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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)
Extracts of highly purified lysosomes from rat liver were examined for their ability to degrade native collagen and thermally denatured collagen at pH values between 3.5 and 7.0. After a 24-h digestion at 36 degrees with the lysosomal extract at a pH of 5.5 or lower (collagen/lysosomal protein; 2/1 or 8/1), both native and denatured collagen were degraded to an extent equivalent to 60 to 70% of that observed upon total acid hydrolysis in 6 N HCl as measured by the ninhydrin reaction (570 nm). At a pH of 6.0, native collagen and denatured collagen were degraded by the mixture of lysosomal proteinases to 11% and 40% of total acid hydrolysis, respectively. At pH 6.5 AND 7.0, the corresponding values were 3% versus 33% and 0.3% versus 11%, respectively. Fragments of collagen (TCA and TCB) are produced when mammalian
collagenase
degrades native collagen at 25 degrees. These fragments were degraded by the lysosomal extract at 36 degrees to an extent equivalent to 28% and 8% of total acid hydrolysis at pH 6.5 and 7.0, respectively. The experiments at pH 6.5 and 7.0 were done using a collagen/lysosomal protein ratio of 2/1. At pH 5.0 (a pH which is found within secondary lysosomes), the lysosomal extracts degraded collagen to a mixture of free amino acids and small peptides. Amino acid analysis established that approximately 30% of the amino acid residues of the collagen appeared in the lysosomal hydrolysate as free amino acids. Hydroxyproline and perhaps hydroxylysine were the only amino acids found in collagen which did not appear at least to some extent as the free amino acid in this hydrolysate.
...
PMID:Digestion of native collagen, denatured collagen, and collagen fragments by extracts of rat liver lysosomes. 0 59
The acyl-CoA:sn-glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.15) (glycerol-P acyltransferase) and acyl-CoA:dihydroxyacetone phosphate acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.42) (DHAP acyltransferase) activities were investigated in vitro in order to evaluate the quantitative contribution of the glycerol-P and DHAP pathways for the synthesis of triacylglycerols in isolated fat cells and to test the hypothesis that these two activities may be dual catalytic functions of a single enzyme. More than 85% of both acyltransferase activities was associated with the microsomal subcellular fraction. The microsomal glycerol-P acyltransferase activity showed an apparent Km of 8 muM for glycerol-P with a Vmax of 15.6 nmol/min/mg, while the DHAP acyltransferase activity showed an apparent Km of 40 muM for DHAP with a Vmax of 9.7 nmol/min/mg. Glycerol-P was a competitive inhibitor (Ki = 7.2 muM) of the DHAP acyltransferase, and DHAP was a competitive inhibitor (Ki = 92 muM) of the glycerol-P acyltransferase. The two acyltransferase activities showed virtual identity in their pH dependence, acyl-CoA chain length dependence, thermolability, and inactivation by N-ethylmaleimide. Trypsin, detergents,
collagenase
, phospholipases, and various salts and organic solvents also had similar effects on both activities. Taken as a whole, the data strongly suggest that the microsomal glycerol-P and DHAP acyltransferase activities actually represent dual functions of a single enzyme. Calculations based on the above kinetic constants and previously reported glycerol-P and DHAP pools in adipocytes suggest that the in vivo ratio of glycerol-P to DHAP acylation should be greater than 24:1.
...
PMID:Triacylglycerol synthesis in isolated fat cells. Evidence that the sn-glycerol-3-phosphate and dihydroxyacetone phosphate acyltransferase activities are dual catalytic functions of a single microsomal enzyme. 0 98
A total of 160 1-2 day old chickens were fed a 2% cholesterol diet for a period of 8 to 42 days and compared with an equal number of controls. Aortas were analyzed for various indexes of reactivity of connective tissue, cholesterol content and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) characteristics of the endothelial lining. Cholesterol feeding for a period up to 6 weeks resulted in doubling the level of serum cholesterol. It was, however, without effect on the activity of prolyl hydroxylase, lysyl oxidase,
collagenase
and collagen content in the aortic wall. As early as 3 weeks of feeding significant changes occurred in total and esterified cholesterol content. At the same time endothelial cells were characteristically contracted with several long cytoplasmic elongations and protrusions. A significant decrease of activity of the above enzymes was found in aortic tissue with increased age of the chicken. Collagen content in aortas increased with age of chickens. It is concluded that cholesterol as an atherogenic agent induces marked changes in endothelial cells and lipids of chicken aorta at earlier periods, prior to the activation of connective tissue.
