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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 effects of the chondroprotective drugs, sodium pentosan polysulphate (SP54) and Arteparon (glycosaminoglycan polysulphate), on the in vitro activities of the purified matrix metalloproteinases interstitial collagenase (matrix metalloproteinase 1,
MMP1
) and stromelysin (MMP3) were examined. Both drugs produced concentration-dependent enhancement of the degradation of type I collagen fibrils by purified human fibroblast
collagenase
and rat tumour
collagenase
. Rat
collagenase
activity was increased by drug concentrations above 0.5 microgram/mL, whereas human
collagenase
activity was only increased by higher drug concentrations, above 5 micrograms/mL. The concentration dependence of the increase in rat
collagenase
activity was similar for both drugs, with a maximal 3-fold increase at 50 micrograms/mL. In contrast, human
collagenase
activity was increased to a greater extent by SP 54 compared to Arteparon, with maximal increases at 5000 micrograms/mL of 6-fold and 2-4-fold, respectively. Both drugs produced concentration-dependent inhibition of the proteoglycan-degrading activity of both human fibroblast stromelysin and rat tumour stromelysin. Rat and human stromelysin activities were inhibited at drug concentrations above 0.005 microgram/mL, with a similar concentration dependence for both drugs. Fifty percent inhibition of rat stromelysin was produced by concentrations of each drug in the 0.5-5 microgram/mL range. The pattern of inhibition of human stromelysin was similar, except that drug concentrations in the 500-5000 micrograms/mL range produced 50% inhibition. The possible modes of action for these drug effects and their possible pharmacological significance are discussed.
...
PMID:The chondroprotective drugs, Arteparon and sodium pentosan polysulphate, increase collagenase activity and inhibit stromelysin activity in vitro. 138 3
Matrix metallo-proteinases (MMPs) are a group of enzymes thought to be responsible for both normal connective tissue matrix remodelling and accelerated breakdown associated with tumor development. The distribution of 3 major matrix metallo-proteinases was studied in human mammary pathology:
collagenase
(
MMP1
) which degrades fibrillar interstitial collagens, a 72-kDa gelatinase (MMP2) which mainly degrades type IV collagen and denatured collagens, and stromelysin (MMP3) which has a wider range of action, degrading several matrix components including the core proteins of proteoglycans, laminin and non-helical regions of collagens. These MMPs and the MMP tissual inhibitor (TIMP1) were detected by immunohistochemistry in 30 benign and 79 malignant lesions of the breast. MMPs were detected in 1 fibroadenoma (
collagenase
) and 22 breast carcinomas:
collagenase
(9 cases), stromelysin (12 cases) and gelatinase (16 cases) with a limited distribution. Tumor cells were preferentially labelled and the localization of gelatinase and stromelysin at the periphery of some non-invasive and well-differentiated clusters supports the role of these enzymes in the breakdown of basement membranes. Only a few stromal cells (fibroblasts) were found to be immunopositive. In contrast, TIMP1 was more frequently detected, and was found in 7 benign lesions and 55 carcinomas out of 79. It was mainly localized at the periphery of the endothelial cells but was occasionally detected in cancer cells and fibroblasts.
...
PMID:Immunolocalization of matrix metallo-proteinases and their tissue inhibitor in human mammary pathology. 139 65
The actions of recombinant human fibroblast
collagenase
(
MMP1
), purified polymorphonuclear leucocyte
collagenase
(MMP8) and their N-terminal catalytic domain fragments against cartilage aggrecan and an aggrecan G1-G2 fragment have been investigated in vitro. After activation with recombinant human stromelysin and typsin, both collagenases were able to degrade human and porcine aggrecans to a similar extent. An N-terminal G1-G2 fragment (150 kDa) was used to identify specific cleavage sites occurring within the proteinase-sensitive interglobular domain between G1 and G2. Two specific sites were found; one at an Asn341-Phe342 bond and another at Asp441-Leu442 (human sequence). This specificity of the collagenases for aggrecan G1-G2 was identical with that of the truncated metalloproteinase matrilysin (MMP7), but different from those of stromelysin (MMP3) and the gelatinases (MMP2 or gelatinase A; MMP9 or gelatinase B) which cleave at the Asn-Phe site, but not the Asp-Leu site. In addition,
collagenase
catalytic fragments lacking C-terminal hemopexin-like domains were tested and shown to exhibit the same specificities for the G1-G2 fragment as the full-length enzymes. Thus the specificity of the collagenases for cartilage aggrecan was not influenced by the presence or absence of the C-terminal domain. Together with our previous findings, the results show that stromelysin-1, matrilysin, gelatinases A and B and fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases cleave at a common, preferred site in the aggrecan interglobular domain, and additionally that both fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases cleave at a second site in the interglobular domain that is not available to stromelysin or gelatinases.
