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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)
Type I procollagen secreted by matrix-free chick embryo tendon cells was labeled with L-[3,3'-3H] cystine and purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography. After bacterial
collagenase
digestion, the NH2- and COOH-terminal propeptides were partially characterized by ion exchange chromatography and gel filtration. Similar experiments were then conducted after labeling with either D-[6-3H] glucosamine, D-[2-3H] mannose, or D-[U-14C] glucose. On the basis of these studies and subsequent carbohydrate analysis, it was concluded that the COOH-terminal peptide contained greater than 90% of the radioactive carbohydrate which consisted predominantly of glucosamine and mannose with traces of galactosamine and galactose. Only radioactive glucosamine could be detected in the NH2-terminal propeptide. Under conditions which inhibit hydroxylation of lysine and glycosylation of hydroxylysine, unhydroxylated procollagen (protocollagen) could still be labeled with [3H] glucosamine and [3H] mannose. This suggested that glycosylation of the propeptides is at least initiated at the level of the rough
endoplasmic reticulum
.
...
PMID:Localization and partial composition of the oligosaccharide units on the propeptide extensions of type I procollagen. 61 65
1. Parenchymal, Kupffer and biliary tract cells were isolated from normal rat liver by perfusion with
collagenase
solution. 2. The specific activities (munits of enzyme activity/mg of protein) of marker enzymes for the principal subcellular organelles were determined in the isolated cell homogenates and compared with whole liver homogenates. 3. The cells were disrupted and the extracts subjected to analytical subcellular fractionation by sucrose-density-gradient centrifugation. Lysosomal integrity was determined by assaying latent beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase in the extracts. 4. Similar subcellular distributions were found for lysosomal,
endoplasmic reticulum
and plasma membrane marker enzymes in the whole liver and in parenchymal and biliary tract cells. In Kupffer cells, the proportion of these enzymes in the cytosol was significantly increased compared with the other fractions. In addition the equilibrium densities of the various organelles in these cells were lower than those from parenchymal cells.
...
PMID:Analytical subcellular fractionation studies on different cell types isolated from normal rat liver. 71 95
Release of peroxidase from secretory cells of rat lacrimal gland upon cholinergic stimulation was studied in vitro with single lobules and isolated cells (lacrimocytes). Isolated lobules, kept in Eagle's medium, remain structurally intact and reaction product of peroxidase is confined to cisternae of rough
endoplasmic reticulum
, elements of the Golgi apparatus, and all secretory granules. Morphologically, exocytosis occurs by membrane fusion and discharge of granule content. The highest rate of peroxidase released from lobules is observed at 10(-4) M carbamylcholine. The specific activity of peroxidase released into the medium is fourfold higher as compared to the lobules. Release of peroxidase is suppressed by atropine when added before or after the addition of carbamylcholine. At 4 degrees C, no peroxidase release occurs upon cholinergic stimulation. The exocytotic release of peroxidase is dependent on energy supply, as indicated by substantial inhibition (at 37 degrees C) under anoxic conditions or in the presence of dinitrophenol, KCN, or carboxyatractyloside. Furthermore, the process is sensitive to colchicine and vinblastine. Isolated lacrimocytes, consiting of 95% secretory acinar cells, are prepared by digestion with
collagenase
, hyaluronidase, and trypsin. They retain the characteristic polarity of secretory cells in situ, and localization of peroxidase is the same as in lobules. Since isolated lacrimocytes respond to cholinergic stimulation in the same way as lobules, the receptors are not damaged by the isolation procedure and appear to be associated directly with the exocrine cell. Oxygen uptake by isolated lacrimocytes is about 14 nmol O2 X min-1 X 10(-6) cells; it is about doubled by uncoupling with dinitrophenol. Oxygen uptake rises by 20-30% above the resting rate upon cholinergic stimulation. This additional uptake is suppressed by atropine or by added cholinesterase, indicating that continuous receptor occupancy may be required for the energy demand by exocytosis. On the basis of the specific activity of peroxidase in the medium, the energy demand resulting from cholinergic stimulation is estimated to be 0.08 mumol ATP (or energy-rich phosphate bonds) per microgram of protein released from the lacrimocytes.
...