...
PMID:Early changes in the arterial wall of chickens fed a cholesterol diet. 0 48
This study describes the isolation of arylsulfatases A and B (arylsulfate sulfohydrolase EC 3.1.6.1) from human articular cartilage. These enzymes were extracted from
collagenase
digests of tissue homogenates. After fractionation with ammonium sulfate the enzymes were separated from each other by DEAE-cellulose chromatography and further purified by gel filtration on Sephadex G-200. Sulfatase B, subsequently chromatographed on CM-cellulose was apparently homogenous as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence and absence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The enzyme has a pH optimum of 5.6, a molecular weight of 51,000 and Km of 2.6 mM for 4-nitrocatechol sulfate. Sulfatase A was found to be a glycoprotein with a pH optimum of 4.8, a molecular weight of 105,000 and a Km of 0.16 mM for 4-nitrocatechol sulfate. The competitive inhibition of both enzymes by inorganic sulfate, sulfite and phosphate support the likelihood of a common reaction mechanism. In contrast to sulfatase B which showed minimal inhibition, sulfatase A was totally inhibited by 5 mM N-ethylmaleimide.
...
PMID:Enzymes from human articular cartilage: isolation of arylsulfatase B and its comparison with arylsulfatase A. 1 Oct 79
In vitro addition of rat insulin (200, 400 or 800 muU/ml) to
collagenase
-isolated pancreatic islets of adult rats diminished glucose (3 mg/ml)-induced insulin release which was correlated with a decrease of the ratio of total NADPH/NADP and inhibition of glucose oxidation via the pentose phosphate shunt (PPS). NADH and NAD levels were not affected. It is suggested that exogenous insulin diminishes the islet total NADPH/NADP ratio by a direct or indirect decrease in PPS activity. However, it is also conceivable that insulin decreases this ratio through another mechanism than PPS. It is possible that inhibition of insulin secretion by exogenous insulin is at least in part due to the decrease of the NADPH/NADP ratio.
...
PMID:Pyridine nucleotides in pancreatic islets during inhibition of insulin release by exogenous insulin. 1 90
The antibacterial activity of a myeloperoxidase (MPO)-glucose oxidase system was found to be greatly increased by granulocyte elastase, present in azurophil granules of human neutrophils. The MPO-H2O3-mediated killing of both Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus was potentiated by granuocyte elastase at an acid pH, whereas at pH 7.4 only killing of E. coli was potentiated. The potentiating effect of elastase was not dependent on the enzymatic properties of the protein since it was not abolished by heating, which destroys the enzymatic activity. A peptide chloromethyl ketone elastase inhibitor abolished both elastolytic activity and the pctentiating effects on MPO-H2-O2-mediated bacterial killing. The antibacterial activity of chymotrypsin-like cationic protein of human neutrophils was also potentiated by elastase. Other degradative enzymes isolated from human granulocytes, e.g.,
collagenase
and lysozyme, did not potentiate MPO-H2O2-mediated or cationic protein-dependent bacterial killing. The present study indicates that a neutrophil constitutent, elastase, which is not microbicidal by itself, can initiate sublethal changes that render some microorganisms more susceptible to the action of microbicidal agents like MPO and chymotrypsin-like cationic protein.
...
PMID:Microbicidal mechanisms of human granulocytes: synergistic effects of granulocyte elastase and myeloperoxidase or chymotrypsin-like cationic protein. 1 11
Liver cells were obtained from adult rats by a
collagenase
perfusion technique and cultured as monolayers in serum-free media. Epinephrine and isoproterenol both induced large increases in intracellular adenosine 3':5'-monophosphate (cAMP) within 1-2 min whereas epinephrine (but not isoproterenol) induced 2- to 3-fold increases in the rate of alpha-aminoisobutyric acid transport within 2-4 hr after a 1 hr lag. Propranolol abolished the increase in cAMP elicited by epinephrine and isoproterenol, but did not block the induction of alpha-aminoisobutyric acid transport by epinephrine. In contrast, dihydroergotamine abolished and phentolamine diminished the induction of alpha-aminoisobutyric acid transport by epinephrine but did not decrease the stimulation of cAMP levels by epinephrine. Epinephrine dose response curves for cAMP and alpha-aminoisobutyric acid transport were similar. Once exposed to epinephrine, cells became refractory to further stimulation of cAMP levels by epinephrine.
