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)

The collagens are the major structural glycoproteins of connective tissues. A unique primary structure and a multiplicity of post-translational modification reactions are required for normal fibrillogenesis. The post-translational modifications include hydroxylation of prolyl and lysyl residues, glycosylation, folding of the molecule into triple-helical conformation, proteolytic conversion of precursor procollagen to collagen, and oxidative deamination of certain lysyl and hydroxylysyl residues. Any defect in the normal mechanisms responsible for the synthesis and secretion of collagen molecules or the deposition of these molecules into extracellular fibers could result in abnormal fibrillogenesis; such defects could result in a connective tissue disease. Recently, defects in the regulation of the types of collagen synthesized and in the enzymes involved in the post-translational modifications have been found in heritable diseases of connective tissue. Thus far, the primary heritable disorders of collagen metabolism in man include lysyl hydroxylase deficiency in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VI, p-collagen peptidase deficency in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VII, decreased synthesis of type III collagen in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV, lysyl oxidase deficency in S-linked cutis laxa and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type V, and decreased synthesis of type I collagen in osteogenesis imperfecta.
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PMID:Defects in the biochemistry of collagen in diseases of connective tissue. 0 48

Catechol analogs inhibit the formation of hydroxylysine-derived intermolecular collagen cross links in tissue cultures of chick embryo calvaria. Formation of intermolecular collagen cross links was measured following incorporation of [14C]lysine, reduction with sodium borohydride, and elution from an ion exchange column with a pyridine-formate gradient. Cultures grown in the presence of 10(-3) M catechol, 10(-3) M dopamine, 10(-3) M L-dopa, or 10(-3) M D,L-serine-(2,3,4-trihydroxybenzyl)-hydrazide demonstrated between 43 and 84% inhibition of hydroxylysine formation. Collagen biosynthesis was not diminished in these cultures as compared to controls without additions or with beta-aminopropionitrile when measured by collagenase digestion. The formation of hydroxylysine-derived intermolecular cross links was inhibited 34 to 93% for 5,5'-dihydroxylysinonorleucine and 7 to 71% for 5-hydroxylysinonorleucine. The catechol analogs also inhibit the activity of lysyl hydroxylase as measured by specific tritium release as triated water from an L-[4,5-3H]lysine-labeled unhydroxylated collagen substrate prepared from chick calvaria. Since catechol analogs inhibit the formation of hydroxylysine in a cell-free assay, these compounds must pass into the cells of calvaria in this culture system to inhibit intracellular hydroxylysine formation and subsequently to diminish the reducible intermolecular cross links of the newly synthesized collagen.
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PMID:In vitro inhibition of collagen cross links by catechol analogs. 1 15

The aim of the present study was to find out whether the basement-membrane proteins laminin and type IV collagen are involved in the development of aminonucleoside-induced nephrosis. These proteins were measured by specific radioimmunoassays in serum, urine and kidney-cortex samples, and they were localized in the glomeruli by indirect immunofluorescence. Nephrosis was induced in rats with a single intraperitoneal injection of puromycin aminonucleoside. Serum laminin concentrations, detected by a radioimmunoassay for the P2 domain of the protein, increased to reach a maximum at days 5-7, and they remained elevated until at least day 14. The increase preceded the development of proteinuria, suggesting a role for laminin in glomerular function. Concomitant with proteinuria, increasing amounts of laminin antigenicity were also found in the urine. The size of the laminin antigen in serum was estimated by gel filtration, and the serum forms were found to contain both the P1 and the P2 regions of the intact laminin molecule. On the other hand, there were no changes in the serum or urinary concentrations of type-IV-collagen-derived antigens, as detected by a radioimmunoassay for the 7S collagen domain of this protein. The total content of laminin in kidney cortex, measured after digestion of the tissue with trypsin and collagenase, was, at day 9, still comparable with normal values, and the distribution of both basement-membrane proteins in the glomeruli, studied by indirect immunofluorescence, was similar to that in the controls. The tissue damage induced by aminonucleoside, however, seems to stimulate collagen biosynthesis, as the activities of prolyl 4-hydroxylase, lysyl hydroxylase and galactosylhydroxylysyl glucosyltransferase in kidney tissue increased significantly, with maxima at days 8-10.
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PMID:Effects of experimental nephrosis on basement-membrane components and enzymes of collagen biosynthesis in rat kidney. 388 96