PMID:Exocytosis in secretory cells of rat lacrimal gland. Peroxidase release from lobules and isolated cells upon cholinergic stimulation. 95 71
This paper describes a method of obtaining epithelial cells from large quantities of normal human breast tissue and the response of these cells in culture to lactogenic hormones. Suspensions of single cells and clusters of cells resembling normal ductal and alveolar structures were obtained by mechanical disaggregation and subsequent (3h) incubation of tissue fragments in 0.5 mg/ml
collagenase
. Cells rapidly attached to glass or plastic surfaces within 48 h and grew to form large colonies which maintained their epithelial appearance throughout 2 months of observation. Cell cycling as monitored by DNA synthesis was enhanced by insulin, hydrocortisone, or ovine prolactin (in concentrations of 5.0mug/ml each) at respectively 2,3 and 5 days of incubation. These results were observed in cultures derived from 3 premenopause samples of mammary tissue maintained in medium with 1% fetal calf serum. Prolactin at a concentration of 5 mug/ml induced phosphoprotein synthesis 8-fold over control values. In addition, prolactin induced morphological changes in cells including the development of distended
endoplasmic reticulum
, large microvilli, and the deposition of glycogen granules. These initial results led to the tentative conclusion that prolactin was sufficient to initiate some of the characteristics in cultured cells normally associated with lactating tissues.
...
PMID:Cultures of normal human mammary cells. 97 88
The submandibular glands of 4-week-old rats were dissociated by a procedure involving digestions with
collagenase
and hyaluronidase, chelation of divalent cations and mechanical force. A suspension of single cells was obtained in low yield by centrifugation in a Ficoll-containing medium. Immediately after dissociation and after a culture period of 16-18 hr the dissociated cells were tested for agglutinability by concanavalin A (Con A). Using ferritin (tfer)-conjugated Con A the lectin binding by the isolated acinar cells was also studied. The dissociated cells were agglutinated by low concentrations of Con A and bound Fer-Con A molecules on their entire surface without any indication of polarization of the cell membrane. There was a considerable cell to cell variation in the amount of Fer-Con A binding which was, in general, sparse and patchy. The contact surfaces between agglutinated cells revealed a dense binding of Fer-Con A molecules irrespective of the types of cells participating in the agglutination reaction. Cells cultured for 16-18 hr were no longer agglutinated by Con A. As compared to the freshly dissociated cells the cultured acinar cells revealed a more uniform and denser binding of Fer-Con A molecules. Furthermore, there were more lectin molecules bound to the cell surface corresponding to the basal part of the cell, where the nucleus and most of the rough surface
endoplasmic reticulum
were located, than to the apical cell surface. It is suggested that the higher density of lectin-binding sites on the cell surface in the vicinity of the cisternae of the rough
endoplasmic reticulum
indicates insertion sites of newly synthesized membrane glycoproteins.
...
PMID:Distribution of concanavalin A binding sites on the surface of dissociated rat submandibular gland acinar cells. 115 94
In normal lung growth, post-pneumonectomy lung growth, and in possibly several lung disorders, there are marked alterations in the density of collagen and changes in the rate of synthesis of collagen relative to the synthesis of other lung proteins. To provide a technology to begin to understand these changes at the molecular level, polysomes were prepared from rabbit lung and translated in a heterologous cell-free system including rabbit reticulocyte 0.5 M KCl ribosomal wash fraction and liver tRNA. Collagen was shown in the cell-free product by
collagenase
sensitivity, hydroxylation of incorporated proline by peptidyl prolyl hydroxylase, agarose gel chromatography, and sodium dodecyl sulfate acrylamide gel electrophoresis. The cell-free system was optimized with respect to K+, Mg2+, amino acids, and ribosomal wash fraction and used under conditions where total protein synthesis and collagen synthesis are linear with respect to time and amount of polysomes. Under these conditions, collagen synthesis was directed almost entirely by polysomes derived from the
endoplasmic reticulum
. Polysomes isolated from late fetal lung directed collagen synthesis at twice the rate (per polysome) as those polysomes isolated from adult lung. Similar changes were seen if lung tRNA replaced liver tRNA and if lung ribosomal wash fraction replaced reticulocyte wash fraction. Although these changes in cell-free lung collagen synthesis with tissue explants, further studies will have to be carried out to determine whether, in fact, age-related alterations in control of lung collagen synthesis are truly explained by these findings.
...
