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)

Human lung specimens were minced and treated for 30 min with collagenase (1 mg ml-1) and DNase (0.1 mg ml-1) to obtain a suspension of viable (approximately 80%) and metabolically active lung cells (5 x 10(6) cells per gram of tissue). Treatment of these mixed lung cells with bradykinin (1.25 x 10(-6) to 1 x 10(-5) M) and f-Met-Leu-Phe (f-MLP; 1 x 10(-8) to 5 x 10(-6) M) did not stimulate to a substantial extent the release of prostaglandins and thromboxanes (measured with novel Enzyme Immunoassays). The only concentration of PAF that stimulated significantly the release of icosanoids from lung cells was 5 x 10(-7) M. Phorbol myristate (PMA; 5 x 10(-8) to 2 x 10(-6) M) and ionophore a-21387 (2.5 x 10(-6) to 2 x 10(-5) M) strongly stimulated the release of prostaglandins and thromboxanes by dispersed human lung cells. These findings support previous observations showing that human lungs have the enzymes necessary for the synthesis and release of prostaglandins and thromboxanes but stimulation of the release of these mediators is not obtained with the hormonal stimuli that are active in guinea pigs. Studies in progress will purify the cell populations and characterize the cells responsible for the release of these icosanoids.
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PMID:Release of prostaglandin E2 and thromboxane B2 by mixed isolated human lung cells. 313 66

Rat antiserum (as well as purified IgG and F(ab')2 fragments) raised against cellfree cytosolic extracts (CFE) of an alloimmune cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) clone (B6.1.SF.1) is a potent inhibitor of CTL-mediated cytotoxicity. Inhibition by this antiserum (termed alpha CTLL) occurred during the postbinding lethal hit stages of cytolysis, because it did not inhibit target cell binding, nor did it prematurely dissociate CTL-target cell conjugates; inhibition was observed regardless of the H-2 haplotype of the target cell or CTL employed; inhibition was reversible when pretreated, and washed CTL were used as effectors; and in Ca++ pulse experiments alpha CTLL inhibited cytolysis beyond the Ca++-dependent (lethal hit) stage of cytolysis. This antiserum did not inhibit lysis of P815 cells by activated murine macrophages or by human cytotoxic cells, and extensive absorption of the antiserum on viable thymocytes, normal spleen cells, or CTL did not reduce its blocking activity. CFE prepared from several sources of CTL, including in vivo elicited peritoneal exudate lymphocytes (PEL), secondary MLC-generated CTL, alloimmune splenic T cells, and CTL clones, contained material(s) that inhibited the ability of alpha CTLL to block CTL-mediated cytolysis. The inhibitory activity was not detected in CFE from a variety of noncytotoxic cell sources, including thymocytes, normal C57BL/6 spleen cells, EL4 or P815 tumor cells, macrophages, and helper T cell clones. It was also absent in CFE prepared from human CTL cells. Furthermore, although alpha CTLL neutralizing activity was not detectable in CFE prepared from memory CTL, it rapidly appeared in CTL parallel to the development of cytolytic activity during secondary MLC cultures. The inhibitory material in CTL-CFE appeared to be specific for alpha CTLL antibody, as it did not affect the CTL blocking activity of anti-Lyt-2 or anti-target cell antisera. Finally, CTL-CFE did not contain proteases that degraded the alpha CTLL antibody. By the use of a soluble-phase immunoabsorbent assay, the biochemical properties of materials present CFE derived from CTL and reactive with alpha CTLL antibody were examined. CTL cytosolic material(s) reactive with alpha CTLL IgG was unstable to brief heating (50 degrees C) or acidic pH, but not to high ionic strength buffers. The material was inactivated by treatment with pronase but not by DNase, collagenase, or trypsin. Gel filtration chromatography of CTL-CFE revealed multiple peaks of alpha CTLL neutralizing activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Studies on the cytolytic attack mechanism of the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL): preparation of antisera against cellfree cytosolic extracts of a CTL clone capable of blocking the lethal hit stage of CTL cytolysis and analysis of the cytolytic structure. 315 7

