Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

1. This paper describes improved methods of obtaining, purifying and studying bulk suspensions of isolated living hepatocytes and other cells of adult rats and urodeles. 2. The cells were isolated largely by dissolving the hepatic ground substance through the extracorporeal portal perfusion and further incubation of the excised liver with 0.05% collagenase and 0.1% hyaluronidase. The different kinds of cells were then separated from one another by counter-current centrifugation. The isolated cells were examined by differential interference, phase-contrast, amplitude-contrast, ultraviolet, fluorescence and electron microscopy. Various cytochemical tests were carried out. Whenever possible, for each method of examination, the isolated cells were compared with cells of the same kind which had not undergone isolation. 3. Dye-exclusion, lysochromy, fluorescence and differential interference microscopical analysis indicated viability rates between 75 and 99%. Succinate dehydrogenase activity was preserved at a high level in nearly all isolated cells. In hepatocytes, the essentially extracellular cells. In hepatocytes, the essentially extracellular 'soluble' alkaline phosphatase activity of bile canaliculi was retained. Living hepatocytes were studied by super-modulating methods of microscopy for the first time, with somewhat unexpected findings. It now seems probable that previous methods of tissue preparation produced gross alterations in hepatocyte mitochondria. The assessment of the viability of isolated cells was re-examined. 4. The methods described may permit a more meaningful correlation between biochemical, cytochemical, ultrastructural and biophysical findings than that obtainable by the use of current methods.
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PMID:Improved isolation, separation and cytochemistry of living cells. 110 11

The submandibular glands of 4-week-old rats were dissociated by a procedure involving digestions with collagenase and hyaluronidase, chelation of divalent cations and mechanical force. A suspension of single cells was obtained in low yield by centrifugation in a Ficoll-containing medium. Immediately after dissociation and after a culture period of 16-18 hr the dissociated cells were tested for agglutinability by concanavalin A (Con A). Using ferritin (tfer)-conjugated Con A the lectin binding by the isolated acinar cells was also studied. The dissociated cells were agglutinated by low concentrations of Con A and bound Fer-Con A molecules on their entire surface without any indication of polarization of the cell membrane. There was a considerable cell to cell variation in the amount of Fer-Con A binding which was, in general, sparse and patchy. The contact surfaces between agglutinated cells revealed a dense binding of Fer-Con A molecules irrespective of the types of cells participating in the agglutination reaction. Cells cultured for 16-18 hr were no longer agglutinated by Con A. As compared to the freshly dissociated cells the cultured acinar cells revealed a more uniform and denser binding of Fer-Con A molecules. Furthermore, there were more lectin molecules bound to the cell surface corresponding to the basal part of the cell, where the nucleus and most of the rough surface endoplasmic reticulum were located, than to the apical cell surface. It is suggested that the higher density of lectin-binding sites on the cell surface in the vicinity of the cisternae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum indicates insertion sites of newly synthesized membrane glycoproteins.
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PMID:Distribution of concanavalin A binding sites on the surface of dissociated rat submandibular gland acinar cells. 115 94

1. Intact cells, cell fragments (membranes) and matrix vesicles were isolated from the proliferating and calcifying layers of epiphyseal cartilage by sequential hyaluronidase and collagenase digestion and differential centrifugation. Lipids were extracted and analyzed for various lipid classes and their fatty acid composition by column, thin-layer, paper and gas-liquid chromatography. 2. On a protein basis the isolated matrix vesicles had more total lipid than either the membrane or cell fractions, the vesicles and membranes being richer in non-polar lipids and containing smaller quantities of phospholipids than whole cells. Expressed as a percentage of the total lipid, the cells were richer in triacylglycerols and lower in free fatty acids than in the membrane or vesicle fractions. The proportion of free cholesterol and the cholesterol/phospholipid ratio were nearly twice as high in the matrix vesicles as in the other tissue fractions. Choline and ethanolamine phosphoglycerides progressively declined in the membrane and matrix vesicle fractions, whereas serine phosphoglycerides and sphinogomyelin increased. Non-phosphorus-containing polar lipids were present in all fractions, the vesicles being richer in polyhexosyl ceramides, cerebrosides, glycosyldiacylglycerols and certain uncharacterized acidic polar lipids. 3. Fatty acid patterns of the matrix vesicles were distinctive from those of isolated cells, being generally richer in 18 : 0 and 18 : 2, and lower in 16 : 1 and 18 : 1 fatty acids. Monoacyl forms were similarly increased in 16 : 0 and/or 18 : 0, and reduced in 16 : 1, 18 : 1 or 20 : 2 fatty acids, depending on the lipid class. The fatty acid composition of diphosphatidylglycerol from cells and matrix vesicles was markedly different, providing evidence that the cardiolipin in the vesicles was not from mitochondrial components. 4. Based on the fact that the matrix vesicles were significantly enriched in free cholesterol, sphingomyelin, glycolipids and serine-phosphoglycerides, it is concluded that they are derived from the plasma membrane of the cell, supporting earlier conclusions based upon morphological and enzymological evidence.
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PMID:Lipid composition of isolated epiphyseal cartilage cells, membranes and matrix vesicles. 118 91

