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)

Production of an unusual collagenous protein was observed in culture of dermal fibroblasts from four patients with Marfan syndrome. The apparent molecular weight of the protein was about 185 kDa after reduction with 2-mercaptoethanol and 175 kDa after limited pepsin treatment. The 185 kDa protein was susceptible to the bacterial collagenase but resistant to the animal collagenase. Immunoprecipitation revealed the specific interaction of the pepsin-treated 175 kDa collagenous protein with monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies to human type IV collagen. From the patterns of CNBr peptide mapping the 185 kDa band was identified as alpha 1 (IV) chain. Type IV collagen in the skin is generally considered to be of non-fibroblastic origin. However, in "diseased" condition, dermal fibroblasts might produce type IV collagen. The clinical manifestation in relation to production of type IV collagen by cultured skin fibroblasts from Marfan patients is discussed.
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PMID:Partial characterization of an unusual 185 kDa protein synthesized by dermal fibroblasts from patients with Marfan syndrome: identification of the protein as type IV collagen. 260 99

A high molecular weight extracellular protein has been purified from cell culture medium of Ewing's sarcoma cell lines, by high performance liquid chromatography and electroelution from SDS-PAGE electrophoresis. This protein has an apparent molecular mass of about 500,000 Da on SDS-PAGE. Immunoprecipitation studies with several extracellular matrix glycoproteins (laminin, fibronectin) specific antisera indicate it is a separate protein. Reduction of disulphide bonds with 2-ME or DTT fails to significantly alter its migration on SDS-PAGE gels, other than a slight apparent increase in molecular mass, indicating an apparent single polypeptide chain structure. The slightly greater mobility observed in unreduced gels suggests one or more regions of intrachain disulfide bonding. It is sensitive to pepsin and trypsin, but resistant to bacterial collagenase indicating that it does not contain collagenous domains. Metabolic labelling with 3H-proline, 3H-leucine, and 35S-methionine indicate that this protein is proline-poor, but leucine, and especially methionine, rich. Sodium 35S-sulfate incorporation is totally negative and treatment with glycosaminoglycan degrading enzymes has no effect on the mobility of the protein on gels, unlike typical proteoglycans. This protein appears by rotary shadowing electron microscopy as a long, thin, filamentous molecule at least 500 nm (0.5 um) in length. The tissue localization and function are unknown at this time, but are under active investigation.
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PMID:A novel 500,000 Da, linear, single chain extracellular protein synthesized by several childhood tumors. 263 60

Pz-peptidase was purified from rabbit muscle by acid precipitation of tissue homogenate followed by cation- and anion-exchange chromatography, gel chromatography, and immunoadsorption. In analytical gel chromatography, one single peak of protein with corresponding Pz-peptidase activity was obtained. The enzyme had an apparent Mr of 74,000 in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and was eluted at pH 4.8 in chromatofocusing. No metals were detectable in the protein by neutron activation analysis. Purified Pz-peptidase hydrolyzed Dnp-Pro-Leu-Gly-Pro-Trp-D-Lys (Km 7.2 microM) most effectively in the presence of 5 mM 2-mercaptoethanol and 10 mM CaCl2. No inhibition was observed with inhibitors of serine proteinases, aspartic proteinases, or metalloproteinases, apart from some nonspecific reversible inhibition by 1,10-phenanthroline. The activation by Ca2+ was reversed by EDTA. The enzyme was not inhibited by E-64, cystatin, or leupeptin, but was irreversibly inactivated by iodoacetate, iodoacetamide, and N-ethylmaleimide. It was therefore concluded that rabbit muscle Pz-peptidase is not a typical member of any of the four recognized catalytic classes of proteinases, but may be an atypical cysteine endopeptidase. The peptidase was not bound by alpha 2-macroglobulin. No hydrolysis of gelatin or fibronectin by the enzyme was detected, nor was there any activation of latent collagenase.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of Pz-peptidase from rabbit muscle. 267 41

