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)

Highly sensitive gelatin substrate films prepared according to a recent variant of the procedure are studied for their susceptibility to the action of various endopeptidases and exopeptidases. Trypsin, papain, elastase, and chymotrypsin are found to hydrolyze the gelatin films most easily, while higher enzyme concentrations are required in case of pepsin, plasmin and collagenase. The exopeptidases, i.e. leucine aminopeptidase, amino acid arylamidase and carboxypeptidases A and B do not cause lysis of gelatin substrate films. The example of a rabbit blastocyst protease involved in implantation is given to demonstrate the application of gelatin substrate film tests for studies of enzymes which have no or little activity against known synthetic substrates (like BANA or GPNA) but hydrolyze gelatin films. Studies of interactions of this blastocyst protease with various inhibitors of known specificity, however, show that the active center of this enzyme nevertheless has striking similarities to trypsin (and also to chymotrypsin). The enzyme is possibly related to elastase. It is emphasized that, besides this, there are a number of different protease type enzymes in rabbit blastocyst and uterine tissues, some of which can be demonstrated only with chromogenic substrates and some only by gelatin methods. Aspects of applicability of the two types of protease tests are briefly discussed.
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PMID:[The specificity and sensitivity of the gelatin base protease substrate film test ]. 4 23

Studies were performed to determine if cultured human endothelial cells synthesized basement membrane collagen. In culture, endothelial cells were attached to grossly visible membranous structures which on light microscopy were composed of ribbons of dense, amorphous material. On transmission electron microscopy, these membranous structures consisted of amorphous basement membrane, and material morphologically similar to microfibrils and elastic fibers. By immunofluorescence microscopy, these membranous structures stained brightly with antisera to human glomerular basement membrane. Cultured endothelial cells incorporated [3H]proline into protein; 18% of the incorporated [3H]proline was solubilized by purified collagenase. When endothelial cells were cultured with [14C]proline, 7.1% of the incorporated counts were present as [14C]hydroxyproline. Cultured endothelial cells were labeled with [3H]glycine and [3H]proline and digested with pepsin. The resulting fractions on analysis by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis contained two radioactive protein peaks of mol wt 94,200 and 120,500. Both these peaks disappeared after digestion with purified collagenase. The peak of mol wt 120,500 corresponds to that of alpha1 (IV) collagen; the peak of the mol wt 94,200 probably corresponds to that of alpha1 (III) collagen. Thus, cultured human endothelial cells synthesize material which is morphologically and immunologically like amorphous basement membrane and biochemically like basement membrane collagen. Cultured endothelial cells probably also synthesize material which is morphologically similar to microfibrils and elastic fibers.
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PMID:Synthesis of basement membrane collagen by cultured human endothelial cells. 5 57

Previous studies have shown that there is microscopic and biochemical evidence that rat parietal yolk sac synthesizes basement membrane (type IV) collagen; this study shows that a radioimmunoassay may be used for the detection of type IV collagen in such biosynthetic systems. Rat parietal yolk sacs incubated in medium containing (14C) proline either with or without alphaalpha-dipyridyl produced either unhydroxylated or hydroxylated (14C)collagen. The immunological reactivity of these two preparations was investigated using antibodies to bovine type IV collagen in a radioimmunoassay which demonstrated that the hydroxylated (14C)collagen preparation had a considerably higher level of antigenicity than the unhydroxylated (14C)collagen. Hydroxylated rat type IV (14C)collagen which had been reduced and alkylated was intermediate in antigenicity between hydroxylated and unhydroxylated material. These findings suggest that there are antigenic determinants which depend upon hydroxylation of the collagen molecule, and others dependent upon intact disulphide bonds. In addition, various levels of pepsin extracted unlabelled calf anterior lens capsule collagen caused inhibition of antibody binding to (14C)collagen. Rat type IV (14C)collagen which had been digested with collagenase was inactive in the radioimmunoassay, while pepsin digestion caused no reduction in antigenicity. These findings suggest that the antiserum is directed towards the collagenous part of the molecule and may be a useful tool in the detection of biosynthesized basement membrane collagen.
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PMID:Rat parietal yolk sac basement membrane. An investigation of the antigenic determinants using a radioimmunoassay. 6 39