The activity of highly purified lysyl hydroxylase towards lysyl residues within both the helical and the N-terminal non-helical telopeptide regions of chick type I collagen has been examined. The peptides alpha 1(I)-CB1 and alpha 2(I)-CB1, isolated from protocollagen following CNBr digestion and containing the N-terminal telopeptidyl lysyl residues, failed themselves to act as substrates. With protocollagen as substrate, analysis of products obtained following bacterial collagenase digestion of the reaction mixture showed that overall 37% hydroxylation of lysyl residues within the helical region of collagen had been obtained, which may be maximal. No hydroxylation, however, of the single lysyl residue in either alpha 1(I)-CB1 or alpha 2(I)-CB1, isolated following CNBr digestion of the reaction mixture, was observed, despite the known susceptibility of these residues to hydroxylation. These findings provide strong circumstantial evidence for the suggestion that a lysyl hydroxylase specific for the telopeptidyl residues and distinct from that active towards lysyl residues in the helical portion of the molecule may exist [Barnes, Constable, Morton & Royce (1974) Biochem. J. 139, 461-468].
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PMID:Failure of highly purified lysyl hydroxylase to hydroxylate lysyl residues in the non-helical regions of collagen. 393 36

In confluent human skin fibroblasts maintained in 0.5% serum-supplemented medium. L-ascorbate specifically stimulated the rate of incorporation of labeled proline into total collagenase-sensitive protein, without changing the specific activity of the intracellular free proline. This influence of ascorbate reached a maximum at 30 microM and continued for at least 4 days, resulting in a 4-fold increase. The ascorbate effect occurred in cells at both confluent and subconfluent densities and was evident at all serum concentrations from 0.5-20%. The effect was independent of duration of the radioactive pulse between 2-6 h. D-Ascorbate, D-isoascorbate, and L-dehydroascorbate also stimulated collagen synthesis but at considerably higher concentrations, i.e., 250-300 microM. The stimulation of collagen synthesis by ascorbate and its analogs was accompanied by a decline in prolyl hydroxylase activity and a rise in lysyl hydroxylase activity; again L-ascorbate was found to be most effective. Dimethyltetrahydropterine and L-lactate failed to produce these effects.
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PMID:Collagen synthesis in cultured human skin fibroblasts: effect of ascorbic acid and its analogs. 630 3

Contribution of collagen to cell proliferation was studied in cultured hepatocytes. When alpha,alpha'-dipyridyl, an iron chelator which blocks hydroxylation of prolyl and lysyl residues of procollagen and expression of procollagen mRNA, was added to the medium of rat hepatocytes in primary culture, DNA synthesis of the cells was reduced in a dose-related manner without changes in protein synthesis. The reduction of collagen synthesis was parallel with the changes of DNA synthesis. The addition of P-1894B or minoxidil, which inhibits specifically prolyl hydroxylase or lysyl hydroxylase, respectively, also produced similar results. However, the DNA synthesis was not affected by beta-aminopropionitrile fumarate, which inhibits cross linking in extracellular collagen maturation, nor by purified bacterial collagenase. Intracellular processing of collagen synthesis may be required for proliferation in cultured rat hepatocytes.
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PMID:Evidence that impaired intracellular collagen synthesis reduces proliferation in cultured rat hepatocytes. 818 28

This study was designed to investigate whether the changes in lysine hydroxylation known to occur in hypertrophic tendon occur randomly or at specific lysine residues in the type I collagen molecule. Peptides corresponding to the two known major cross-linking sites of type I collagen (a lysine (or hydroxylysine) at position 9N cross-linked to a hydroxylysine at 930 and a lysine (or hydroxylysine) at position 16C cross-linked to a hydroxylysine at position 87) were prepared by collagenase digestion, size fractionation, and separation by high performance liquid chromatography from normal chicken tendon and from chicken tendon subjected to increased tensile load as a result of muscle hypertrophy. The ratio of the difunctional cross-links dihydroxylysinonorleucine to hydroxylysinonorleucine in normal tendon is 0.75:1; this ratio is increased to 6:1 in hypertrophic tendon. The dihydroxylysinonorleucine to hydroxylysinonorleucine ratio is increased to the same extent in samples of the purified cross-linked peptides derived from both the N-terminal and C-terminal lysine aldehyde residues. On the other hand, the relative hydroxylysine content of preparations of the pooled larger helical peptides obtained by cyanogen bromide digestion of normal and hypertrophic tendons was essentially identical. These results demonstrate that there is a specific increase in hydroxylation of only the N- and C-terminal non-helical lysine residues that participate in the formation of the reducible difunctional cross-links of type I collagen in hypertrophic tendon, while the extent of hydroxylation of lysine residues in the helical regions is not affected. The specific mechanism by which the enzyme lysyl hydroxylase acting on its substrate can distinguish between lysine residues destined to be in non-helical versus helical regions in a nascent collagenous peptide that has not yet attained its final secondary structure remains to be defined.
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PMID:Tendon hypertrophy is associated with increased hydroxylation of nonhelical lysine residues at two specific cross-linking sites in type I collagen. 824 92

