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)

Mechanical and enzymatic methods of disaggregating tumors were studied with the goals of (1) minimizing cell losses while (2) maintaining functional and surface membrane markers needed to objectively identify inflammatory cells (IC)1 in resultant suspensions. Application of the principles and methods described makes accurate estimation of the percentage of each IC type present in neoplasms possible for the first time. Compared to purely mechanical means of disaggregating tumors, all enzyme mixtures tested markedly increased yields of viable cells/g neoplasm. Best results were obtained with a combination of collagenase and a protease of broader substrate range (alpha chymotrypsin, papain, pronase or trypsin). The combination of enzymes that gave the highest yields with the least effect on inflammatory cell markers was trypsin, collagenase and DNAse (TCD). Because mechanical injury appeared to be the greatest single cause of cell loss (the enzymes themselves had little direct effect), potential sources were identified and either eliminated or minimized. With TCD, depending on the tumor system, cell recovery (measured as DNA recovered in cell suspensions) was as high as 50% and yields were as much as 6.9 X 10(8) viable cells/g tumor. Complete disaggregation was not required to obtain representative IC populations from tumor fragments. Neutrophils, eosinophils and mast cells from disaggregated neoplasms were counted in Giemsa stained cytocentrifuge preparations based on their unique morphologic appearances. Macrophages were identified by their capacity to phagocytose zymosan, a function which proved highly resistant to the effect of enzymes. Flourescent microscopic identification of brain associated thymus antigen (BATA) allowed quantification of T lymphocytes, since this marker was virtually unchanged by enzyme exposure. Surface immunoglobulin (Ig) was stripped from B lymphocytes most rapidly by pronase and chymotrypsin, slowly by trypsin and papain, and not at all by collagenase. Ig positive cells therefore could be quantified in suspensions generated by collagenase or very short (20 min) exposure of fragments to trypsin.
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PMID:Inflammatory cells in solid murine neoplasms. I. Tumor disaggregation and identification of constituent inflammatory cells. 18 47

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.
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PMID:Enzymic preparation of neurosecretosome- and pituicyte-enriched fractions from the rat neurohypophysis. 18 63

The basement membrane of the human umbilical vein was studied by electron microscopy with respect to its ultrastructure, susceptibility to digestion by collagenase or trypsin, and reactivity with human platelets. Electron microscopic examination of this vessel showed a continuous reticulated basement membrane which morphologically resembled those of mammalian capillaries and rabbit heart valves. The vascular endothelium was removed by freezing and thawing, thus uncovering the underlying connective tissue. The vessels were sliced into rings which were incubated with collagenase or trypsin. The basement lamella appeared to be susceptible to digestion by either enzyme. Platelet interaction with exposed vascular basement mambrane was studied by rotating frozen-thawed everted and noneverted rings in anticoagulated whole human blood. In heparinized or citrated blood, large aggregates of degranulated platelets adhered to collagenous controls; in contrast, the test rings with exposed basement membrane were partially covered with a monolayer of platelets which appeared to retain discoid or spherical shape and granules. In EDTA-anticoagulated blood, the collagen control rings accumulated a platelet monolayer, whereas little or no adhesion occurred on the basement membrane surface. In this system the basement membrane of the human umbilical vein appears to be a poor platelet reactive surface as compared to collagen.
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PMID:Platelet interaction with human umbilical cord vascular basement membrane. 18 62