A cross-linked fragment (peptide T1X) with a molecular weight of 13,000 could be isolated from a tryptic digest of insoluble type III collagen of calf skin. Peptide T1X was conjugated on to bovine serum albumin by glutaraldehyde and used for immunization of rabbits. The antisera reacted in passive haemagglutination and radioimmune assay with peptide T1X, type III collagen and its constituent alpha1(III) chain. Little or no reaction was observed with type I collagen and alpha1(I) chain. While rabbit antisera to neutral salt-soluble type III Collagen also showed a strong binding for 125I-labelled peptide T1X much less reaction was observed with antisera to type I collagen. The antigenicity of type III collagen was largely destroyed by pepsin treatment suggesting that it resided in non-helical segments. A fragment of peptide T1X produced by digestion with collagenase retained antigenic activity. The data indicated that the aminoterminal region of type III collagen contains strong antigenic determinants located in a non-helical sequence of about sixteen amino acids. Antibodies to these antigenic determinants were purified and rendered specific for type III collagen by immunoadsorption. The antibodies stained in indirect immunofluorescence tests particularly those regions in various connective tissues which are rich in reticulin fibres. Different staining patterns were observed with antibodies to type I collagen.
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PMID:Production and specificity of antibodies against the aminoterminal region in type III collagen. 6 19

To assess potential abnormalities in collagen metabolism in systemic scleroderma, skin fibroblast lines from patients with this disease were established and compared to control cell lines derived from healthy subjects. For studies on the biosynthesis of procollagen, the cells were incubated with [(14)C]proline in a medium supplemented with ascorbic acid and beta-aminopropionitrile, and the synthesis of nondialyzable [(14)C]hydroxyproline, in relation to DNA or cell protein, was taken as an index of procollagen formation. Five of eight scleroderma fibroblast cell lines demonstrated procollagen biosynthesis rates significantly higher than the controls, and the mean rate of procollagen synthesis by scleroderma fibroblasts was about twice that of the control cells. Control experiments demonstrated that the specific activity of the intracellular free proline was not different in scleroderma and control fibroblasts, and the mean population doubling times of the scleroderma and the control fibroblast cell lines were the same. The relative synthesis of the genetically distinct procollagens was examined by isolating type I and type III procollagens from the cell culture medium using DEAE-cellulose chromatography. The ratios of type I/III procollagens in scleroderma cell lines did not differ from the controls. The helical stability of the collagenous portion of type I and type III procollagens, estimated by the resistance of (14)C-collagen to limited proteolytic digestion with pepsin under nondenaturing conditions, was the same in both scleroderma and control cultures. The capacity of the cells to synthesize enzymatically active and immunologically reacting collagenase was also studied; no marked differences in these parameters could be observed. The results suggest that cultured skin fibroblasts from patients with scleroderma demonstrate a metabolic abnormality expressed as increased synthesis of type I and type III procollagens in a normal ratio. This abnormality may play a role in the excessive accumulation of collagen in the skin and other organs affected in scleroderma.
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PMID:Scleroderma: increased biosynthesis of triple-helical type I and type III procollagens associated with unaltered expression of collagenase by skin fibroblasts in culture. 9 59

A preparation rich in basement membranes isolated from rat testes (STBM) was exposed to pepsin, collagenase, trypsin, and pronase to obtain soluble fractions. The immunological reactivity of these fractions was studied by gel immunodiffusion or by passive hemagglutination tests against an anti-STBM serum. All fractions reacted with the antiserum, but the highest titer was detected when the antiserum was reacted with a fraction that contained only traces of hydroxyproline (fraction 1), whereas low titers were obtained with collagen or collagen fragments isolated from STBM. Antibodies in the anti-STBM serum were mainly directed to the glycoproteins of STBM not related to collagen. Fraction 1, obtained by subsequent collagenase and trypsin digestion of STBM and purification by Sephadex G-200, was a high molecular weight glycoprotein that was free of half-cystine and methionine, had only traces of hydroxyproline, and contained 7.2% neutral sugars, 0.26% sialic acid, and 8.7 residues of glucosamine per 1000 residues of amino acids.
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PMID:Isolation and immunological reactivity of soluble fractions from rat seminiferous tubule basement membrane. 9 Apr 90