The mechanism of the biosynthesis of albumin was studied in cell suspensions from rat liver. The cells were prepared by continuous perfusion of the liver in situ with 0.05% collagenase and 0.10% hyaluronidase and incubated under conditions optimized for the incorporation of amino acids into protein. Seven minutes after starting the incubation L-[1-14C]leucine was added, followed after 25 min by a 15 or 30-min chase with an 830-fold excess of non-radioactive L-leucine. Total protein, an albumin-like protein, and albumin were isolated from samples withdrawn immediately of total protein was found to remain constant after addition of the non-radioactive L-leucine, whereas that of the albumin-like protein decreased and that of albumin increased with incubation time. The increase in albumin radioactivity accounted for the decrease in radioactivity of the albumin-like protein, suggesting that the latter is a precursor of albumin. The precursor protein differed from albumin by an oligopeptide extension at the N-terminal end.
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PMID:Synthesis of albumin via a precursor protein in cell suspensions from rat liver. 126 47

Cells were obtained from the mammary glands of sheep and cows by collagenase-hyaluronidase digestion. Characterization of cells as epithelial was by reaction with a monoclonal antibody to cytokeratin. A subpopulation of spindle-shaped or stellate cells reacted with a monoclonal antibody to desmin and may be related to myoepithelial cells. The development is described of a simple serum-free culture system for these cells on gels of rat tail (type 1) collagen. A commercial medium (M199) was used, buffered with Hepes and with bovine serum albumin as the sole protein supplement, plus fibronectin for the first 18 h only as an attachment factor. The cell cultures showed stimulated DNA synthesis in response to mitogens on attached gels and also responded as floating cultures to lactogenic hormones with production of alpha-lactalbumin.
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PMID:Characteristics of ruminant mammary epithelial cells grown in primary culture in serum-free medium. 128 Jun 56

In frog cutaneous-pectoris muscles the frequency of slowly rising atypical miniature endplate potentials (MEPPs) was significantly enhanced after collagenase (0.1%) treatment. Treatment with trypsin, hyaluronidase, hyper- and hypoosmotic solutions caused no changes in slowly rising MEPP (frequency in muscle fibers with intact acetylcholinesterase (AChE). Inhibition of AChE caused appearance of giant MEPPs. Acceleration of acetylcholine diffusion from synaptic cleft after treatment with hyaluronidase decreased giant MEPP frequency demonstrating their dependence upon nonhydrolyzed acetylcholine in synaptic cleft. The relation between slowly rising MEPPs and activity of synaptic Schwann cells in discussed.
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PMID:[Atypical endplate miniature potentials in the frog neuromuscular junction after modification of the intercellular matrix and osmotic exposures]. 129 72

The interstitium is the final link in the transportation of nutrients from the bloodstream to the individual cells of an organism. To assess interstitial fluid transport in normal and inflamed tissue, the hydration (H, ml H2O/g dry wt) and hydraulic conductivity (Kp, 10(-8) cm2.s-1.cmH2O-1) of bovine pericardial stroma were determined. The effect of enzymes and neutrophil-derived products of inflammation on the properties of the interstitial model were determined. Samples of the pericardium were exposed separately to trypsin, elastase, hyaluronidase, collagenase, superoxide radicals, and hydrogen peroxide. After exposure, the tissues were washed repeatedly in physiological saline and equilibrated in transport chambers heated to 37 degrees C and pressurized to 50 cmH2O. Fluid flow across the tissues was monitored. A section of tissue was removed and weighed. The tissue section was subsequently dried and reweighed. Tissue thickness, H, and Kp were calculated. H and Kp of the control tissues were 2.82 +/- 0.04 and 1.71 +/- 0.07, respectively. Hydration was significantly increased (22-38%) by exposure to trypsin, elastase, collagenase, and superoxide radicals. Kp increased significantly (30-1055%) in the groups treated with trypsin, hyaluronidase, collagenase, and superoxide radicals. The inflammatory mediators generally increased the hydration and/or the hydraulic conductivity of the model. These results indicate that neutrophil-derived products could be involved in the development of interstitial edema during the inflammatory process.
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PMID:Oxygen radicals, enzymes, and fluid transport through pericardial interstitium. 131 Feb 33