Collagen type II (Col II), one of the main components of the hyaline cartilage, is a member of the fibril-forming collagen family. Due to its amino acid composition, the extent of lysine hydroxylation of Col II is much higher than that of other fibril forming collagens. Since lysyl hydroxylase isoforms are less synthesized in hypothyroid ovarian tissue, Col II level is expected to be reduced here and contribute to the degradation of ovarian ECM in this condition. As there was no previous report, we have demonstrated Col II expression in rat ovary. Col2A1 mRNA shares significant part of the total collagens in ovary as shown by the relative expression of the major collagen genes present in this tissue. It has also been shown that Col II is down regulated in hypothyroid ovarian tissue and its expression is increased upon stimulation by thyroid hormone (T(3)). To know whether less Col II in hypothyroid ovarian tissue is due to less synthesis of the protein or its increased rate of degradation is also involved in it, we demonstrated the status of Collagen - degrading Matrix Metalloproteinases in this condition and found up regulation of MMP-1, -8 and -13 in hypothyroid rat ovary. The present study shows the reduced Col II expression in hypothyroid rat ovary, with the concomitant increase in Col II degradation. This information will be useful for further studies on reproductive disorders.
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PMID:Localization and thyroid hormone influenced expression of collagen II in ovarian tissue. 1731 Jan 1

We previously demonstrated that a high dose of tacrolimus (1 mumol/L) induced expression of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) proteins in human cultured gingival fibroblasts, suggesting a molecular mechanism maintaining gingival collagen homeostasis in tacrolimus-treated patients. Herein we have analyzed whether the effect on collagen turnover might be influenced by a therapeutic tacrolimus dose. Human gingival fibroblasts were incubated for 72 hours with 10 nmol/L, 100 nmol/L, and 1 mumol/L tacrolimus, or left untreated (CT). Collagen type I and III (COL-I, COL-III), lysyl hydroxylase 2b (LH2b), MMP-1 and -2, tissue inhibitor of MMP-1 and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) mRNA levels were assayed by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, collagen protein levels by dot blot, and MMP activity by sodium dodecyl sulfate zymography. Tacrolimus did not affect COL-I, COL-III, or MMP gene expression, while LH2b and TGF-beta1 tended to be down-regulated after 1 mumol/L FK506. Conversely, protein levels of MMP-1 (P = NS) and MMP-2 (P < .05 vs CT, 10 nmol/L, 100 nmol/L) were up-regulated after 1 mumol/L tacrolimus. Our findings confirmed that a high dose of tacrolimus does not induce interstitial collagen overexpression by gingival fibroblasts and induces up-regulation of MMPs protein levels. Interestingly, at doses corresponding to whole blood trough levels, tacrolimus did not exert any evident effect on collagen turnover pathways, suggesting that tacrolimus is likely to not affect collagen homeostasis in the gingival connective tissue compartment of FK506-immunosuppressed subjects. This effect did not seem to be dose-dependent.
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PMID:A therapeutic dose of FK506 does not affect collagen turnover pathways in healthy human gingival fibroblasts. 1858 21

Cerebral palsy (CP) is a nonprogressive central nervous system lesion clinically characterized by impairment of voluntary movement related to spasticity, time of activation, and strength of skeletal muscle. Altered muscular control may act on tendon structure and influence extracellular matrix homeostasis, in particular, collagen. The effect of spasticity on collagen turnover in CP patients' tendons has not been described previously. We studied collagen turnover related genes in the gracilis and semitendinosus tendons of diplegic (n = 6) and quadriplegic (n = 15) patients, compared to normal subjects (n = 7). In particular, using real time RT-PCR, we analyzed the mRNA levels of the major extracellular matrix (ECM) components collagen type I (COL-I, alpha 2 chain COL1A2), the matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) and the tissue inhibitor of MMP (TIMP-1), the enzyme responsible for collagen maturation lysyl hydroxylase 2b (LH2b), of the matricellular protein involved ECM remodelling (secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine, SPARC), and the transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1), a multipotent cytokine involved in collagen turnover. Our results show that gene expression profiles are quite different in CP samples compared to normal ones. In fact, spasticity induces relevant modifications of tendons at the molecular level, which modify their phenotypes to respond to the higher mechanical loading and increased functional demands. Interestingly, hypertonic quadriplegic subjects displayed the highest mRNA levels of COL1A2, LH2b, TGF-beta1, and SPARC, suggesting that their tendons undergo higher mechanical loading stimulation.
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PMID:Expression profiling of genes involved in collagen turnover in tendons from cerebral palsy patients. 1944 61


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