A preoperative serum carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) concentration greater than 5 ng/ml portends a poor prognosis for patients with colorectal carcinoma. The purpose of this study was to determine if the tumorigenicity of colorectal carcinomas in nude mice was associated with the preoperative serum CEA concentration. Neoplasms from 53 patients were either implanted as fragments or dissociated with collagenase and DNase, and 3 x 10(6) viable cells were injected into the flanks of BALB/c nude mice. The growth potential of tumors resected from patients with CEA levels exceeding 5 ng/ml was greater than that of tumors from patients with normal serum CEA: 26 of 33 carcinomas from patients with CEA greater than or equal to 5 ng/ml were tumorigenic in nude mice, whereas only 8 of 22 neoplasms from patients with normal serum CEA were tumorigenic in nude mice (P less than 0.001). Primary colorectal cancers, not metastases, were the basis for the association between tumorigenicity and preoperative CEA. Tumorigenicity was also associated with stage of disease, since Dukes' D primary tumors and metastases were more tumorigenic than Dukes' A to C primary tumors. Growth in nude mice was not associated with other prognostic factors such as tumor site, mucin production, local invasion, or stage of histological differentiation. The tumorigenic capability of human colorectal carcinomas may be associated with the preoperative serum CEA concentration and may reflect an increased potential to develop clinical metastases.
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PMID:Growth potential of human colorectal carcinomas in nude mice: association with the preoperative serum concentration of carcinoembryonic antigen in patients. 334 36

Fetal placental tissue from 11 days pregnant mice was dissociated in collagenase and DNase solution and then separated on a 40 per cent Percoll gradient. Trophoblast cells banded at a density of 1.05 g/ml. When cultured on rat tail collagen, these cells formed colonies of mono- and binucleate cells varying in size from 40 to 70 microns. At the time of plating, about 13 per cent of the trophoblast cells secreted mouse placental lactogen II (mPL-II) as determined by reverse haemolytic plaque assay. The ratio of mPL-II-producing cells increased significantly in culture and reached 63 per cent after 48 h. The secretion of mPL-II increased continuously during six days of culture, whereas the total protein release was highest after the first day, declined the second day and then remained relatively constant for the last four days of culture. The DNA content of the cells did not change significantly during the six-day period. When the trophoblast cells were incubated with insulin (1 ng/ml to 5 micrograms/ml), a modest but significant reduction in mPL-II secretion was observed. No change in the mPL-II secretion was seen when epidermal growth factor was administered to the culture in concentrations from 1 ng/ml to 10 micrograms/ml. It is concluded that this in vitro culture system is suitable for studying both mPL-II secretion and the differentiation of mPL-II-producing cells.
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PMID:Development of a placental cell culture system for studying the control of mouse placental lactogen II secretion. 343 55

From PMSG-pretreated immature rats, dispersed ovarian cells were prepared with collagenase and DNase and incubated at 37 degrees C in McCoy's 5a medium under 95% air-5% CO2 atmosphere for 4 h. The activities of C17-C20 lyase measured in the 10,000 x g supernatant fluid of the cell homogenates decreased spontaneously with the lapse of time of the incubation. N,N'-Diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine (DPPD, an antioxidant) and actinomycin D inhibited the decrease most effectively. Cycloheximide was also an effective protector. Accordingly, the spontaneous decrease of the lyase activity was caused partly by an oxygen radical-mediated process and partly by a mechanism involving de novo synthesis of RNA and protein. Addition of hCG to the cells further decreased the lyase activity to about half of the control group at 4 h. DPPD itself did not affect the hCG-induced decrease of the lyase activity. However, actinomycin D and cycloheximide prevented the effect of hCG. These results indicate that de novo synthesis of RNA and protein is involved in the latter mechanism, while oxygen radical is not concerned in this process. The decrease of the enzyme activity by hCG during incubation is in agreement with the in vivo effect of hCG upon the lyase activity. On the contrary, at the end of incubation the activity of delta 5-3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (coupled with delta 5-delta 4 isomerase) was more than 89% of that before incubation, and the change of the enzyme activity according to the various treatments was less than 16%.
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PMID:In vitro decrease of lyase activity in rat ovarian cells during incubation: effect of hCG. 345 47

