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)

A method has been developed to assay collagenase in ovarian extracts in the presence of tissue inhibitors. Rat ovarian tissue is first extracted with Triton X-100 and then heated to 60 degrees C in 50 mM Tris buffer containing 100 mM CaCl2. This extract contains collagenase activity and putative inhibitor(s). The inhibitory activity is removed by reduction with dithiothreitol and alkylation with iodoacetamide. Collagenase is then activated with aminophenylmercuric acetate and assayed using 3H-acetylated collagen from which the telopeptides have been removed. Identification of this activity as collagenase was performed by using the metalloprotease inhibitors EDTA and o-phenanthroline and by demonstration of the typical collagen cleavage fragments on sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. To investigate the changes in collagenase activity associated with ovulation, immature rats received 20 IU of pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin and 52 h later 10 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). After hCG administration, ovaries were removed at intervals from 0 to 20 h. Collagenase activity rose from 4.9 +/- 1.4% digestion of the 3H-collagen at 0 time to a maximum of 24.7 +/- 1.5% digestion at 8 h after hCG and remained high at 12 h (time of ovulation) and up to 20 h (18.7 +/- 1.9% and 16.1 +/- 1.6% digestion, respectively). These findings support a role of collagenase in the rupture of the follicle and they suggest a further role for this enzyme in the events following ovulation.
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PMID:The extraction of a tissue collagenase associated with ovulation in the rat. 300 8

In the present study, we have examined the role of gonadotropins and prostaglandins in the preovulatory increase of ovarian collagenase activity in the rat. Whole ovaries of immature PMSG-primed rats (20 IU) were removed before and 8 h after the rats were treated with human (h) CG, Nembutal, and/or indomethacin. The ovaries were homogenized in a solution containing Triton X-100 (0.25%) and centrifuged. Collagenase was extracted by resuspending the pellets in buffer containing 100 mM CaCl2, heating to 60 C for 6 min, and centrifuging. The supernatants were treated with dithiothreitol (2 mM) and iodoacetamide (5 mM) to inactivate collagenase inhibitors. Collagenase activity was measured as the percent digestion of 3H-type I collagen/100 microliters aliquot of ovarian sample. At zero time (52 h after PMSG), ovarian collagenase activity was 4.2 +/- 1.2% digestion (mean +/- SEM, n = 3). In ovaries collected 8 h after the endogenous LH surge or 8 h after the administration of 10 IU hCG at time zero, collagenase activity rose to 19.6 +/- 2.1 (n = 6) and 22.5 +/- 1.7% digestion (n = 11), respectively. Indomethacin (1.5 mg/100 g BW) administered 30 min after hCG, produced no change in collagenase activity (24.8 +/- 2.5% digestion, n = 7) although the expected increase in ovarian prostaglandin E after hCG treatment was blocked. When the endogenous LH surge was blocked with Nembutal (3 mg/100 g BW), collagenase activity in 8-h ovaries was 6.8 +/- 1.1% digestion (n = 10). The Nembutal block of the preovulatory collagenase increase was overcome by administration of hCG (8-h ovarian enzyme activity = 22.7 +/- 3.2% digestion, n = 8). These observations demonstrate that hCG stimulates ovarian collagenase activity and that this stimulation is not dependent on prostaglandin synthesis.
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PMID:The preovulatory increase in ovarian collagenase activity in the rat is independent of prostaglandin production. 300 37

Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM kinase II) is associated with microtubule preparations and phosphorylates several endogenous proteins including microtubule-associated protein 2, tubulin, and an 80,000-dalton protein doublet (pp80). We now report that pp80 is identical to synapsin I by all criteria studied including molecular weight, isoelectric point, phosphopeptide mapping of cAMP- and calmodulin-dependent phosphorylated protein, comigration with authentic synapsin I, and sensitivity to digestion with collagenase. Synapsin I and CaM kinase II were found in association with both microtubule preparations and preparations enriched in neurofilaments. Antibodies to synapsin I specifically labeled neurofilaments prepared in vitro. Immunocytochemical studies on rat brain tissue demonstrated synapsin I immunoreactivity specifically associated with the neuronal cytoskeleton as well as synaptic vesicles. The observed synapsin I staining on cytoskeletal elements was considerably diminished or abolished by the inclusion of Triton X-100 in the staining solutions. These results indicate that synapsin I is associated with the cytoskeleton and may be an important link between cytoskeletal elements as well as between the cytoskeleton and membrane.
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PMID:Association of synapsin I with neuronal cytoskeleton. Identification in cytoskeletal preparations in vitro and immunocytochemical localization in brain of synapsin I. 308 74

