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)

We have investigated potential mechanisms for blister formation by assaying proteolytic enzymes in the blister fluids of patients with various bullous diseases. Blister fluids were obtained from patients with dermatitis herpetiformis (DH), bullous pemphigoid (BP), chronic bullous disease of childhood (CBDC), and pemphigus vulgaris (PV). The cells were recovered by centrifugation, and the supernatants as well as the cell pellets were assayed first for collagenase activity using [3H]proline-labeled type I collagen as substrate. Collagenase activity could be detected in most cases with DH, BP, and CBDC, while no activity was found in 2 cases of PV or in 5 control blister fluids obtained from suction blisters induced in healthy control subjects. Elastase activity was assayed in the same blister fluids by using a synthetic substrate succinyl-(L-alanyl)3-paranitroanilide or soluble [14C]valine-labeled tropoelastin. High levels of elastase activity were present in all DH patients, while lower, but clearly detectable, levels were found in BP, CBDC, and PV. The enzyme activity in BP was inhibited by Na2EDTA, but not by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), and Ca2+ stimulated the activity, suggesting that the enzyme in BP was a metalloproteinase. In cell-free supernatants of the DH blister fluids, the elastase activity was markedly decreased by PMSF, indicating that most of the enzyme activity was due to a serine protease. The cells recovered from DH blister fluids also contained high levels of elastase activity which could be inhibited by PMSF but not by Na2EDTA. Thus, in DH, the elastase activity is probably derived from polymorphonuclear leukocytes abundantly present in the lesions. The results indicate that active proteases are present in the blister fluids of skin diseases, and they may play a mechanistic role in the blister formation by degrading connective tissue components of the dermis and the dermal-epidermal junction.
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PMID:Demonstration of collagenase and elastase activities in the blister fluids from bullous skin diseases. Comparison between dermatitis herpetiformis and bullous pemphigoid. 630 88

Previous studies have shown that vasopressin stimulates the mitotic activity in adrenal zona glomerulosa cells in intact as well as in hypophysectomized rats. (Payet and Isler, Cell and Tissue Res. 172, 1976; Payet and Lehoux, J. steroid Biochem. 12, 1980). We now report that this effect is direct and specific, since vasopressin stimulates the mitotic activity of rat adrenal zona glomerulosa cells in primary cultures. These cells were prepared by dissociation with collagenase in the culture medium MEM-d-Valine. Isolated cells were placed in 3.5 diameter petri dishes in MEM-d-valine medium containing 15% fetal calf serum and antibiotics for two days and 5% fetal calf serum for subsequent cultures. The medium was changed at 24 hr intervals. The hormones were added 3 days after the culture was started. The mitogenic effect of vasopressin was found to be dependent both on time and hormone concentrations. Vasopressin (10(-11) M) stimulated thymidine incorporation 4.8 +/- 0.6-fold after 2 days of treatment and 5.3 +/- 1.6-fold after 8 days. When ACTH (10(-11) M) was added together with vasopressin (10(-11) M) the mitogenic effect was enhanced at 6.5 +/- 1.9-fold after 2 days and 12.9 +/- 6.9-fold after 8 days of treatment. The aldosterone and corticosterone outputs were also stimulated by the combined presence of vasopressin and ACTH in the incubation medium; a maximal effect was observed between 6 and 8 days of treatment. Vasopressin (10(-11) M) + ACTH (10(-11) M) stimulated the aldosterone output 7-fold and that of corticosterone by 18-fold. When added alone, vasopressin, as well as ACTH alone had only a small effect on the aldosterone output. However, ACTH alone stimulated the corticosterone output 10-fold. In conclusion, vasopressin is an important and specific growth factor of the adrenal zona glomerulosa cells. In addition, together with ACTH vasopressin stimulates the aldosterone and corticosterone output both in vivo and in vitro in primary cell cultures.
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PMID:Vasopressin: a potent growth factor in adrenal glomerulosa cells in culture. 632 70

Polymorphonuclear leukocytes have been shown to contain proteolytic enzymes which are capable of degrading connective tissue proteins such as native collagen. In this study, proteolytic enzymes were extracted from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes and a neutral proteinase was extensively purified and characterized. The activity of this enzyme was monitored by degradation of denatured [ 3H ]proline-labeled type I collagen or by cleavage of a synthetic dinitrophenylated peptide with a Gly-Ile sequence. The enzyme was readily separated from leukocyte collagenase by concanavalin-A--Sepharose affinity chromatography and further purified by QAE-Sephadex ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration on Sephacryl S-200. The purified enzyme had a molecular weight of approximately 105000, its pH optimum was about 7.8, and it was inhibited by Na2EDTA and dithiothreitol, but not by fetal calf serum. The enzyme degraded genetically distinct type I, II, III, IV and V collagens, when in a non-helical form, but not when in native triple-helical conformation. Dansyl-monitored end-group analyses, combined with digestion by carboxypeptidase A, indicated that the enzyme cleaved denaturated type I collagen at Gly-Xaa sequences, in which Xaa can be leucine, isoleucine, valine, phenylalanine, lysine, or methionine. Thus, the purified enzyme referred to here as Gly-Xaa proteinase, is a neutral proteinase, which may be of importance in inflammatory disease processes by degrading further collagen peptides which have been rendered non-helical as a result of collagenase cleavage.
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PMID:Proteinases in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Purification and characterization of an enzyme which cleaves denatured collagen and a synthetic peptide with a Gly-Ile sequence. 634 59