The human colon adenocarcinoma cell line WiDr was xenografted and the tumor characterized. When athymic mice (NCR-nu) were inoculated with 10(6) cells, tumors appeared after 7-14 days with a 93-100% take rate and grew with an initial volume-doubling time of around 6 days. For optimizing the tumor disaggregation method, a comparison was made of two dissociation procedures and of different dissociation times. An enzyme cocktail (collagenase, DNase, pronase) resulted in total viable cell yields of 1-3 X 10(7) cells/g tumor tissue. Cell yield decreased with increasing tumor weight. Disaggregation with trypsin gave lower cell yields; and so, although the plating efficiencies (PEs) were higher, the enzyme cocktail was chosen for tumor disaggregation. On the basis of morphologic identification, cell suspensions prepared from WiDr tumors, by use of the enzyme cocktail for 2 hours, contained 49% malignant cells as well as a significant fraction of nonneoplastic cells. The major nonneoplastic host cell component was macrophage (33%); lymphocytes (13%) and granulocytes (5%) also were present. Host cells could be separated from neoplastic cells by centrifugal elutriation. By mixing various proportions of host and tumor cells, it was subsequently shown that the presence of host cells did not influence the malignant cell PE unless the cell suspensions contained greater than 90% host cells. Single-cell suspensions prepared from WiDr tumors, with use of the enzyme cocktail for 2 hours, were irradiated and then plated for survival (D0 = 1.5 Gy; n = 5) (D0, the 37% dose slope). A comparison was made of the sensitivity to radiation, after the different dissociation methods. The radiation sensitivities after 1.5-hour trypsinization and 2- and 6-hour enzyme cocktail administrations were similar, but after 0.5 hour of trypsin, the cells were more sensitive to radiation.
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PMID:A human colon adenocarcinoma xenograft--radiation response, cellular composition, and tumor disaggregation. 346 98

Human epidermoid tumours (Co112, HEp3, A431, ME180) grown in nude mice were dissociated using four different enzyme cocktails: 0.025% collagenase, 0.05% pronase, 0.04% DNase; 0.1% protease IX; 0.14% trypsin, 0.04% DNase; 0.025% collagenase, 0.02% DNase. Using these different enzymatic procedures, the total cell yields, host to tumour cell ratios, plating efficiencies and cell cycle distribution profiles obtained from each tumour model were compared. For all tumours tested, enzyme cocktail 1 was the most effective in releasing the greatest total number of cells g-1 tumour. However, for each tumour the percentage of neoplastic cells recovered, the plating efficiency and the cell cycle distributions varied according to the enzyme cocktail used to dissociate the tumour. For example, for HEp3 tumours, the highest plating efficiency was achieved using enzyme cocktail 4, whereas for ME180 tumours, this enzyme cocktail produced the lowest plating efficiency. Further, the effect of lethally irradiated (HR) feeder cells on the plating efficiency of the various tumours was found to be influenced by the enzymes chosen to dissociate the tumours. These studies indicate that the choice of an enzyme dissociation technique may profoundly influence the results obtained using human tumour xenografts.
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PMID:Recovery of cell subpopulations from human tumour xenografts following dissociation with different enzymes. 353 63

Inflammatory cell populations in glomerulonephritis (GN) are not well characterized. A method is reported for isolating leukocytes from glomeruli. GN was induced in rats by perfusing left kidneys (LKs) with cationized human IgG followed by intravenous rat anti-human IgG serum. Acute GN developed in LKs with proteinuria, deposition of human and rat IgG and C3, leukocyte infiltration, and capillary wall electron-dense deposits. Glomeruli (GL) isolated at 24 hours were digested with collagenase, trypsin, and DNase, and the resulting cells were as follows (mean +/- SEM): LK, 354 +/- 25/GL; RK, 214 +/- 32/GL. Cells were labeled with monoclonal antibody MRCOX1 (anti-rat leukocyte common [LC] antigen) followed by FITC F(ab')2 rabbit anti-mouse Ig: LK, 170 +/- 11 leukocytes/GL;RK, 8 +/- 2 leukocytes/GL (P less than 0.001). Isolated cells were sorted by flow cytometry to 98% pure LC+ cells with greater than 80% viability (Giemsa staining: 86% mononuclear cells, 14% neutrophils); the ultrastructure was that of maturing macrophages and neutrophils. This method quantitates leukocyte infiltration and provides leukocytes from nephritic glomeruli suitable for in vitro studies.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of inflammatory leukocytes from glomeruli in an in situ model of glomerulonephritis in the rat. 354 49