PMID:Characterization of cell-free synthesis of collagen by lung polysomes in a heterologous system. 116 43
The rabbit has been a useful model for in vivo studies of the pharmacologic control of lacrimal gland fluid secretion. However, by contrast with rodent exorbital lacrimal glands, the rabbit lacrimal gland has not been subjected to detailed cellular, subcellular, or biochemical analyses. Procedures were developed to isolate rabbit lacrimal acini by
collagenase
digestion and mechanical dispersion. The preparations exhibited good morphology, and trypan blue exclusion rates generally exceeded 90%. The isolated acini responded to carbachol by releasing protein and increasing Na+ unidirectional influx rates. The presence of muscarinic cholinergic and beta-adrenergic receptors was indicated by specific binding of the muscarinic cholinergic antagonist, 3H-N-methylscopolamine (3H-NMS; dissociation constant, Kd, 0.55 nmol/l), and the beta-adrenergic antagonist, 3H-CGP12177 (Kd, 0.34 nmol/l). The maximal binding values measured in crude membrane preparations were 79 fmol/mg for 3H-NMS and 40 fmol/mg for 3H-CGP12177. Subcellular fractionation analyses showed various membrane populations, including a series of Golgi-derived populations admixed with a major
endoplasmic reticulum
-derived population, a population that may represent the basal-lateral plasma membranes, and a series of populations with characteristics suggesting they are involved in the assembly or recycling of basal-lateral membrane constituents. The authors believe the ability to isolate and analyze acinar preparations from the rabbit lacrimal gland will facilitate various studies of acinar cell biochemistry and physiology that would be impractical with the relatively smaller amounts of material that can be obtained from rat or mouse exorbital lacrimal glands.
...
PMID:Isolation and subcellular fractionation analysis of acini from rabbit lacrimal glands. 132 95
The morphological counterpart of the well-known age-dependent marked impairment of glucocorticoid secretion of rat adrenals was investigated by use of morphometric techniques. For this purpose 4-, 8-, 16- and 24-month-old rats were studied. Despite the notable lowering of both basal and ACTH-stimulated production of corticosterone by
collagenase
-dispersed inner adrenocortical cells, ACTH and corticosterone plasma concentrations displayed significant increases with ageing. Zona fasciculata (ZF) and zona reticularis (ZR) showed a notable hypertrophy in aged rats, which was due to rises in both the average volume and number of their parenchymal cells. The hypertrophy of ZF and ZR cells was in turn associated with increase in the volume of the mitochondrial compartment and proliferation of smooth
endoplasmic reticulum
, i.e., the two organelles involved in steroid-hormone synthesis. All these morphologic changes, conceivably due to the chronic exposure to high levels of circulating ACTH, are interpreted as a response enabling ZF and ZR to compensate for their age-dependent lowering in glucocorticoid secretion. Stereology also demonstrated that ZF and ZR cells underwent a striking age-related lipid-droplet repletion. Lipid droplets are the intracellular stores of cholesterol esters, the obligate precursors of steroid hormones in rats. This finding is in keeping with the contention that the mechanism underlying the age-dependent decline in rat-adrenal glucocorticoid secretion mainly involves impairments of the utilization of intracellular cholesterol previous to its intramitochondrial transformation to pregnenolone.
...
PMID:The effects of ageing on the morphology and function of the zonae fasciculata and reticularis of the rat adrenal cortex. 133 63
Pancreatic islets from adult Wistar rats were isolated by an improved
collagenase
digestion technique. Examination of the preparations showed that they contained B cells possessing secretory granules, each having an eccentric electron-dense core surrounded by an electron-lucent halo; the Golgi bodies with their characteristic features were located in a juxtanuclear position. Roughly surfaced
endoplasmic reticulum
and mitochondria were present and were mostly normal in appearance. The cell possessed all the ultrastructural attributes indicating that they were fully functional and structurally intact.
...
PMID:Isolated pancreatic islets of the rat: an ultrastructural study. 144 93
The C-propeptide of type II procollagen has previously been implicated in cartilage calcification. To further characterize this propeptide, we have investigated its molecular status and intracellular distribution in bovine fetal growth plate chondrocytes, particularly within the calcifying zone, using cell isolation, Western blotting, and localization with immunofluorescence and immunogold techniques. We found that in all cells freshly isolated by
collagenase
digestion the C-propeptide was a component of type II pro-alpha chains. No free C-propeptide was detected intracellularly. In situ localization of the C-propeptide by immunostaining employing immunofluorescence revealed the presence of procollagen in most growth plate cells, staining being most intense in hypertrophic cells. In the latter, large dilations of the rough
endoplasmic reticulum
were observed. These were not found in proliferating cells and had an approximate diameter of 5 microns. With immunogold localization these, together with Golgi-derived secretory granules, stained for the C-propeptide. These combined results suggest that in all cells of the growth plate the C-propeptide is a constituent part of type II collagen pro-alpha chains, and that it is usually segregated in the rough
endoplasmic reticulum
at a time when, according to other studies, collagen synthesis ceases in the lower hypertrophic zone and calcification of the extracellular matrix ensues. This suggests that the intracellular translocation of type II collagen pro-alpha chains may change in hypertrophic cells at this time.
...
PMID:Immunochemical and immunocytochemical studies of the C-propeptide of type II procollagen in chondrocytes of the growth plate. 169 54
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