A preparation of the cuticle of Onchocerca volvulus was obtained by extracting worm fragments in an series of buffers with 1.5% Triton-X-100 and 3% Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). Electron micrographs of worm fragments, treated with the detergents or collagenase showed that our methods had been effective in isolating the cuticle from the other organs of the parasite. The cuticular preparation was found to contain 19 different amino acids with glycine (23.4%); proline (11.23%); hydroxyproline (10%); and glutamic acid (9.4%) being the most abundant. Hydroxylysine was present in small amounts (0.04%). Total reducing sugar was determined to be 5.3 mg per gram dry weight of the preparation. The cuticular preparation was solubilized by boiling in 2-mercaptoethanol and shown by SDS-PAGE to contain at least 10 different polypeptides in the Mr range 17,000-163,000. Five of these polypeptides with apparent Mr respectively of 33,000; 67,000; 74,000, 88,500 and 114,000 were isolated by preparative gel electrophoresis and their amino acid compositions shown to be similar to that of invertebrate collagens. We conclude that the cuticle of O. volvulus contains collagen-like proteins held together by disulfide bridges.
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PMID:Isolation and biochemical composition of the cuticle of Onchocerca volvulus. 284 63

The major structural proteins of the cuticle of the filarial nematode parasites Brugia malayi and Brugia pahangi were identified by extrinsic iodination and sensitivity to clostridial collagenase. At least 16 acidic components were identified in adult worms by 2-dimensional electrophoresis, with molecular weights ranging from 35,000 to 160,000. These proteins appear to be cross-linked by disulphide bonds, and localised in the basal and inner cortical layers of the cuticle. The outer cortex, containing the epicuticle, is insoluble in 1% sodium dodecyl sulphate and 5% 2-mercaptoethanol, and can be isolated free of cellular material. Despite their inaccessibility to the immune system in intact worms, antibodies to the cuticular collagens are provoked in humans infected with a variety of filarial parasites. Immunological cross-reactivity was demonstrated between a 35 kDa component and human type IV (basement membrane) collagen. Autoantibodies to type IV collagen were detected in a number of individuals with lymphatic filariasis, although no correlation could be drawn with observed pathology. Synthesis of cuticular collagens is discontinuous, occurs at negligible levels in mature adult male worms, and does not appear to involve the production of small molecular weight precursors, in contrast to Caenorhabditis elegans. Hybridisation with a heterologous cDNA probe coding for the alpha 2 chain of chicken type 1 collagen suggests that they are encoded by a multigene family.
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PMID:Identification, synthesis and immunogenicity of cuticular collagens from the filarial nematodes Brugia malayi and Brugia pahangi. 292 47

Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of pepsin-solubilized collagens from post-burn granulation tissues revealed that type V collagen consisted of 3 alpha chains: alpha 1(V), alpha 2(V), and alpha 3(V). The mean value (0.12 +/- 0.01 SD) of the type V/type I ratio in the granulation tissues was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) than that (0.03 +/- 0.01 SD) of the ratio in normal skin. The average ratio of alpha 1(V):alpha 2(V):alpha 3(V) of type V collagen purified from the granulation tissues was determined to be about 5:3:1. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns of 3 alpha chains were not affected in the presence or absence of 2-mercaptoethanol. Purified type V collagen was degraded by bacterial collagenase, but remained intact after tadpole collagenase digestion, in contrast to type I and type III collagens. Amino acid analyses of each alpha chain separated on SDS-gel electrophoresis of type V collagen revealed that all 3 alpha chains of type V collagen were poor in alanine, rich in hydroxylysine, and had high ratios of hydroxylysine/lysine, which are typical features of type V collagen. The purified type V collagen was further fractionated by ammonium sulfate into 2 molecular species, [alpha 1(V)]2 alpha 2(V) and alpha 1(V)alpha 2(V)alpha 3(V). Our data demonstrate that type V collagen in preparations from human post-burn granulation tissues consists of 3 alpha chains and can be resolved into 2 distinct heterotrimers.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of type V collagen from human post-burn granulation tissues. 302 Jan 32

1. Cuticles were isolated from developmental stages of the swine nematode Ascaris suum by a combination of mechanical disruption and detergent treatment of larvae or by surgical removal of cuticle from adults. Proteins from the isolated cuticles were solubilized with 2-mercaptoethanol (2ME) and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. 2. 2ME soluble, cuticular proteins from adults consisted of 5 to 6 bands with 80% of proteins in 2 bands with mol. wts of 106,000 and 93,000. Cuticular proteins from the third and fourth larval stages (L3 and L4) were comparable to adult, but differences in the number of bands were observed. The soluble proteins from the adult, L3 and L4 were readily degraded by a bacterial collagenase suggesting that these proteins are collagen-like structural elements of the cuticle. 3. The soluble proteins from the second stage (L2) differed from the adult and other larval stages in both the number and mol. wt of protein bands and their lack of degradation by bacterial collagenase. Amino acid composition of soluble cuticular proteins were similar for adult and L4, but glycine and proline were present in lower amounts in the L2. 4. These results support a hypothesis that there are stage specific differences in cuticular proteins from A. suum and that the greatest differences appear to exist between L2 and other stages.
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PMID:Developmental changes in cuticular proteins of Ascaris suum. 340 62