A significant percentage of cows (11%) fail to release the placenta within 12 h postpartum. Failure of collagen breakdown seems to be related to the retention of placentas. Sections of placentomes incubated with bacterial collagenase caused an increase in placentome proteolysis (6.6-fold) and placentome collagenolysis (94-fold) within 4 h in a dose-related fashion (r = 0.94). Injections of collagenase (825 U/cc) into the placentomes, via umbilical vessels, decreased the cotyledon-caruncle binding force (determined by manometry) to 30 +/- 5 mm Hg from 97 +/- 2 mm Hg, and increased proteolysis by 42% within 8 h (r = -0.95). Hyaluronidase at various concentrations (400-8 250 U/cc) and at various incubation times (up to 8 h) was not effective. Hyaluronidase (825 U/cc) and collagenase (825 U/cc) were not synergistic in loosening cotyledon-caruncle attachment. A single 15-min collagenase pulse, given prior to perfusion with collagenase-free blood, was as effective in loosening cotyledon attachment as was a sustained 2-h perfusion of blood with collagenase added. It was concluded that collagenase caused collagenolysis and loosening of cotyledon from caruncle, but collagenolysis and cotyledon-caruncle separation were not facilitated by the presence of hyaluronidase.
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PMID:Bovine retained placenta: effects of collagenase and hyaluronidase on detachment of placenta. 131 81

Cultured chick embryo skin fibroblasts release a major component with a native molecular mass of about 1 MDa, which resolves into three polypeptide bands of about 300, 350 and 600 kDa upon reduction. We report here the purification of this oligomeric protein and show, by means of polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies, that its three polypeptide constituents are closely related. The 600-kDa polypeptide is likely to be a dimer of two smaller subunits which are cross-linked by non-reducible bonds. By electron microscopy, isolated oligomeric molecules exhibit a novel cruciform structure with a large central globular domain. One arm has the shape of a thin rod about 70 nm in length. The three other arms are thicker, longer (90 nm) and flexible, and carry a prominent double globule at their distal ends. Collagenase treatment of the oligomeric fibroblast protein yields two resistant fragments of about 270 kDa and 320 kDa. The intact 350-kDa and 600-kDa (but not the 300-kDa) polypeptides are chondroitinase sensitive and labeled by metabolic incorporation of [35S]sulfate; collagenase treatment does not remove any [35S] sulfate. Hence, the intact fibroblast protein has glycosaminoglycan chains attached to its non-collagenous domain. Three amino acid sequences obtained from chymotryptic fragments of the fibroblast protein correspond to sequences predicted for chick type-XII collagen from its full-length cDNA [Yamagata, M., Yamada, K. M., Yamada, S. S., Shinomura, T., Tanaka, H., Nishida, Y., Obara, M. & Kimata, K. (1991) J. Cell Biol. 115, 209-221]. However, the novel fibroblast protein described here differs significantly from previously isolated forms of type-XII collagen: its subunits are larger by one third, and it is a proteoglycan.
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PMID:A major oligomeric fibroblast proteoglycan identified as a novel large form of type-XII collagen. 132 60

Type VI collagen, a widespread structural component of connective tissues, has been isolated in abundance from fetal bovine skin by a procedure involving bacterial collagenase digestion under nonreducing, nondenaturing conditions and gel filtration chromatography. Rotary shadowing electron microscopic analysis revealed that the collagen VI was predominantly in the form of extensive intact microfibrillar arrays. These microfibrils were seen in association with hyaluronan, which was identified by its ability to bind the G1 fragment of cartilage proteoglycan. Treatment with highly purified hyaluronidase largely disrupted the collagen VI microfibrils into component tetramers, double tetramers, and short microfibrillar sections. Subsequent incubation of disrupted collagen VI in the presence of hyaluronan facilitated a partial repolymerization of the microfibrils. In vitro binding studies have also demonstrated that type VI collagen binds hyaluronan with a relatively high affinity. These studies demonstrate that a specific structural relationship exists between type VI collagen and hyaluronan. This association is likely to be of primary importance in the growth and remodeling processes of connective tissues.
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PMID:Type VI collagen microfibrils: evidence for a structural association with hyaluronan. 132 68


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