Insulin release stimulated by single amino acids, with and without gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP), was studied in vivo in anesthetized rats and in vitro in collagenase-digested isolated rat pancreatic islets. Insulin release in vivo during a 15-min intravenous infusion of leucine (0.97 mM) or arginine (0.97 mM) with GIP (17 ng/min) was greater than with infusion of either amino acid or GIP alone. Serum immunoreactive GIP was in the physiological range, and serum glucose showed no significant change in these studies. In contrast, insulin release did not occur with valine infused alone or with GIP. Insulin release in vitro by isolated islets was greater during a 45-min incubation period with leucine (5-20 mM) or arginine (20 mM) plus GIP (10 ng to 10 micrograms/ml) than with either amino acid alone. This effect that occurred in the absence of glucose could not be demonstrated with low concentrations of leucine (1.5 mM) or with 20 mM valine. In vitro insulin release during paired perfusion studies of isolated islets was greater with leucine (20 mM) plus GIP (50 ng/min) than with leucine alone, and augmentation of insulin release by GIP was demonstrable in both the early and late phases of insulin release. From these results it is concluded that insulin release is greater, both in vivo and in vitro, after leucine or arginine plus GIP than with either amino acid or GIP alone. This effect appears to be specific for the insulinotropic amino acids tested, does not appear to be glucose dependent, and can be demonstrated in both the early and late phases of insulin release.
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PMID:Effects of gastric inhibitory polypeptide on leucine- and arginine-stimulated insulin release. 634 79

Vitamin A-storing cells have been shown to be distributed among various organs and tissues, including the lungs. In order to investigate this unique type of cell, the in vitro isolation has been carried out from rat lungs. Lungs were perfused with EGTA and collagenase solution in situ, and were digested with trypsin-collagenase solution at 60-min intervals for 2 h. Then, the cell suspensions obtained were incubated at 37 degrees C in F-10 medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) for 72 h. Non-adherent cells were then removed by vigorous washing with medium, and the resultant cell monolayer was harvested with trypsin to remove the contaminating macrophages. These cell fractions were shown to contain more than 96% of vitamin A-storing cells, judged by electron and fluorescence microscopic examinations. The cells grown in vitro retained well the overall morphology characteristic of the vitamin A-storing cells found in lung tissues. The isolated cells grew well in vitro and the growth was inhibited by D-valine or cis-hydroxyproline. The progeny of the cells still contained vitamin A lipid droplets after several transfer generations. Characteristic networks of fibronectin were also demonstrated around the cells. These results have shown that vitamin A-storing cells in the lung was successfully isolated from rat lungs and the cells possessed fibroblast-like characters storing vitamin A in small lipid droplets.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of vitamin-A-storing lung cells. 638 Oct 75

Hepatocytes were isolated from fasted rats by a two-step CA++-free/collagenase perfusion method. The cells were subjected to centrifugation under mild conditions at 12 degrees C in a linear metrizamide gradient (1.075-1.12 gm/cm3). The cells were distributed in the gradient in a bell-shaped manner. According to their position in the gradient the cells were divided in five different populations. The heaviest population was omitted from the subsequent evaluation because it contained a high proportion of dead cells. The activity of alanine aminotransferase increased with increasing cell density indicating that the lightest cell population was enriched in perivenous cells, whereas the heaviest cell population had an excess of periportal cells. Protein synthesis was more rapid in the light (perivenous) cell population than in the heavy (periportal) cell population as measured by means of incorporation of radioactively labeled valine into protein. The distribution measured in vitro indicated approximately 80% higher rates in perivenous cells. On the other hand, the synthesis and secretion of export proteins were similar in all cell populations regardless of their density. Protein degradation measured as appearance of free valine in cell media was higher in the light (perivenous) cell population than in the other populations. Thus protein metabolism seemed to be faster in the light cell population.
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PMID:Protein synthesis in different populations of rat hepatocytes separated according to density. 708 59

Hepatocytes prepared by collagenase perfusion from Antarctic nototheniid fish of genus Trematomus are active in uptake of [14C]leucine at 0, 5, and 10 degrees C. The system is saturable with apparent Km about 1.0 mM. Isoleucine and phenylalanine were major competitors, valine was about one-half as effective, while alanine, glycine and histidine had no effect. Temperature dependency of rates in the 0-10 degrees C range yielded Ea = 65 kJ/mol (Q10 = 2.7). The average first-order rate constant at 0 degrees C was 0.1 min-1, one-third the value of 0.3 min-1 estimated for clearance of [14C]leucine by liver of these species in vivo. Affinity and specificity agreed well with in vivo data on liver clearance of leucine, both in Antarctic fish at 0 degrees C and in temperate fish acclimated to 10 degrees C and 20 degrees C. The results indicate similar modifications of leucine transport associated with evolutionary cold adaptation and seasonal acclimation in fish.
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PMID:Characteristics of leucine transport by isolated hepatocytes of Antarctic fish at low temperatures. 717 5

