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)

In order to identify structures in human skin that bind collagenase, sections from frozen or paraffin-embedded skin were incubated with either procollagenase or activated collagenase. After washing, bound procollagenase or collagenase was detected by immunofluorescence microscopy. In normal skin, procollagenase bound only to isolated granular dermal cells that were identified as mast cells on the basis of staining with fluoresceinated avidin and pinacyanol erythrosinate. When mast cells were degranulated by exposure to the ionophore A23187, extracellular granules bound procollagenase. Of various pathologic conditions examined, the highest binding of procollagenase occurred in specimens of urticaria pigmentosa. Procollagenase bound to granular cells and to abundant granules scattered throughout the dermis. Binding could be abolished by pre-treatment of tissue sections with heparinase or by pre-incubation of procollagenase with soluble heparin, suggesting that heparin is the binding agent in the granules. Activated collagenase also bound to dermal mast cells but in addition bound strongly to the dermal collagen. Enzymatic activity of activated collagenase was not inhibited by heparin in concentrations up to 10 mg/ml. There is evidence that mast cell tryptase can contribute to procollagenase activation. This study further supports a role for mast cells in collagenolysis by demonstrating that heparin from mast cells binds procollagenase and possibly serves as a reservoir for procollagenase, which may then subsequently be activated.
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PMID:Dermal mast cell granules bind interstitial procollagenase and collagenase. 137 47

The functional role of mast cells in rheumatoid synovium was investigated by assessing the ability of mast cell tryptase to activate latent collagenase derived from rheumatoid synoviocytes. Tryptase, a mast cell neutral protease, was demonstrated in situ to reside in rheumatoid synovial mast cells, by an immunoperoxidase technique using a mouse mAb against tryptase, and in vitro to be released by dispersed synovial mast cells after both immunologic and nonimmunologic challenge. Each rheumatoid synovial mast cell contains an average of 6.2 pg of immunoreactive tryptase and the percent release values of this protease correlated with those of histamine (r = 0.58, p less than 0.01). The ability of purified tryptase to promote collagenolysis was demonstrated in a dose-dependent fashion using latent collagenase derived from rheumatoid synovium, synovial fluid, IL-1-stimulated cultured synoviocytes, and partially purified latent collagenase derived from conditioned media, with between 10 and 92% of the collagen substrate degraded. [3H] Collagen, treated with tryptase-activated latent collagenase, was subjected to electrophoresis on SDS polyacrylamide gels and autoradiography showed the collagen degradation pattern (A, B) characteristically produced by collagenase. Mast cell lysates also activated synovial latent collagenase yielding 24% digestion of collagen substrate. This activator in mast cell lysates could be inhibited by diisopropylflurophosphate or by immunoadsorption of tryptase. Thus, mast cells may activate metalloproteinases and play a role in the catabolism of collagen that occurs in rheumatoid synovium.
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PMID:Activation of latent rheumatoid synovial collagenase by human mast cell tryptase. 245 61

Mast cells have been implicated in the pathogenesis of the matrix degradation observed in the cartilaginous and osseous structures of the rheumatoid joint. We previously reported that human mast cell tryptase, a 134-kD granule-associated neutral protease, is present in rheumatoid synovium and can activate collagenase in crude culture medium in vitro. the present study attempts to depict the precise mechanism of this activation. To express full activation of latent collagenase, matrix metalloproteinase 3 (MMP-3) or stromelysin, can be activated by tryptase in a time and dose-dependent manner. Tryptase was not capable of generating active collagenase in the crude media from cultured rheumatoid synoviocytes depleted of proMMP-3 by immunoadsorption. In addition, the function of the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP) was not altered by tryptase, and SDS-PAGE analysis revealed no degradation of TIMP by tryptase. The tryptase dependent activation of synoviocyte procollagenase thereby appears to be entirely dependent upon its ability to activate proMMP-3.
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PMID:Synovial procollagenase activation by human mast cell tryptase dependence upon matrix metalloproteinase 3 activation. 255 80

