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)

A unique collagen, designated EC, has been isolated from the culture medium of adult bovine aortic endothelial cells. After diethylaminoethylcellulose chromatography of [3H]proline-labeled culture medium, three non-disulfide-bonded bacterial collagenase-sensitive components with apparent Mr of 177000 (EC 1), 125000 (EC 2), and 100000 (EC 3) were demonstrated. Molecular sieve chromatography, cyanogen bromide cleavage, and two-dimensional peptide mapping of radioiodinated EC fragments produced by protease digestion suggest that the lower molecular weight components originate from EC 1. Both EC 1 and EC 2 were digested by pepsin within 10 min to products of less than 60000 molecular weight, under conditions which supported only limited proteolysis of other native collagens. A pepsin-resistant fragment of Mr 50000, derived from a digest of EC 2, contained equal amounts of hydroxyproline and proline, suggesting that at least a portion of the endothelial collagen contains a stable, collagen-like triple helix. Comparative mapping using mast cell protease and cyanogen bromide cleavage, followed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicates that the primary structure of this collagen differs from that of other known collagen types.
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PMID:A unique, pepsin-sensitive collagen synthesized by aortic endothelial cells in culture. 625 89

A highly unusual endothelial cell collagen (Sage, H., Pritzl, P., and Bornstein, P., (1980) Biochemistry 19, 5747-5755) has been characterized in greater detail. Pulse-chase experiments with bovine aortic endothelial cells revealed two nondisulfide-bonded collagens, of apparent chain Mr = 177,000 and 125,000, with an estimated synthesis and secretion time of 75 min. Stepwise, quantitative processing to stable lower molecular weight forms as described for type I procollagen was not observed. Endothelial collagen was secreted over a temperature range of 24-37 degrees C and, prior to heat denaturation, did not display affinity for a gelatin-binding fragment of fibronectin coupled to Sepharose. The presence of a pepsin-resistant domain (Mr = 50,000) in both the soluble and cell layer-associated forms of this protein was shown by ion exchange chromatography and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Endothelial collagen was cleaved by vertebrate collagenase into several discrete fragments that differed in molecular weight from the characteristic alpha A and alpha B fragments generated from the interstitial collagens. Nontriple helical domains corresponding to the NH2- and COOH-terminal propeptides of other procollagen types were not found after incubation of endothelial collagen with bacterial collagenase. Additional evidence for the lack of extended noncollagenous sequences was provided by studies with mast cell proteases, which convert native procollagen to collagen but are unreactive toward native interstitial collagens. Endothelial collagen was not cleaved by these enzymes at 37 degrees C, but, as observed for interstitial collagen alpha chains, required prior heating at elevated temperatures for cleavage to occur. In view of this unique set of structural characteristics, and a distribution that is not restricted to the endothelium, we have designated this protein as type VIII collagen.
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PMID:Biosynthetic and structural properties of endothelial cell type VIII collagen. 663 Feb 35