquot of Sertoli cells was obtained by first dissociating testicular tissue from immature rats with
collagenase
and then centrifuging the suspension in Percoll density gradients. Pre-embedding staining with the
peroxidase
anti-
peroxidase
(PAP) complex technique using anti-FSH beta as the primary antiserum localized endogenous receptor-bound FSH on the plasma membrane of isolated Sertoli cells. Staining was considered to be specific since membranes of Sertoli cells derived from hypophysectomized rats were not stained when subjected to the same procedure. Cytoplasmic vesicles in Sertoli cells from experimental, control, and hypophysectomized groups also stained with PAP. Staining of these structures appeared to be specific since it was obliterated by preabsorption of anti-FSH beta with FSH. Preabsorption with luteinizing hormone (LH) did not affect the staining of cytoplasmic vesicles. The results of this investigation provide the first evidence for ultrastructural localization of specific binding sites for anti-FSH beta on the cell membrane of isolated Sertoli cells using an unlabeled antibody technique, and they further support the contention that Sertoli cells are a primary target for the action of FSH.
...
PMID:Immunocytochemical staining of isolated rat Sertoli cells for anti-FSH beta. 641 82
The extracellular matrix of cultured chicken embryo fibroblasts undergoes a number of modifications during the early stages of oncogenic transformation. One alteration is increased production of a small protein (Mr approximately 21,000) which is transiently deposited in the matrix by transforming cells infected with LA24, a temperature-sensitive mutant of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) (Blenis, J., and Hawkes, S.P. (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80, 770-774). This protein is a major component of substratum-associated material (material which remains attached to culture dishes after removal of cells with ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid). Its synthesis is stimulated by transformation of cells with NY68, another ts mutant of RSV, and also by treatment of normal, uninfected cells with the tumor promoter, phorbol myristate acetate. Accessibility of the 21-kDa protein to
lactoperoxidase
-catalyzed iodination indicates an exposed location within the matrix. The protein binds strongly to the culture dish and/or other matrix components. This interaction can be disrupted by sodium dodecyl sulfate but not by several nonionic detergents, unless beta-mercaptoethanol or KCl (0.5 M) are also present. High concentrations of urea or guanidine hydrochloride also remove the protein from the matrix. The 21-kDa protein is resistant to trypsin,
collagenase
, and the hydrolytic enzymes associated with cells transformed by the wild-type Prague A RSV but not to Pronase or chymotrypsin. A 21-kDa protein with properties similar to those described above is also detected in the medium and binds to the matrix, suggesting that a potential route of deposition of the 21-kDa protein in the matrix may be via shedding and subsequent interaction with other matrix components.
...
PMID:Characterization of a transformation-sensitive protein in the extracellular matrix of chicken embryo fibroblasts. 643 99
The phagocytic process is a combination of a sequence of events which includes a recognition attachment phase and a subsequent internalization phase. The present study was designed to investigate the effect of plasma fibronectin on the attachment and ingestion of gelatinized sheep erythrocytes to isolated rat Kupffer cells in a monolayer assay. Kupffer cells were isolated by sequential
collagenase
-pronase digestion followed by metrizamide density gradient centrifugation and subsequent adherence to plastic. Classification as Kupffer cells was confirmed by the presence of functional Fc receptors, a positive
peroxidase
reaction, and phagocytic activity. Purified plasma fibronectin as well as rat serum containing fibronectin promoted attachment of gelatinized fixed sheep erythrocytes to Kupffer cells in a dose-dependent manner, whereas fibronectin-deficient serum did not. Heparin did not enhance the fibronectin-mediated attachment or ingestion of gelatinized sheep erythrocytes at lower particle doses, whereas at higher particle doses heparin augmented the response. These results indicate that fibronectin can enhance the binding and ingestion of foreign gelatin-coated particulates by Kupffer cells.
...