Normal and premalignant mouse mammary epithelial cells can be prepared in high yields by collagenase dissociation of minced glands followed by a brief, differential centrifugation to remove contaminating fibroblasts and fat cells. The major difficulties in preparing pure cultures in quantity are 1) incomplete dissociation of gland material, and 2) cell death during enzymatic digestion. These problems are eliminated by careful selection of collagenases for dissociation. Normal and premalignant mammary epithelial cells are morphologically indistinguishable from malignant mouse mammary epithelial cells in primary monolayer cultures. In addition, the growth rates and saturation densities achieved by normal mammary epithelial cells are indistinguishable from those of malignant mammary epithelial cells in primary culture. In both cases, a monolayer of cells is preserved with no evidence of focal overgrowth. Malignant adenocarcinoma mammary cells can however be distinguished from normal mammary epithelial cells by virtue of differences in their surface interactions with concanavalin A. A hemadsorption assay using Con-A-coated erythrocytes was the most sensitive indicator for these differences. In hemadsorption assays malignant mammary epithelial cells were half-maximally reactive with 2.5 mug/ml concanavalin A, while normal cells were completely unreactive even at concanavalin A concentrations five-times higher. Premalignant mammary epithelial cells were as reactive as malignant mammary epithelial cells in the hemadsorption assays. Hemadsorption of malignant cells was observed in primary and secondary cultures of epithelium as well as in cell lines. Malignant cells forming mammary adenocarcinomas were as highly reactive as malignant cells forming scirrhous carcinomas. Malignant cells not releasing mammary tumor virus (MuMTV) were as reactive as cells releasing that virus. Adsorption of concanavalin-A-coated erythrocytes to normal mammary epithelial cells could be induced by brief treatment of cell monolayers with hyaluronidase. Exposure of active sites was not affected with either trypsin or collagenase. Our results show that while the growth of malignant cells does not serve to distinguish them from normal cells in monolayer culture, surface changes do exist which can be identified by differences in concanavalin A reactivity. Since the earliest transformants identifiable in vivo (premalignant) have undergone conversion of the surface marker, concanavalin-A-mediated hemadsorption provides a sensitive measure for mammary epithelial cell transformants in vitro.
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PMID:Markers to distinguish normal and neoplastic mammary epithelial cells in vitro: comparison of saturation density, morphology and concanavalin A reactivity. 18 59

In the early postoperative period (third postoperative day) the colonic enterotomies show 45 per cent higher bursting pressure following administration of Aprotinin than the control group (p less than 0,02). On the fifth postoperative day no difference was noted between both groups. The interpretation of the results is difficult because specific parameters such as collagen content and collagenase activity were not determinated. The relationship between colonic anastomotic breakdown and collagenase and therefore the question of collagenase inhibition have to be discussed. It is suggested that activation of procollagenase is prevented because trypsin and kallikrein are inhibited by Aprotinin.
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PMID:[Bursting pressure of colon in the rats and proteinase inhibition (author's transl)]. 18 77

A large amount of plasma low density lipoprotein is present in human aortic intima, and this can be removed and measured by electrophoresis directly from the minced tissue into an antibody-containing gel. We now find that, in addition to this electrophoretically mobile lipoprotein, there is an immobilized lipoprotein fraction than can be released from lesions by incubation of the tissue sample with plasmin or other proteolytic enzymes after the mobile lipoprotein has been removed. The concentration of immobilized lipoprotein is highly correlated with the concentration of the residual cholesterol (not mobile on electrophoresis) that has accumulated in the tissue (r = 0.702; P less than 0.001). Thus, in normal intima and early gelatinous lesions it is about 15% of the concentration of mobile lipoprotein, whereas in the atheroma lipid layers of fibrous or gelatinous plaques it may be 2 or 3 times greater than the concentration of mobile lipoprotein. This suggests that immobilization of plasma lipoprotein is an intermediate step in the irreversible deposition of extracellular cholesterol in atherosclerotic lesions. Incubation with plasmin allowed maximum release of lipoprotein: plasmin = crude collagenase greater than trypsin greater than "pure" collagenase greater than chondroitinase ABC in order of their relative effectiveness. The concentration of immobilized lipoprotein was significantly correlated (r = 0.793; P less than 0.001) with the concentration in the tissue of fibrin or other insoluble derivatives of fibrinogen ("fibrin"). In aliquots of lesions incubated with varying amounts of plasmin for varying times there was a constant relation between release of lipoprotein and release of fibrin-degradation products. Together, these findings suggest that the lipoprotein is associated with insoluble "fibrin". This appears to be of considerable clinical interest, suggesting a synergism between lipoprotein and fibrinogen in the accumulation of lipid in lesions.
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PMID:The release of an immobilized lipoprotein fraction from atherosclerotic lesions by incubation with plasmin. 18 79

Polymeric collagen fibrils have been reacted with fluorescein and rhodamine isothiocyanates to produce fluorescent dye-labelled fibrils, containing seven dye substituents per molecule of tropocollagen within the polymeric collagen fibrils. Two dye-labelled peptides per molecule of tropocollagen were solubilised by trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4) from the telopeptide regions and four dye-labelled peptides were located in the helical regions solubilised by bacterial collagenase (EC 3.4.24.3). The solubilisation of dye-labelled peptides from these insoluble substrates were employed to measure the kinetics of trypsin and collagenase digestion of the telopeptide and helical regions, respectively, of the insoluble polymeric collagen fibrils. These studies demonstrated an apparent excess of enzyme for the readily available substrate under conditions when it was known that a vast excess of substrate existed in the reaction mixture calculated in terms of a molecular ratio. A point of equivalence was established for both trypsin and bacterial collagenase, approximately one enzyme molecule per 870 substrate molecules. On either side of this point the quantity of products formed was controlled by either the enzyme concentration or the substrate concentration. The results can be explained in terms of the inaccessibility of tropocollagen molecules within the molecular architecture of the polymeric collagen fibrils. The external layer of tropocollagen molecules obstruct collagenolytic enzymes penetrating to, and forming enzyme-substrate complexes with, the bulk of the substrate within the interior of the fibrils.
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PMID:Polymeric collagen fibrils. An example of substrate-mediated steric obstruction of enzymic digestion. 18 22

