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)

Eighteen clones of a methylcholanthrene-induced murine fibrosarcoma (3AM) which were heterogeneous with respect to metastatic potentials and in vivo growth rates were examined for five different protease activities: acid protease (cathepsin D), BANA hydrolase (cathepsin B), neutral protease, collagenase, and plasminogen activator. Homogenates of the solid tumors produced by the clones were heterogeneous with respect to the activities of the proteases; these activities were in all cases (except plasminogen activator) higher than those obtained for normal muscle tissue. There was, however, no correlation between any of these protease activities and the metastatic potential or in vivo growth rates. The cathepsin B activity has also been evaluated on the cultured cells of the various clones. Results similar to that of the in vivo study were obtained. Analysis of the enzyme activity of the cell culture and of organ culture media, however, revealed no cathepsin B activity. It is concluded that the measurement of any one biochemical parameter such as proteolysis may not be sufficient to establish a correlation with the overall process of metastasis; a more precise dissection of the individual steps culminating in metastasis may provide a more fruitful approach to this problem.
...
PMID:Proteolytic and metastatic activities of clones derived from a methylcholanthrene-induced murine fibrosarcoma. 610 Aug 5

Serum proteinase-like peptidases and proteinase inhibitor activities have been determined in 40 women with breast cancer at presentation and following total mastectomy. Activities of these enzymes have also been determined in homogenates of malignant (n = 13) and non-malignant (n = 11) breast tissue and benign breast lesions (n = 10). Following surgical treatment, the serum collagenase-like, cathepsin B-like and cathepsin H-like peptidase activities were significantly reduced. In addition, the activities of collagenase-like, cathepsin B-like and elastase-like peptidases were significantly higher in malignant breast tissue than in either non-malignant tissue from the same breast, or benign breast lesions. These findings are consistent with the suggestion that proteinases may have a role in tumour invasion.
...
PMID:Serum and tissue proteinase-like peptidase activities in women undergoing total mastectomy for breast cancer. 620 Mar 27

Both malignant (adenocarcinomas) and nonmalignant (fibroadenomas and normal tissue) human breast tissues were maintained in organ culture for up to 10 days to study the secretion of lysosomal and neutral proteinases. Little difference was observed between the different tissue groups in the release of the lysosomal proteinase cathepsin D into the culture medium. Similar results were obtained when media were tested for plasminogen activator activity. The secretion of collagenolytic activity was investigated with fibroadenoma and adenocarcinoma explants and found to be very low for both tissue groups. The average accumulation of collagenase activity during a 2-day period was 0.002 units/microgram DNA for adenocarcinomas and 0.008 units/microgram DNA for fibroadenomas. The only proteinase that was secreted in substantially higher amounts from explants of malignant tissue was a cathepsin B-like thiol proteinase. Media from adenocarcinoma explants (n = 38) contained on the average 11 times more activity than did media from fibroadenoma (n = 20) and normal tissue explants (n = 8). Metastases of mammary adenocarcinomas (n = 7) secreted the thiol proteinase at about one third of the rate of primary tumors. The secretion of this enzyme is dependent upon protein synthesis as its release was completely inhibited 24 hr after the addition of cycloheximide. In some cases, it was also observed that the presence of sheep serum in the tissue culture medium reduced the accumulation of activity.
...
PMID:Secretion of proteinases from malignant and nonmalignant human breast tissue. 625 82

The proteolytic activity in homogenates and extracts of subcellular fractions prepared from subcutaneous Lewis lung carcinoma was determined using proteins and synthetic peptides as substrates. The presence of cathepsin D, plasminogen activator, cathepsin B-, cathepsin G- and elastase-like enzymes was observed. No difference was revealed between the proteolytic activity in homogenates of Lewis lung carcinoma, at the growth stage examined, and in homogenates of normal lung. High specific activities were found in the lysosomal extract, whereas decreasing activities were found in the nuclear extract, the homogenate and the postlysosomal mitochondrial supernatant; no active or trypsin-activatable collagenase activity was detected. The presence in the tumor tissue of these enzymatic activities is in agreement with their proposed role in the process of metastasis. The lack of differences between homogenates of tumor and normal lung tissue suggests that the use of whole cells is required to selectively study tumor proteinases specifically involved in tumor malignancy.
...
PMID:Methodologic problems encountered in the assay of proteinases in Lewis lung carcinoma, a mouse metastasizing tumor. 629 35