Basement membrane (type IV) collagens were extracted from a mouse tumour with acetic acid and from human placenta after limited enzymatic digestion. Antisera were produced against both collagens in rabbits and guinea-pigs and examined by various assays. These antisera were found to be specific for basement membrane collagen and showed little or no cross-reactions with the interstitial collagens, types I, II and III or with human placenta collagen consisting of alpha A and alpha B chains. Varying degrees of cross-reaction were observed between antisera to human and mouse type IV collagen. Immunochemical analyses demonstrated the presence of three distinct determinants in the tumour type IV collagen. Rabbit antisera against this antigen reacted with either collagenase-resistant segments or with a collagenous, disulphide-bonded segment (P3). Guinea-pig antisera recognized primarily antigenic determinants in the P3 segment. Antisera to placenta type IV collagen reacted with another collagenous, pepsin fragment (P1) which lacks disulphide bonds. These antisera showed complete cross-reaction with collagenous alpha 1 (IV) chains prepared from pepsin-digests of human placenta and bovine lens capsule.
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PMID:Immunochemical study on basement membrane (type IV) collagens. 9 54

Crude extracts from the human glomerular basement membranes solubilized by pepsin or bacterial collagenase agglutinate normal or transformed human cells. Cytoagglutination is inhibited by N-acetyl-osamines. These properties are reminiscent of lectins. When agglutinated cells are incubated for an additional 20 hrs. period in minimal serum free medium but in presence of these basement membrane extracts, they attach to the glass and spread out.
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PMID:[Presence of lectin-like substances in the basement membrane of the human kidney glomerulus]. 11 33

A three stage procedure for the purification of crude bacterial collagenase is described. The three stages were ion exchange chromatography on SP-Sephadex and DEAE-cellulose, followed by molecular sieve chromatography on Sephadex G-200. The end product was eluted from Sephadex G-200 as a single peak of absorbance at 280 nm, and a single zone of activity against gelatin. The active eluate was divided into two halves, designated fraction 1 and 2 collagenase. Their activities were greater than those of commercially available collagenases when assayed viscometrically against pepsin solubilized collagen from guinea-pig skins. The non-specific protease activities in both fractions were much less than in the commercially available purified collagenases, and fraction 1 collagenase liberated only 2.6% of a [3H]-tryptophan label from a substrate of 2 mg of labelled chick embryo proteins, after an 18 hour incubation. When polymeric collagen was incubated with fraction 1 collagenase, at a final enzyme : substrate ratio of 1:160, the collagen was digested, resulting in the loss of 99.8% hydroxyproline as dialysable material.
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PMID:The preparation of a bacterial collagenase containing negligible non-specific protease activity. 17 Jun 2

1. Antisera were raised against the collagenase from rabbit synovial fibroblasts and characterized by immunoprecipitation and immunoinhibition reactions. 2. Immunoglobulins from the antisera were potent inhibitors of the action of rabbit collagenase on both reconstituted collagen fibrils and collagen in solution. 3. The antibody-binding fragment, Fab', produced by digesting the IgG (immunoglobulin G) with pepsin, inhibited collagenase activity just as well as whole IgG. 4. A specific antiserum to the rabbit collagenase was raised by a multi-step procedure. An initial antiserum was made by injecting partially purified collagenase as a complex with sheep alpha2-macroglobulin into a sheep. The non-specific antiserum so obtained was used to produce precipitin lines with the purified enzyme, and these lines were used as antigen for the production of the specific antiserum. 5. An IgG preparation from the specific antiserum was a specific and potent inhibitor of the rabbit synovial fibroblast collagenase. Neutral metallo-proteinase activity secreted by the rabbit fibroblasts was not inhibited by the antibody to the rabbit collagenase. 6. Criteria for determination of the specificity of antisera are discussed.
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PMID:Immunochemical studies with a specific antiserum to rabbit fibroblast collagenase. 17 86


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