Studies were undertaken to define the molecular size of the elastin primary gene product. Translation of chick aortic messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) in an mRNA-dependent reticulocyte lysate resulted in the synthesis of two major proteins of 70 000 and 73 000 molecular weights. Both proteins were shown to be soluble forms of elastin by isotope incorporation, immunoprecipitation, collagenase and cyanogen bromide sensitivity, and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The 70 000-dalton protein behaves similarly to authentic tropoeleastin in sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. There was no evidence for a high molecular weight form of soluble elastin, although procollagen chains were indirectly identified among the aortic mRNA-directed translation products. The same molecular size proteins were also seen in organ cultures of chick embryonic aortas labeled with [3H]valine. However, the 73 000-dalton protein was not extractable in a neutral salt buffer but was found only if the aortas were extracted with urea in the presence of reducing and alkylating reagents. The results from these studies suggest that elastin is first synthesized as two distinct polypeptide chains which differ slightly in size and overall charge. The possibility that these two proteins may associate posttranslationally to form a dimer prior to secretion is postulated to explain the existence of a putative proelastin molecule seen in other systems.
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PMID:Translation of chick aortic elastin messenger ribonucleic acid. Comparison to elastin synthesis in chick aorta organ culture. 735 64

The effect of ethanol on the secretion of proteins was studied in hepatocytes isolated from 24-h fasted rats and from fed rats. Hepatocytes were isolated after collagenase disruption of the liver and incubated in a standard medium containing amino acids, bovine albumin, glucose, penicillin and streptomycin in HEPES buffer. Cell viability was determined by urea production and trypan blue exclusion. When studying protein export, a model had to be chosen in which the labeling is accomplished before the addition of the test agents. Cells were incubated with [3H]valine for 2.5 and 7.5 min followed by a 15-mM valine chase and the incubates were adjusted to final concentrations of ethanol of 50 mM, 100 mM, colchicine 5-50 microM or cycloheximide 18 microM. Cells and media were harvested at various times, and counts incorporated into medium and cell protein were determined. Cycloheximide inhibited protein synthesis by 99%, decreased protein secretion by 10-20%, but did not further inihibit protein labeling when given after the chase confirming the chase's effectiveness. Colchicine inhibited protein release by 27-54% depending on the dose. With control cells labeled protein and specifically albumin appeared in the medium 20 min from the start of the pulse and this release of protein was not inhibited by 50 mM or 100 mM ethanol incubated with cells from the same animal whether the donor has been fed or fasted. The values for the ethanol-treated cells ranged from 94.0 to 113% of the control values from 30 to 120 min after the addition of the pulse. Lactate levels were markedly elevated, and urea synthesis decreased in the presence of either 50 mM EtOH or 100 mM EtOH. Thus using a method that can distinguish the effect of ethanol on synthesis from secretion, it is concluded that acute exposure to EtOH does not interfere with protein secretion.
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PMID:Protein secretion in suspensions of isolated rat hepatocytes: no influence of acute ethanol administration. 745 Apr 1

Human fibroblast collagenase belongs to a family of matrix metalloproteinases which have been implicated in a number of connective tissue disorders ranging from rheumatoid arthritis to tumor invasion. To examine the active site of this enzyme by biophysical studies, a 19 kDa recombinant truncated mature collagenase (mCL-t) was prepared. Electrospray ionization (ESI) and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry have been utilized for the characterization of mCL-t. The molecular weights measured by these techniques identified the presence of two closely related protein components separated by approximately 100 Da. Edman sequence analysis demonstrated that the two protein components differ from each other by an amino terminal valine, consistent with the mass spectrometric data. In addition, the molecular weight of mCL-t determined by mass spectrometry did not agree with that calculated from the reported sequence. To identify the origin of this discrepancy, the DNA sequence of the mCL-t clone was examined. Several differences were noted between the DNA sequence of mCL-t and the published collagenase gene sequence. When these differences were taken into account, the measured molecular weights were found to be in good agreement with that calculated for the modified sequence. In separate experiments, both ESI and MALDI mass spectrometry have been used to determine molecular weights of mCL-t samples enriched with stable isotopes 15N and (15N + 13C). The measured molecular weights demonstrated a 97% (15N) and 99% (15N + 13C) incorporation of labeled isotopes in the two samples.
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PMID:Examination of recombinant truncated mature human fibroblast collagenase by mass spectrometry: identification of differences with the published sequence and determination of stable isotope incorporation. 761 36


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