Broncho-alveolar lavage (LBA) was performed in 17 pneumoconiotics. The liquid obtained was analysed after gentle centrifugation to remove the cellular element, so that biochemical factors might be sought contribution to the evolution and progressive transformation to fibrosis. The percentage of liquid gathered was generally greater. Among the glycosidases found in all the 17 LBA analysed, the beta-D-glucuronidase, which was not detected in the LBA control subjects, was also found during the course of other pulmonary disorders. The elastolytic activity was characterized in 12 out of 17 LBA. In part it could originate from alveolar macrophages. An elevated number of macrophages (greater than 20 X 10(6) for the whole lavage) allied to the presence of elastolytic activity was found in 7 of 8 patients presenting with a pneumoconiosis and signs of progressive pulmonary disease. The collagenase and cathepsin B were present in the LBA of certain pneumoconiotics, but the significance of their presence is still unknown. The three major antiproteases of the serum exist in the LBA of pneumoconiosis. The quantity of alpha 1-antiprotease has identified a group of 6 patients whose LBA showed raised alpha 1-antiprotease, an elastolytic activity and for 5 of them progressive outcome.
...
PMID:[Bronchoalveolar lavage in pneumoconiosis of coal miners. Biochemical aspects]. 630 31

Specimens of the rabbit V2 carcinoma were maintained in organ culture to study the secretion of proteinases. Elastase-like, chymotrypsin-like, plasminogen activator-like, cathepsin B-like and collagenase activities were assayed with sensitive fluorimetric techniques. Of these enzymes, the only activities that were secreted in considerable amounts in primary cultures of tumor tissue were collagenase and a cysteine proteinase resembling cathepsin B. Co-cultures of intraperitoneally grown tumor and normal subcutaneous tissue of the rabbit resulted in significantly higher production of the cysteine proteinase and collagenase compared to the sum of the activities of the separate tissues. Explants of subcutaneous tissue of tumor-bearing rabbits secreted significantly more cysteine proteinase and collagenase than explants from normal animals. Explants from normal subcutaneous tissue stimulated with tumor-conditioned culture medium secreted both enzymes in higher amounts compared to the controls. The cysteine proteinase was similar in some properties to rabbit liver cathepsin B, but the enzyme from the tumor-host system showed a remarkable stability to a moderately alkaline pH. We suggest that a diffusible factor, derived from the tumor or immigrated cells, promotes an increased synthesis and secretion of collagenase and cysteine proteinase in the host, and that both enzymes may play cooperative roles during invasion of the surrounding tissues by the V2 carcinoma.
...
PMID:Extracellular cysteine proteinase and collagenase activities as a consequence of tumor-host interaction in the rabbit V2 carcinoma. 632 87

Serial transplantation of a spontaneous BDX rat tumor, classified as an anaplastic sarcoma, gives rise to two variants; a rapidly growing nonmetastatic line (AS) and a slowly growing, invasive, and highly metastatic variant (ASML). The availability of two cell lines of the same origin but with markedly differing metastatic potential offers an ideal model for the identification of the cellular properties involved in invasive and/or metastatic behavior. The present work focuses on the pattern of various proteinases in the two tumor cell variants. The findings disclosed one major consistent difference which relates to a cathepsin B-like cysteine proteinase. The metastatic ASML variant manifests exceedingly high intracellular cathepsin B-like activity; in the nonmetastatic AS variant, the activity of this proteinase is significantly lower. Other proteinases, in particular elastase-like, chymotrypsin-like, collagenase-like enzymes and plasminogen activator, showed low, essentially comparable activity patterns. Thus, cathepsin B-like proteinase is a marker enzyme of the metastatic ASML tumor cell variant.
...
PMID:Cathepsin B-like proteinase as a marker for metastatic tumor cell variants. 638 97