Three novel components of neuromuscular junctions have been identified by use of monoclonal antibodies (McAb) against glycoproteins obtained from a mouse neuroblastoma X human dorsal root ganglion cell hybrid line. Antigen distribution was assessed by fluorescent immunohistochemistry on frozen sections of human intercostal muscle counterstained with labeled alpha-bungarotoxin to identify neuromuscular junctions. Antigen SOS 6 stained exclusively in the neuromuscular junction, whereas antigens SOS 5 and SOS 13 were highly enriched in the junction but also stained extrasynaptic regions. These antigens can be distinguished from previously described components of the neuromuscular junction by their molecular weights, insensitivity to collagenase treatment, and solubility in 0.1% Triton X-100. Indirect evidence suggests that these species-specific antigens are located in the postsynaptic muscle membrane, but location in the junctional basal lamina or subsarcolemmal region cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Novel antigens at the neuromuscular junction. 351 Feb 28

Rat hepatocytes obtained by means of liver perfusion with collagenase were allowed to spread on type IV collagen coated coverslips for 20 h. Interference reflection microscopy revealed a peripheral ring of dark spots. Carbon replicas of ventral membranes left attached to coverslips after lysis and squirting provided high resolution information on the ultrastructure of the protoplasmic surface. Correlative light and electron microscopy of the same ventral membrane showed that the area of the peripheral 'adhesion annulus' was rich in clathrin-coated structures (sheets, pits and vesicles). In vertical thin sections of hepatocyte monolayers numerous small smooth vesicles were observed piled up below the peripheral portion of the cell. These findings suggest high cytotic activity at the cell periphery during spreading. No bundles of microfilaments were observed in cells after squirting or in sections, but a ring of filaments at the cell periphery could be seen in many cells in whole mount preparations after treatment with Triton X-100. The absence of microfilaments associated with the points of adhesion indicates a cytoskeleton independent adhesion mechanism in hepatocytes during the first 20 h of spreading.
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PMID:Ultrastructure of ventral membranes of rat hepatocytes spread on type IV collagen. 379 41

The binding of Evans blue to collagen and elastin in rabbit aortic tissue and in bovine ligamentum nuchae was studied following circulation in vivo of the dye and incubation in vitro in Evans blue containing plasma, respectively. Using collagenase and elastase, the dye was liberated from both tissues corresponding to their different contents of collagen and elastin. Disc electrophoretic analysis of the liberated dye showed, that it migrated as free Evans blue indicating that the binding of the dye to the macromolecules was due to spatial interactions rather than to fixation at specific prosthetic groups. The capability of collagen and elastin to bind Evans blue was demonstrated with the isolated proteins; it was shown elastin had a higher affinity to the dye than collagen. Treatment of the blued tissue with hyaluronidase and Triton X-100 showed that binding to complex carbohydrates and dye accumulation in the aqueous intra- or extracellular space seems to be negligible.
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PMID:The binding of Evans blue to collagen and elastin in elastic tissue. 620 87

The existing forms of collagenase [EC 3.4.24.7] in the human uterine cervix were examined. The latent collagenase extracted by homogenization in 0.25% Triton X-100 containing 0.01 M CaCl2 was indicated to be a complex of collagenase with alpha 2-macroglobulin by the behavior of the fraction of this enzyme before and after treatment with NaSCN on Sephadex G-150 column chromatography and an immunodiffusion method. The active collagenase was extracted by rehomogenization in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.4, containing 0.1 M M CaCl2 from the insoluble residue at 0 degrees C. Another latent collagenase was extracted from the insoluble fraction in the same buffer by heating at 60 degrees C for 4 min and this enzyme was activated by 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate or trypsin. The molecular weights of the active and the latent forms were approximately 7.3 x 10(4) and 9.4 x 10(4), respectively. This indicates that the latency is due to the formation of a low molecular weight inhibitor enzyme complex. These results clarified that the human uterine cervix contains three existing forms (alpha 2-macroglobulin complex, active form and low molecular weight inhibitor complex) of collagenase under these experimental conditions.
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PMID:The existing forms of collagenase in the human uterine cervix. 624 99