Despite some functional impairment of the newborn's T-cell immune system, most infants survive the intrauterine and perinatal period without succumbing to infection or maternal lymphocyte engraftment. The placenta may play a crucial role in protecting the infant from microbial and histocompatibility antigens. Accordingly, we studied phenotypic and functional capacities of placental cells. Placentas were obtained from uncomplicated pregnancies. Matched cord blood and maternal peripheral blood were also obtained in many instances. Fresh minced placental tissue was washed and digested with collagenase and DNase and mononuclear cells were obtained by density gradient centrifugation. The average yield was 10(6) cells/g of tissue with greater than 80% viability. Chromosome analysis of five placental preparations indicated that these cells were of fetal rather than maternal origin. The isolated placental cells consisted of trophoblasts, lymphocytes (74 +/- 3%), monocytes (16 +/- 3%), and granulocytes (8 +/- 2%). E-rosette forming cells (T cells) made up 65 +/- 2% and surface membrane immunoglobulin positive cells made up 8 +/- 1% of the placental mononuclear cells. Fluorescent activated analysis of the mononuclear cells indicated less Leu 4-positive cells (Pan-T) 43 +/- 3%, and less Leu 3-positive (T-helper cells) (25 +/- 2%), than cord and maternal cell preparations. Leu-2, DR, and B1 positive cells were similar to those in cord and maternal blood. Leu 7 and especially Leu 11 positive cells, markers for natural killer cells, were abundant in placental cells, making up 4 +/- 0.7% and 20 +/- 3%, respectively. The Leu 7/Leu 11 ratio of the placental cells was different from either the maternal or cord blood cells. Natural killer activity of placental cells against a K562 natural killer target was low, despite the abundance of cells with NK markers. The K562 activity was low in the placental cells, similar to the low NK activity of maternal and cord cells. Molt 4f killer activity was near normal. Lectin-dependent cytotoxicity using an EL-4 cell target plus PHA was low in placentas, compared to normal, maternal, or cord cell cytotoxicity. Matched samples indicated that LDCC activity was mother greater than cord greater than placenta. Antibody-dependent cytotoxicity (Raji target) of placental cells showed low activity, and again the paired studies indicated that normal controls greater than maternal greater than cord greater than placenta cytotoxicity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Phenotypic and cytotoxic characteristics of the immune cells of the human placenta. 374 13

The proteins of solid lung tumours (15 adenocarcinomas and 10 squamous cell carcinomas) were examined by high resolution two-dimensional electrophoresis (2-DE) and compared with the proteins of adjacent lung tissue which demonstrated no histological evidence of malignant transformation, and with the proteins of other malignant tumours and normal tissues. To investigate tumour cell-specific protein synthesis, we isolated malignant and normal cells enzymatically with collagenase, elastase, and DNase. Tissue and tumour cells were enriched in an additional step on a Percoll gradient. The 2-DE gel patterns derived from entire tissue and enriched tissue cell preparations were compared. No specific differences were found between the 2-DE protein patterns from adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas of the lung, but three proteins identified on the 2-DE gels appeared to be tumour-associated. Spot A is present in non-neoplastic and neoplastic epithelial tissues. Spot B is pronounced in 2-DE gels of sarcomas, but is also present in preparations of other malignant tissues. Spot C is present in all malignant cell preparations. These three spots were also demonstrated in 2-DE protein patterns from tissue cultures of malignant cell lines. Spot B and spot C were also present in some normal tissues.
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PMID:Two-dimensional electrophoresis of proteins in tumours of the lung. 381 56


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