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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)
We recently showed that osteogenic protein-1(OP-1), a bone morphogenetic protein member of TGF-beta superfamily, induces endochondral bone formation in vivo, and stimulates growth and differentiation of osteoblasts in rat calvarial-derived cell cultures. In the present study, we examined the effect of OP-1 on cell growth and expression of markers that are characteristic of osteoblast phenotype using the clonal rat
osteosarcoma
cells (ROS 17/2.8). A comparison of OP-1 and TGF-beta 1 effects on cell growth showed that, both OP-1 and TGF-beta 1 inhibited DNA synthesis up to 90 percent and 60 percent of the controls at concentrations of 10 ng/ml and 1 ng/ml, respectively, in serum-free medium. In the presence of 5% serum, TGF-beta 1 did not have any significant inhibitory effects while 40 ng OP-1/ml inhibited the DNA synthesis up to 80% of the controls. Examination of collagen synthesis showed that 40 ng OP-1/ml increased the expression of type I collagen mRNA, and thus increased collagen synthesis (4-fold), as examined by
collagenase
-digestible protein. Evaluation of markers that are characteristic of the osteoblast phenotype demonstrated that OP-1 stimulated cAMP production in response to PTH (10-fold at 200 ng/ml), alkaline phosphatase specific activity (ALPase) (4-fold at 80 ng/ml), and osteocalcin (OC) synthesis (4.5-fold at 40 ng/ml). Northern blot analysis revealed that OP-1 increased mRNA expression for both ALPase and OC in a dose-dependent manner. These data collectively demonstrate that OP-1 suppresses cell proliferation and stimulates the expression of markers characteristic of osteoblast phenotype in rat clonal osteoblastic osteosarcoma cells (ROS 17/2.8).
...
PMID:Osteogenic protein-1 (BMP-7) inhibits cell proliferation and stimulates the expression of markers characteristic of osteoblast phenotype in rat osteosarcoma (17/2.8) cells. 773 48
The triterpenes, alpha-amyrin (AA) and its palmitate (AAP) and linoleate esters (AAL), were tested on models of inflammatory and destructive arthritic processes and their effects were compared with the clinical antiarthritic drugs indomethacin (IN) and methotrexate (MTX). The triterpenes had no effect on the prostaglandin phase of carrageenin pedal edema in rats, which was reduced 28% by 100 microM IN. AAL caused a considerable reduction in the synthesis by human neutrophils of 5-lipoxygenase products--5-HETE (IC50 = 70 microM), LTB4, (62 microM), isomer I (30 microM) and isomer II (24 microM). Rat
osteosarcoma
cell growth was inhibited by all triterpenes with IC50's (microM) of < 10 (AAP), 14 (AA) and 27 (AAL) and were more effective than IN (35). MTX caused 100% inhibition at a concentration of 10 microM compared with 64% inhibition by AAP. Tadpole
collagenase
digestion of type I (bone) native collagen was completely inhibited by all the triterpenes as well as IN and MTX at 100 microM. The results indicate that the principal point of antiarthritic intervention by amyrin triterpenes lies in their local inhibition of joint destruction.
...
PMID:Antiarthritic mechanisms of amyrin triterpenes. 795 94
To determine how progestins increase bone formation in vivo, the effects of the synthetic progestin norethindrone (NET), on aspects of bone formation in vitro were determined. NET at picomolar concentrations in vitro stimulated the proliferation of human TE85
osteosarcoma
cells as assessed by the increase in [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA and in cell number and also stimulated the release of osteocalcin in both the presence and absence of 10 nM 1,25-(OH)2D3. NET increased cellular alkaline phosphatase specific activity (an index of osteoblastic differentiation), but at much higher concentrations, that is, nanomolar. These findings suggest that low concentrations of NET act directly on human TE85
osteosarcoma
cells to stimulate their proliferation, differentiation, and cell activity. Furthermore, mitogenic doses of NET stimulated bone collagen synthesis both in a chicken calvarial organ culture assay (assessed by the incorporation and hydroxylation of [3H]proline) and in a human TE85
osteosarcoma
cell culture assay (determined by the incorporation of [3H]proline into
collagenase
-digestible proteins). In contrast, NET at 10(-6)-10(-12) M had no apparent effect on the rate of basal or PTH-stimulated release of 45Ca from prelabeled mouse calvariae in vitro. In summary, this study has demonstrated for the first time that picomolar NET acted directly on human TE85
osteosarcoma
cells to increase (1) cell proliferation and differentiation, (2) osteoblastic activity (i.e., osteocalcin synthesis), and (3) bone collagen synthesis in vitro. The same doses of NET in vitro did not reduce the bone resorption rate under our assay conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Picomolar norethindrone in vitro stimulates the cell proliferation and activity of a human osteosarcoma cell line and increases bone collagen synthesis without an effect on bone resorption. 805 99
Transgenic mice overexpressing the c-fos proto-oncogene in bone develop osteosarcomas, whereas mice overexpressing c-Jun are normal. In this study, we investigated whether Fos and Jun would cooperate in vivo and whether the threshold levels of Fos are important in
osteosarcoma
formation. Fos-Jun double-transgenic mice develop osteosarcomas at a higher frequency than single-Fos transgenic mice with no differences in the time of onset of tumor formation. Histological and histochemical analyses indicated that Fos-Jun tumors contained greater quantities of neoplastic bone, were more remodeled, and contained a greater number of multinucleated osteoclast-like cells than tumors isolated from age-matched, single transgenic littermates. In contrast, overexpression of Fos in knockout mice that lack endogenous Fos resulted in a decrease in the number of tumor-bearing mice; osteosarcomas were almost absent in c-fos -/- mice, whereas tumor incidence was reduced to approximately 50% in c-fos +/- mice. Cell lines isolated from Fos-Jun transgenic tumors expressed high levels of both transgenes but significantly lower levels of the jun-related gene junB compared with cells expressing only a c-fos transgene. Osteoblastic marker genes were expressed at varying levels in different cell lines, but expression of interstitial collagenase (
matrix metalloproteinase-1
) was enhanced in cells derived from Fos-Jun tumors. These studies demonstrate that coexpression of a c-jun transgene can enhance Fos-induced oncogenesis in vivo and suggest that a critical level of Fos is necessary for
osteosarcoma
development.