Pig synovial and human skin fibroblast procollagenases were treated with highly purified tryptase, the major proteinase of human mast cells, to determine whether this trypsin-like proteinase could activate the latent form of collagenase and so be involved in connective tissue breakdown. No significant activation of either human or pig procollagenase was found, but the highest concentration of tryptase partially destroyed procollagenase. Tryptase did not degrade type I collagen or proteoglycan. These data indicate that human mast cell tryptase does not contribute to connective tissue breakdown via procollagenase activation or via proteoglycan degradation.
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PMID:Human lung mast cell tryptase fails to activate procollagenase or degrade proteoglycan. 299 69

We present the first direct biochemical evidence for the turnover of intact type VI collagen microfibrils. Matrix-degrading enzymes of the serine proteinase class, including rat mast cell chymases I and II, human mast cell tryptase, neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G and trypsin, were able to catabolize intact type VI collagen microfibrils isolated from foetal bovine skin and metabolically labelled intact type VI collagen immunoprecipitated from fibroblast culture medium. By contrast, intact type VI collagen was not degraded by the human matrix metalloproteinases, MMP-1, MMP-2, MMP-3 and MMP-9. These data have important implications for the stability of type VI collagen in connective tissues and highlight the potential role of serine proteinases both in normal type VI collagen turnover and in inflammatory conditions characterized by matrix degradation.
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PMID:Catabolism of intact type VI collagen microfibrils: susceptibility to degradation by serine proteinases. 846

The endometrium displays characteristic cyclical changes involving proliferation and differentiation. The differentiation that takes place requires major tissue remodelling involving the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family as key enzymes in this process. Mast cells, containing the tryptase and chymase enzymes that are capable of stimulating the MMP cascade, have been identified in the endometrium, but their role is still unclear. In this study, we observed that the majority of mast cells in the uterus reside in the myometrium and that they co-express mast cell tryptase and MMP-1 in the same intracellular granules. In endometrium exposed to synthetic progestogen via an intrauterine levonorgestrel system a significant increase in mast cells numbers was observed in women experiencing breakthrough bleeding compared to those in women with no reported bleeding. We conclude that mast cells contain MMP-1 and we postulate a potential role for mast cells in breakthrough bleeding.
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PMID:Co-localization of matrix metalloproteinase-1 and mast cell tryptase in the human uterus. 1138 11

The aim of study was to evaluate the clinicopathological features of oral mucoceles and the immunohistochemical expression of cellular and extracellular matrix components in these lesions. One hundred cases of oral mucoceles were examined for clinicopathological features. The expression of mast cell tryptase, CD68, MMP-1 (matrix metalloproteinase-1), MMP-9 (matrix metalloproteinase-9) and CD34 was investigated immunohistochemically in 32 cases. The lesions arose as nodules or blisters of variable color. The mean age was 23.2 years and a higher male frequency was observed. The most common locations were the lower lip (92%), followed by the floor of the mouth (7%), and palate (1%). The lesion size ranged from 0.4 to 3.0cm. Unusual histopathological findings as superficial mucoceles (n=16, 16%), pseudopapillary projections (n=3, 3%), epithelioid histiocytes (n=4, 4%), multinucleated giant cells (n=1, 1%) and myxoglobulosis (n=9, 9%) were also seen. Mast cells and CD68-positive macrophages, MMP-1, MMP-9 and CD34-positive blood vessels were seen in all cases. A significant association was seen between mast cells and MMP-1 (p=0.03) and between macrophages and MMP-1 (p=0.01). This study provided important insight into the demographic and histopathological occurrence of oral mucoceles. The tissue remodeling seen in these lesions mainly involved the migration and interaction of mast cells, macrophages and MMP-1.
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PMID:Oral mucoceles: a clinical, histopathological and immunohistochemical study. 2372 42