At present, there is no established diagnostic method by which the metastatic ability of an individual prostatic cancer can be accurately predicted. Metastasis is a multistep process, the first critical step of which is invasion. Tumor invasion has been suggested to involve a variety of hydrolytic enzyme activities; therefore, the tumor levels of these activities might be indicative of the overall metastatic ability of the cancer. In order to evaluate if the quantitative levels of hydrolytic enzymes can be used to predict the metastatic ability of individual prostatic cancers, five different Dunning R-3327 rat prostatic adenocarcinoma sublines, with widely varying metastatic abilities, were assayed for the respective levels of a variety of hydrolytic enzyme activities (collagenase, trypsin-like, cathepsin B, neutral protease, N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, chymotrypsin-like, leucine aminopeptidase, elastase, and plasminogen activator). These studies demonstrated that most hydrolytic activities are not elevated when going from normal prostate to prostatic cancer. In addition, only the levels of elastase and chymotrypsin-like activity were found to be consistently higher in highly metastatic prostatic cancers than in either the normal prostate or low-metastatic prostatic cancers. It was found that, by combining the relative activities of elastase and chymotrypsin-like activity and then dividing by the relative activities of N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, a biochemical metastatic index could be constructed which accurately reflected the respective metastatic ability of the Dunning sublines.
...
PMID:Biochemical methods for predicting metastatic ability of prostatic cancer utilizing the dunning R-3327 rat prostatic adenocarcinoma system as a model. 653 99

Local or systemic prostaglandin (PG) administration leads to the known softening and dilatation of the cervix uteri. Lysosomal enzymes are involved in connective tissue degradation. The question arises whether the effect of PG on the cervix uteri is mediated by lysosomes. Five pregnant women (volunteers after informed consent) in the first trimester received 500 micrograms of PGE2-derivative (Nalador) i.m. at 12 and 8 h before termination by curettage. Five pregnant women without PG-treatment served as controls. Small biopsies were obtained from the endocervical canal and were immediately immersed in cold 2.5% glutaraldehyde and after further preparations examined under a Zeiss electron microscope 9S-2. A second portion of tissue was sliced and prepared for histochemical analysis of the acid phosphatase on lysosomes. Examination of the ultrastructure of the cervix uteri showed vesicles in the extracellular matrix. These were surrounded by a single membrane and contained either fine granular material of myelin-like whorls of membranes. These vesicles lay between collagen fibers, showed the reaction product of acid phosphatase and were often surrounded by an electron-lucent halo. We conclude that these matrix vesicles were "matrix lysosomes" extruded from the cervical myo-fibrocytes into the extracellular space as a result of the PG-E2-administration. Here they are not under cellular control and can initiate the proteolytic degradation of connective tissue. This might be the crucial step in cervical dilatation which, on ultrastructural examination, can be seen as decreasing electron density of the extracellular ground substance near the matrix lysosomes. The relationship between PGE2 and collagenase production is generally accepted. If one believes that lysosomal cathepsin D and cathepsin B act synergistically with collagenase, it can be assumed that PGE2 is involved in a lysosomal degradation of the connective tissue. The morphological sign of this occurrence is the release of matrix lysosomes by PGE2 as described in the present study. Extracellular lysosomes and their physiological significance in cervical function are discussed in detail.
...
PMID:The effect of prostaglandins on the lysosomal function in the cervix uteri. 666 Sep 24

To clarify the role of cathepsin B in tumor invasion, the enzyme was visualized in tissue frozen sections of the subcutaneously growing rabbit V2 carcinoma. Localization of cathepsin B was achieved by immunofluorescent staining and by enzyme histochemistry. For the former approach, a sheep antiserum was raised against purified cathepsin B from rabbit liver. The antibodies, isolated by immunoadsorption, reacted monospecifically with rabbit liver cathepsin B in Ouchterlony double diffusion and in immunoelectrophoresis. In the enzyme histochemical assay, Z-Ala-Arg-Arg-methoxynaphtylamide was used as fluorogenic substrate and nitrosalicylaldehyde as coupling agent. With both methods, cathepsin B was found to be localized within fibroblasts and leukocytes assembled at the tumor invasion front. In addition, immunofluorescent staining demonstrated the occurrence of the enzyme in the extracellular matrix surrounding tumor cell clusters. Carcinoma cells always remained unstained. The conclusion is drawn that cathepsin B is chiefly produced by host cells which are stimulated to increase synthesis and to release the enzyme under the influence of the tumor. A dual function can be ascribed to cathepsin B concentrated in the vicinity of the tumor: it operates intracellularly (in host cells) through degradation of endocytosed protein and extracellularly through activation of collagenase. The resulting lytic action on host structures appears to be a prerequisite for local spread of the V2 carcinoma.
...
PMID:Histochemical localization of cathepsin B at the invasion front of the rabbit V2 carcinoma. 703 59


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next >>