A successful technique for the isolation of highly pure suspensions of viable leukocytes from the small intestine of cattle is described. Procedures ranging from mechanical mincing to enzymatic digestion of tissues were compared. The most reliable and reproducible procedure was the sequential treatment of tissues with dithiothreitol (DTT), ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) in calcium-magnesium-free salt solutions, and collagenase. Two populations of mucosal leukocytes were obtained from the small intestine. One population was derived from within the epithelium (intraepithelial leukocytes, IEL), the second from within the lamina propria (lamina propria leukocytes, LPL). At least 2 X 10(6) viable leukocytes were obtainable from each square centimeter of the intestinal mucosa from either the epithelium or lamina propria. Erythrocyte rosetting and immunofluorescence characterization with conventional antisera and monoclonal antibodies (MAB) demonstrated that IEL were predominantly T cells (60%), with relatively few B cells present (10%), while LPL contained relatively high numbers of B cells (28%) and a reasonable percentage of T cells (45%). Both cell populations proliferate in response to stimulation with T and B cell mitogens. Addition of the thiol compound, 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME) strongly augmented the mitogenic response of both cell isolates. Human recombinant interleukin-2 (hr-IL-2) in the presence or absence of additional stimuli was found to be able to induce the proliferation of both cell types. These results demonstrate that functional leukocytes can be isolated from the small intestine of cattle, and that they can maintain their responsiveness to both T and B cell mitogens and to exogenous cloned IL-2.
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PMID:Bovine gut-associated lymphoid tissue--morphologic and functional studies. I. Isolation and characterization of leukocytes from the epithelium and lamina propria of bovine small intestine. 350 Feb 40

1. An enzyme present in rat liver extracts degraded insoluble collagen maximally at pH3.5. Collagenolytic activity was more abundant in kidney, spleen and bone marrow and was also present in decreasing concentrations in ileum, lung, heart, skin and muscle. 2. The crude collagenolytic cathepsin was activated by cysteine and dithiothreitol, but not by 2-mercaptoethanol. Iodoacetamide, p-chloromercuribenzoate and 7-amino-1-chloro-3-l-tosylamidoheptan-2-one hydrochloride inhibited the enzyme. Zn(2+), Fe(3+) and Hg(2+) ions were strongly inhibitory, but Ca(2+), Co(2+), Mg(2+) and Fe(2+) ions had little or no effect. EDTA was an activator of the enzyme. Inhibitors of cathepsin B were found to enhance collagenolysis, but phenylpyruvic acid, a cathepsin D inhibitor, inhibited the enzyme. Di-isopropyl phosphorofluoridate had no effect. 3. Collagenolysis at pH3.5 and 28 degrees C was restricted to cleavage of the telopeptide region in insoluble collagen, and the material that was solubilized consisted mostly of alpha-chains. 4. The collagenolytic cathepsin was separated from cathepsins B2 and D by fractionation on Sephadex G-100 and a partial separation from cathepsin B1 was obtained by chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex. 5. The function of the collagenolytic cathepsin in the catabolism of collagen is discussed in relation to the action of the other lysosomal proteinases and the neutral collagenase.
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PMID:The nature of the collagenolytic cathepsin of rat liver and its distribution in other rat tissues. 465 Nov 35

1. Properties of a purified chemically activated form of pig synovial collagenase were examined and compared with a spontaneously active form of the enzyme. 2. The active enzyme has a specific activity of 53 000 units (microgram/min)/mg, a mol.wt. of 44 000 (by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyarcylamide-gel electrophoresis in 2-mercaptoethanol) and pI 5.2 (by isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide gels). 3. The activity has the characteristics of a metalloproteinase that degrades types I and III soluble or insoluble collagens in preference to type II, at an optimum pH of 6.5-8.5. 4. There is no detectable difference in these properties between the chemically activated and spontaneously active form of collagenase.
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PMID:Properties of pig synovial collagenase. 625 33


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