...
PMID:c-fos-induced osteosarcoma formation in transgenic mice: cooperativity with c-jun and the role of endogenous c-fos. 852 21
The expression of parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) was studied in a range of cell cultures representative of the osteoblast lineage and in rat calvarial sections. Primary newborn rat calvarial cells, a rat preosteoblastic cell line (UMR 201), a mouse stromal cell line (ST 2), a mouse calvaria-derived osteoblastic cell line (KS 4), and rat
osteosarcoma
cell lines (UMR 106-01 and -06), all expressed PTHrP when examined by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Using a radioimmunoassay we also demonstrated PTHrP in the conditioned medium of the cultured cells, with the exception of UMR 106-01 and -06 cells. Treatment of UMR 201 cells with all-trans-retinoic acid which induces them to acquire a more differentiated phenotype, also led to a time-dependent decrease in PTHrP mRNA levels as determined by RT-PCR, Northern blot analysis, and in situ hybridization. Decreased PTHrP levels in the conditioned medium of the treated cells was also observed. These results suggested that PTHrP production might be greater in less mature osteoblasts. Examination of the populations obtained from newborn rat calvariae by sequential
collagenase
digestion revealed that the early digests exhibited low ALP activity, low expression of PTH/PTHrP receptor mRNA, and no adenylate cyclase response to PTHrP(1-34). These populations showed the highest level of mRNA and production of PTHrP. Cells from later digests, the "osteoblast-rich" populations, had reduced PTHrP expression. Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization in sections of newborn rat calvariae showed PTHrP expression in cuboidal osteoblasts located adjacent to bone and in spindle-shaped cells in the periosteal region. It is concluded that PTHrP is produced by cells of the osteoblast lineage, supporting the hypothesis that PTHrP may function physiologically as a paracrine factor in bone.
...
PMID:Expression of parathyroid hormone-related protein in cells of osteoblast lineage. 855 80
Co-cultures of human
osteosarcoma
Takase (OST) cells with various human fibroblasts derived from surgical specimens stimulated production of gelatinase B (92-kDa type-IV
collagenase
, MMP-9), tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinase (TIMP)-1, and TIMP-2 when compared to cultures of individual cells. The maximum stimulation of gelatinase-B production occurred at a cellular ratio of 1:1. Conditioned media from several fibroblast cultures stimulated OST cells to produce gelatinase B, TIMP-1 and TIMP-2, but not vice versa. Among various recombinant growth factors or cytokines, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha stimulated gelatinase-B production in cultures of OST cells alone, while recombinant basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) stimulated gelatinase-B production in co-cultures of OST cells with skin fibroblasts but not in individual cultures of each cell type. In the co-cultures, gelatinase-B production was inhibited by anti-bFGF monoclonal antibody (MAb), but not by anti TNF-alpha MAb. This co-culture-specific stimulation of gelatinase-B production by bFGF was associated with increased expression of the FGF receptor in the co-culture.
...