...
PMID:3':5'-cyclic AMP: independent induction of amino acid transport by epinephrine in primary cultures of adult rat liver cells. 1 65
The elementary collagen molecule consists of three chains rolled into a spiral and ending in nonhelical telopeptides. In cutaneous collagen, there are two types of chains, in cartilaginous collagen there is only one. In the synthesis, several enzymes play successive parts: proline hydroxylase, lysine hydroxylase, then pro-
collagen peptidase
and finally, lysine oxidase and hydroxylysine oxidase; their coordinated actions ultimately allow the chains to establish the transverse intra and intermolecular links which give the collagen fiber its cohesion. The type and number of these transverse links vary from one tissue to another. Specific collagenases make collagen degradation possible.
...
PMID:[Biochemistry of collagen and the locomoter apparatus (Hereditary connective tissue diseases and rheumatic diseases. Part I]. 1 77
Catechol analogs inhibit the formation of hydroxylysine-derived intermolecular collagen cross links in tissue cultures of chick embryo calvaria. Formation of intermolecular collagen cross links was measured following incorporation of [14C]lysine, reduction with sodium borohydride, and elution from an ion exchange column with a pyridine-formate gradient. Cultures grown in the presence of 10(-3) M catechol, 10(-3) M dopamine, 10(-3) M L-dopa, or 10(-3) M D,L-serine-(2,3,4-trihydroxybenzyl)-hydrazide demonstrated between 43 and 84% inhibition of hydroxylysine formation. Collagen biosynthesis was not diminished in these cultures as compared to controls without additions or with beta-aminopropionitrile when measured by
collagenase
digestion. The formation of hydroxylysine-derived intermolecular cross links was inhibited 34 to 93% for 5,5'-dihydroxylysinonorleucine and 7 to 71% for 5-hydroxylysinonorleucine. The catechol analogs also inhibit the activity of lysyl hydroxylase as measured by specific tritium release as triated water from an L-[4,5-3H]lysine-labeled unhydroxylated collagen substrate prepared from chick calvaria. Since catechol analogs inhibit the formation of hydroxylysine in a cell-free assay, these compounds must pass into the cells of calvaria in this culture system to inhibit intracellular hydroxylysine formation and subsequently to diminish the reducible intermolecular cross links of the newly synthesized collagen.
...
PMID:In vitro inhibition of collagen cross links by catechol analogs. 1 15
A mechanochemical method was developed for studying the enzymatic degradation of insoluble collagen fibers. The method involves stretching the collagen fiber to a fixed extension in the presence of a solution of
collagenase
and measuring the rate of relaxation of the force induced in the fiber. In this work, bacterial
collagenase
was used for reasons of availability. We observed invariably an exponential decrease in force with respect to ttime. The slope of the linear plot of logarithm of the force versus time was taken as a measure of the rate of enzymatic degradation. This rate was found a) to vary linearly with
collagenase
concentration; b) to be maximal at pH 7-8; c) to vary with temperature according to the Arrhenius relationship in the range 10-56 degrees C; d) to be reduced to varying extent by addition of EDTA omicron-phenanthroline, 2,3-dimercaptopropanolol, and D,L-cysteine; e) to be minimal when the strain on the fiber was ca. 4%; f) to be increased dramatically by denaturation of the collagen fiber; and g) to be reduced by an increase in the crosslink density of the collagen fiber. Except for the effect of strain, which can not be conveniently studied by existing methods these results are consistent with those observed by other methods for the study of the enzymatic degradation of collagen. The mechanochemical method is, however, uniquely suited to monitor continuously the enzymatically induced decay in the stress-bearing ability of collagen fibers. It has also been found useful in the design of collagenous implants with specified resistance to enzymatic degradation in vivo.
...
PMID:Mechanochemical studies of enzymatic degradation of insoluble collagen fibers. 1 68
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