PMID:Fibronectin-enhanced attachment of gelatin-coated erythrocytes to isolated hepatic Kupffer cells. 659 85
Oval cells and biliary epithelial cells were isolated from livers of rats fed a choline-deficient diet containing 0.1% ethionine and from normal rat livers, respectively. Nonparenchymal cell suspensions prepared from these livers by
collagenase
perfusion followed by digestion of undissociated tissue with 0.1%
collagenase
, 0.1% Pronase, and 0.004% DNase I were separated into six fractions by centrifugal elutriation. Cells in each fraction were characterized histochemically for gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase,
peroxidase
, alkaline phosphatase, and glucose-6-phosphatase activities, and for albumin and alpha-fetoprotein by immunocytochemical methods. Cells from Fraction 5 of the elutriation procedure had various features predicted for oval cells and were selected for further studies. The cell yield in this fraction, from each preneoplastic liver, was 5.7 X 10(7) cells, 93 +/- 2% of which were gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase positive, 6 +/- 1%
peroxidase
positive, 61% albumin positive, and 29% alpha-fetoprotein positive. Cells in this fraction have a median diameter of 13.1 micron and are diploid and cycling. The majority of these cells has morphological features characteristic of biliary epithelial cells, although some cells display features intermediate between duct cells and hepatocytes. Nucleic acid hybridization using specific probes revealed that these cells contain albumin and alpha-fetoprotein messenger RNAs, while hepatocytes from normal and preneoplastic liver contain only albumin messenger RNA. Biliary cells obtained from normal livers do not contain albumin messenger RNA. The large-scale purification and characterization of cell populations from preneoplastic livers is an important step in elucidating the cellular derivation of liver tumors.
...
PMID:Isolation of oval cells by centrifugal elutriation and comparison with other cell types purified from normal and preneoplastic livers. 669 43
In order to clarify the microvascular architecture and ultrastructural features of the capillary vessels related to transendothelial transport of metabolites, scanning electron microscopy of tissues digested by HCl-
collagenase
and of vascular corrosion casts as well as thin-section, tracer, and freeze-fracture replications were employed to study the maturation zone of rat-incisor enamel organ. The enamel-organ maturation zone was shown to have a well-developed, dense capillary plexus. The capillary vessels were distributed along furrows formed by the enamel-organ papillary ridges. In central regions they formed a regular, blindlike network; in the peripheral regions, however, they formed an irregular, circular network. Everywhere except in the nuclear and perinuclear regions, the very thin capillary-vessel endothelial walls were pierced with numerous fenestrations. Such fenestrations were evident in endothelial walls facing the ameloblast-layer site. In tracer experiments, intravenously injected horseradish
peroxidase
passed through the fenestrations in the endothelial walls to diffuse throughout the enamel-organ extracellular spaces. It did not, however, pass through intercellular spaces or transendothelial channels. The dense, regular distribution of highly fenestrated capillaries in the enamel organ is thought to make possible the rapid transcapillary exchange of various metabolites between the vascular system and the ameloblast and papillary layers that is necessary for enamel maturation.
...
PMID:Microvascular architecture of the enamel organ in the rat-incisor maturation zone. Scanning and transmission electron microscopic studies. 672 Feb 39
Using the sialic acid-specific lectin, limulin (LPA; from Limulus polyphemus hemolymph), the distribution and nature of sialoglycoconjugates on the surface of rat pancreatic cells has been investigated. Binding of rhodaminated LPA (Rh-LPA) or horseradish
peroxidase
-conjugated LPA (HRP-LPA) to fixed-frozen sections of adult rat pancreas resulted in intense linear staining of the apical surface of acinar cells with fainter staining on the basal but not the lateral cell surfaces. LPA binding was specific in that it could be abolished by 1) pretreatment of tissue sections with neuraminidase or periodic acid; 2) competition with sialic acid; and 3) incubation in Ca2+ -free buffers. Pretreatment of sections with proteases abolished LPA binding to the apical surfaces of acinar cells and also enhanced LPA binding to the lateral cell surface. Lipid extraction of sections following protease treatment markedly reduced LPA binding to the acinar cell periphery. These results suggest that LPA binding sites on the acinar cell apical surface may be primarily sialoglycoproteins, while those on the basolateral surfaces may consist in part of gangliosides. Electron microscopy of
collagenase
-dispersed acini exposed to HRP-LPA confirmed binding of LPA to the basal plasmalemma and, in addition, revealed staining of basal lamina when present. LPA binding to the acinar cell surface was not affected by digestion of tissue sections with hyaluronidase, heparinase,
collagenase
, or 6 M guanidine-HCl. Control experiments indicated that rat pancreatic secretory proteins contain undetectable amounts of sialoglycoproteins and thus that the apical localization of LPA is not due to adherent secretory proteins. Islets of Langerhans were always uniformly and heavily stained with LPA conjugates; this staining was protease insensitive. Appearance of LPA binding sites was examined on embryonic pancreatic epithelia. At day 15 of gestation, Rh-LPA stained the entire periphery of the epithelial cells, including the lateral cell surface, although more intense staining was already noted on the apical surface. This pattern persisted through day 17 of gestation, but by day 19 an adult staining pattern was observed with loss of staining of the lateral cell surfaces.