A new intracytoplasmic immunofluorescence staining procedure has been investigated to detect and quantify myeloma cells by means of flow cytometry. Freshly harvested bone marrow aspirations from 12 patients with multiple myeloma were treated with collagenase and Triton X-100, and incubated with different specimens of fluoro-isothiocyanate-marked antihuman immunoglobulins. DNA-staining was then done with propidium iodide. Biparametric evaluation in a cytofluorograph 6300A/FC 200 showed a characteristic cluster distribution of normal and pathological immunoglobulin-producing cells. This intracytoplasmic fluorochromic staining procedure may be significant for the specific identification of nonsecretive immunocytomas, which cannot be detected by serodiagnostic methods.
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PMID:Intracytoplasmic immunofluorescence in multiple myeloma. 626 85

Polysomes were isolated from calcified and matrix-containing tissues, such as rat calvaria, rat chondrosarcoma and chick embryos. The method of isolation involves preliminary swelling of the tissues in hypotonic buffer containing heparin and cycloheximide. After homogenization, differential centrifugation is used to separate membrane-bound and non-bound polysomes. Each fraction is rehomogenized in the presence of detergent (Triton X-100) and potassium ions (0.25M). Polysomes are harvested by centrifugation through sucrose cushions in the continued presence of high levels of potassium ions and heparin. Total, non-bound, and membrane-bound polysomes prepared in this manner are equally active in protein synthesizing activity in an heterologous cell-free system. The distribution between non-bound and membrane-bound polysomes in the 12 day old chick embryo is 43 and 57 per cent respectively. Sucrose gradient profiles of polypeptide chains on polysomes labeled in organ culture correlate well with the protein synthetic activity of the isolated polysomes. Much of the protein synthetic activity is devoted to collagen. Polysomal fractions obtained from sucrose gradients show preferential incorporation of 3H-proline and nearly 60 per cent of trichloroacetic acid precipitable material is susceptible to collagenase digestion. Products of synthesis are also substrates for collagen specific enzyme, prolyl hydroxylase. The method described in this communication overcomes the inherent difficulties in obtaining active polysomes from calcified and matrix-containing tissues.
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PMID:Isolation and partial characterization of active polysomes from calcified and matrix-containing tissues. 627 Oct 84

We have extracted acetylcholinesterase from young chick retinas by homogenization in different solutions combining high salt concentration, ionic and nonionic detergents, and EDTA, looking for an optimum procedure for the solubilization of collagen-tailed, asymmetric structural forms of the enzyme. High salt and EDTA seem to be the only necessary requirements for the solubilization of acetylcholinesterase as the A12 form (20S), and the presence of detergent in the homogenization medium does not significantly improve the yield of tailed enzyme. Extraction in the absence of detergent has the potential advantage of a threefold enrichment of tailed enzyme, because only about one-third of the total retinal acetylcholinesterase activity is solubilized. Divalent cations, especially Ca2+, seem to be involved in the attachment of the tailed enzyme to the retinal membranes, at the tail level. High salt-EDTA-extracted 20S acetylcholinesterase (without detergent) aggregates in the presence of exogenous Ca2+ and becomes "insoluble." However, the aggregated 20S acetylcholinesterase can be completely recovered and brought back into solution by further addition of EDTA. Besides, the aggregation can be prevented by the inclusion of Triton X-100 in the homogenization buffer or by adding the detergent concurrently with Ca2+. It is postulated that the acetylcholinesterase collagenous tail is coated by acidic lipid molecules hydrophobically bound to the tail protein so that Ca2+ ionic bridges would actually link these lipid molecules (and consequently the tail) to the membrane matrix. Removal of the lipid coat (e.g., by Triton X-100) produces tailed acetylcholinesterase molecules that no longer aggregate in the presence of Ca2+ and are fully accessible to collagenase digestion.
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PMID:Solubilization of collagen-tailed acetylcholinesterase from chick retina: effect of different extraction procedures. 627 24


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