A procedure for adsorbing enzymes from the human burn wound onto solid sheets of substrate is described. Using this technique, low levels of enzyme activity with chymotrypsin-like specificity can be demonstrated in the wound approximately 2 weeks after injury. This activity disappears at about 5 weeks after the burn. The enzyme activity corresponds with the clinical experience for the time course of natural loss of the burn eschar. A trypsin-like enzyme of very low level activity is present in the wound. No collagenase was detected in the human burn wound. Preliminary evidence shows an additional leucine-specific enzyme in the human burn wound. A more detailed analysis of enzymes in the human burn wound should permit the development of a useful artificial debriding agent. Presently these preparations must be used with caution.
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PMID:Proteolytic enzyme activity in the granulation tissue of the human burn wound. 18 29

125I-angiotensin II (AII) specifically bound to rat glomerular basement membrane (GBM). The kinetics of binding were similar to those obtained with the total glomeruli. The apparent dissociation constant was close to 50 pM with both preparations. The number of sites related to the amount of protein was two times greater with GBM than with total glomeruli. Since the amount of GBM protein extracted from a given amount of glomerular protein was about 10%, it was possible to estimate the share of the GBM binding sites for AII as representing 20% of the total number present in the entire glomerulus. Binding studies at equilibrium as a function of 125I-AII concentration and competitive binding experiments suggested either multiplicity of the binding sites or cooperativity in the binding reaction. Degradation of 125I-AII in the presence of GBM was slight and did not increase with time. The difference in the degrees of degradation of 125I-AII was too small to account for the observed difference in binding when the results obtained with GBM and isolated glomeruli preparations were compared. 125I-AII binding to GBM was increased after treatment of these membranes with collagenase, slightly diminished with neuraminidase, and almost completely abolished with trypsin suggesting the proteic nature of the receptor. 125I-AII binding to GBM was diminished after incubation of GBM with anti-GBM antibodies as a result of a decrease in the number of binding sites. 125I-AII binding was even more diminished in preparations of glomeruli isolated from rats passively immunized with anti-GBM antibodies when compared with glomeruli from control animals. This resulted from both smaller affinity for AII and decrease in the number of the binding sites. The present data provides evidence for specific binding sites for AII localized on GBM. This is noteworthy since receptors for polypeptide hormones are currently observed on the surface of cell membranes. These findings also suggest a new physiological role for AII which might involve modification of GBM permeability.
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PMID:High affinity binding of 125I-angiotensin II to rat glomerular basement membranes. 18 23

In advanced osteoarthritis, all of the cartilaginous components are lost from the joint surface. Although mechanisms exist for proteoglycan degradation, there is not known to be any system for removal of the collagen. This study suggests that the loss of the collagen components may be a function of articular cartilage collagenase. The enzyme in normal human cartilage is bound to an inhibitor and appears to be present in very small amounts. Attempts to demonstrate collagenase activity in ground human articular cartilage or in its lysosomal fraction were unsuccessful. 7-Day cartilage tissue cultures also failed to demonstrate the presence of the enzyme; but the same culture fluid, incubated with trypsin, showed significant degradation of collagen, suggesting that trypsin destroyed the inhibitor. 7-Day culture fluids were then chromatographed on a heparin-charged Sepharose 4B affinity column that had been activated with cyanogen bromide. This removed the inhibitor, and the chromatographed fluid from osteoarthritic cartilage released 42% of the incorporated counts of the collagen substrate, whereas normal cartilage released 10.1% and a trypsin control, 6.4%. Electrophoresis of the degradation products of the enzyme-collagen complex incubated at 37 degrees C revealed breakdown was complete to small dialyzable fragments, while at 25 degrees C larger fragments were split off.
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PMID:Collagenase and collagenase inhibitors in osteoarthritic and normal cartilage. 18 66


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