...
PMID:Distribution of sialoglycoconjugates on acinar cells of the mammalian pancreas. 675 68
A study was made of mycobacterial-induced granulomas in guinea-pig lymph nodes. Live BCG (Pasteur) induced a granuloma containing epithelioid cells while Cobalt irradiated Mycobacterium leprae induced a granuloma comprised of phagocytic macrophages. The granulomas were quantitated by measurement of lymph node weight and the areas of infiltration in histological sections. The time course of granuloma formation induced by Co-irradiated M. leprae was veary different from the time course of the granuloma formation induced by BCG. Collagen synthesis assessed by incorporation of 14C-proline into
collagenase
sensitive protein was greater in lymph nodes draining the site of injection of Co-irradiated BCG than those draining the site of injection of Co-irradiated M. leprae during the first 10 weeks. Collagen synthesis was delayed in the nodes from animals injected with live BCG for at least 10 weeks. Single cell suspensions of draining lymph nodes containing granulomas consisted of lymphocytes and large cells (epithelioid cells and macrophages). A high proportion of the large cells were found to be non-adherent in the live BCG-induced epithelioid cell granuloma. In contrast, M. leprae-induced granulomas contained a high percentage of adherent large cells. In both the granulomas, the majority of large cells were esterase positive and showed the presence of fibronectin. Most of the large cells in the granulomas did not carry receptors for the Fc component of IgG or the C3 component of complement and did not exhibit
peroxidase
activity.
...
PMID:Comparison of mycobacterial granulomas in guinea-pig lymph nodes. 675 60
Collagen and its high-molecular-weight fragments specifically induce an extracellular
collagenase
(EC 3.4.24.8) in the Gram-negative Achromobacter iophagus. During the induction process the inducer is concentrated on the bacterial outer membrane. Two-dimensional electrophoresis of 125I-labelled outer membrane proteins has shown that, in particular, the amount of one protein which is already present on the surface of non-induced bacteria increases quantitatively when the inducer is added. After 125I-labelling of the cell membrane and its solubilization, the same protein is retained selectively on a gelatin-Sepharose column. It has isoelectric point of 4.9-5.1 and molecular weight of 40000. This molecular weight is close to that of the 35000 of the
collagenase
subunit. However, their non-identity was proved in three independent ways: upon two-dimensional electrophoresis, only those proteins in the range corresponding to the
collagenase
dimer (Mr 70000-80000) react with fluorescent anticollagenase antibody system, whereas the spot of the collagen-binding protein (mr 40000) is negative; the solubilized collagen-binding protein is not retained by anticollagenase-Sepharose affinity chromatography; in vivo, it is not protected by anti-
collagenase
antibodies against
lactoperoxidase
iodination. A hypothesis for the possible role of the collagen-binding protein in the induction of
collagenase
is proposed.
...
PMID:Cell-surface collagen-binding protein in the procaryote Achromobacter iophagus. 682 47
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