PMID:Stimulation of gelatinase B and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinase (TIMP) production in co-culture of human osteosarcoma cells and human fibroblasts: gelatinase B production was stimulated via up-regulation of fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor. 860 72
Interstitial collagenase plays an important role in both the normal and pathological remodeling of collagenous extracellular matrices, including skeletal tissues. The enzyme is a member of the family of matrix metalloproteinases. Only one rodent interstitial collagenase has been found but there are two human enzymes, human
collagenase
-1 and -3, the latter being the homologue of the rat enzyme. In developing rat and mouse bone,
collagenase
is expressed by hypertrophic chondrocytes, osteoblasts, and osteocytes, a situation that is replicated in a fracture callus. Cultured osteoblasts derived from neonatal rat calvariae show greater amounts of
collagenase
transcripts late in differentiation. These levels can be regulated by parathyroid hormone (PTH), retinoic acid, and insulin-like growth factors, as well as the degree of matrix mineralization. Much of the work on
collagenase
in bone has been derived from studies on the rat
osteosarcoma
cell line, UMR 106-01. All bone-resorbing agents stimulate these cells to produce
collagenase
mRNA and protein, with PTH being the most potent stimulator. Determination of secreted levels of
collagenase
has been difficult because UMR cells, normal rat osteoblasts, and rat fibroblasts possess a scavenger receptor that removes the enzyme from the extracellular space, internalizes and degrades it, thus imposing another level of control. PTH can also regulate the abundance of the receptor as well as the expression and synthesis of the enzyme. Regulation of the
collagenase
gene by PTH appears to involve the cAMP pathway as well as a primary response gene, possibly Fos, which then contributes to induction of the
collagenase
gene. The rat
collagenase
gene contains an activator protein-1 sequence that is necessary for basal expression, but other promoter regions may also participate in PTH regulation. Thus, there are many levels of regulation of
collagenase
in bone perhaps constraining what would otherwise be a rampant enzyme.
...
PMID:The regulation and regulatory role of collagenase in bone. 888 5
A cell culture inside a three-dimensional gel of fibrillar collagen is an experimental model used to study the response of cells to the extracellular matrix. Many cell types induce the contraction of gel and simultaneously decrease their production of type I collagen, whereas the expression of interstitial collagenase (
matrix metalloproteinase-1
;
MMP-1
) is enhanced. We have previously shown that in osteogenic cells the collagen receptor alpha2beta1 integrin is a positive regulator of
MMP-1
and that the number of alpha2beta1 integrins on the cell surface also regulates the magnitude of contraction. However, the downregulation of collagen mRNA levels is not initiated by alpha2beta1 integrin. Here, we have studied in human KHOS-240 and MG-63
osteosarcoma
cells and in human skin fibroblasts the effects of tyrosine kinase inhibitors on collagen gel contraction and on the regulation of
MMP-1
and collagen alpha1(I) genes by extracellular collagen. The induction of
MMP-1
could be inhibited by all tyrosine kinase inhibitors tested with the exception of genistein. None of them could prevent the downregulation of collagen expression. Thus, the collagen-induced alterations in the expression of
MMP-1
and collagen alpha1(I) seem to be dependent on distinct signal transduction pathways. Many of the inhibitors, including genistein, could prevent the contraction of collagen gels. The effect was not related to their ability to inhibit cell growth, because an inhibitor specific for DNA synthesis and cell division did not have the same effect. Thus, we suggest that the process of collagen gel contraction requires protein-tyrosine phosphorylation and that the ability of cells to contract collagen gels is not related to the induction of
MMP-1
or to the level of collagen alpha1(I) expression. Finally, we propose that the tyrosine kinase inhibitors might be considered as candidate molecules in the treatment of pathological scar contraction.
...
PMID:Integrin alpha2beta1-dependent contraction of floating collagen gels and induction of collagenase are inhibited by tyrosine kinase inhibitors. 889 67
Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) has been shown to be one of the significant factors in the prognosis of bone tumours. In normal development BMP induces new bone formation and later takes part in fracture healing, but its function in malignant tumours is not known. In this study the concentration of bone morphogenetic protein was measured in primary bone tumours by two methods. Local staining intensity was detected immunohistologically by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase method determining the highest dilution of anti-serum against bovine bone morphogenetic protein. The total amount of BMP in a tumour sample was measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay technique after digesting the tissue with
collagenase
to remove proteins from the connective tissue. Immunohistochemical staining showed that bone morphogenetic protein was present in the cytoplasm and in reactive bone formed by malignant cells. The local concentration was highest in the tissue of giant cell tumours compared to chondrosarcoma,
osteosarcoma
and benign bone tumours. The total amount in malignant bone tumours was 2.4 times higher compared to benign bone tumours.
...
PMID:Measurement of total and local bone morphogenetic protein concentration in bone tumours. 926 1
Bone cells are a prime target for the biological function of the fos/jun (activating protein-1 (AP-1)) transcription factor complex. Deregulated expression of c-fos or v-fos in bone cells induces tumorigenicity and the formation of non-metastatic osteosarcomas. In contrast, fos oncogenes transform fibroblasts to an invasive phenotype accompanied by the expression of various invasion- and metastasis-associated genes. Here we compared the expression of AP-1-dependent genes and AP-1 activity in cell lines from fos-induced, radiation-induced, and spontaneous osteosarcomas. We showed that the presence of high AP-1 activity was not sufficient for the induction of invasion- and metastasis-associated AP-1-dependent genes in transformed bone cells. Further, we identified the
collagenase I
and stromelysin 1 gene promoters as suitable tools for the analysis of other factors regulating metastatic progression of
osteosarcoma
.
...
PMID:Discordant effects of activator protein-1 transcription factor on gene regulation, invasion, and metastasis in spontaneous, radiation-induced, and fos-induced osteosarcomas. 980 60
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