...
PMID:Fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases cleave at two sites in the cartilage aggrecan interglobular domain. 821 28
Leucocyte (L)-selectin can be proteolytically cleaved in the membrane proximal extracellular region to yield a soluble fragment that contains the functional lectin and epidermal growth factor domains. A variety of stimuli are known to stimulate L-selectin shedding including chemoattractants, phorbol esters, and L-selectin cross-linking; however, the enzymes that regulate L-selectin expression are not characterized. In this study we have used phorbol ester to stimulate endoproteolytic release of L-selectin and identified a major role for a cell surface metalloproteinase (L-selectin sheddase) in this process. The hydroxamic acid-based inhibitor of zinc-dependent matrix metalloproteinases Ro 31-9790 completely prevented shedding of cell surface L-selectin from leucocytes in mouse, rat, and man. L-selectin was susceptible to cleavage by known matrix metalloproteinases. Recombinant human fibroblast
collagenase
(
MMP1
) reduced the number of L-selectin-positive lymphocytes to a similar extent as phorbol ester activation, and stromelysin (MMP3) had a partial effect on L-selectin expression. Gelatinases A (MMP2) and B (MMP9) were without effect. Lymphocytes did not express fibroblast
collagenase
or stromelysin at the cell surface, and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP) did not affect L-selectin levels. L-selectin sheddase was not detected in media harvested from phorbol ester-stimulated lymphocytes and was only able to cleave L-selectin in the cis but not the trans configuration. These results suggest that endoproteolytic release of L-selectin from the leucocyte surface is mediated by a metalloproteinase (L-selectin sheddase), which is distinguishable from known matrix metalloproteinases. Understanding the regulation of L-selectin sheddase will be critical for controlling leucocyte migration from the blood.
...
PMID:Metalloproteinase-mediated regulation of L-selectin levels on leucocytes. 866 5
Al-trans retinoic acid (RA) enhanced human, S-type, SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cell invasion of reconstituted basement membrane in vitro but did not induce terminal differentiation of this cell line. In contrast to basal invasion, which was urokinase (uPA)- and plasmin-dependent, RA-enhanced invasion was dependent on tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) and plasmin activity. Neither basal nor RA-enhanced invasion involved TIMP-2 inhibitable metalloproteinases. Enhanced invasion was associated with the induction of t-PA expression, increased expression of the putative t-PA receptor amphoterin, increased association of t-PA with cell membranes and increased net membrane-associated PA activity. Enhanced invasion was not associated with significant changes in the expression of uPA or its membrane receptor UPAR; plasminogen activator inhibitors PAI-1 and PAI-2; metalloproteinases
MMP-1
, MMP-2, MMP-3, MMP-9 and membrane type
MMP1
; or tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases TIMP-1 and TIMP-2. RA stimulated the association of t-PA with the external cell membrane surface, which could be inhibited by heparin sulphate but not by mannose sugars or chelators of divalent cations, consistent with a role for amphoterin. Our data indicate that RA can promote the malignant behavior of S-type neuroblastoma cells refractory to RA-mediated terminal differentiation by enhancing their basement membrane invasive capacity. We suggest that this results from the action of a novel, RA-regulated mechanism involving stimulation of t-PA expression and its association with the cell membrane leading to increased PA-dependent matrix degradation.
...
PMID:Retinoic acid-enhanced invasion through reconstituted basement membrane by human SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cells involves membrane-associated tissue-type plasminogen activator. 939 56
The net amount of collagen produced and deposited by fibroblasts in cell culture is determined by the rate of collagen synthesis as well as the rate of collagen degradation. Although collagen synthesis can be analyzed by several techniques, it is more difficult to measure collagen degradation. Breakdown of collagen depends upon the activity of a family of structurally and catalytically related mammalian enzymes termed matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). Interstitial collagenase (
MMP1
) initiates the cleavage of fibrillar collagen, whereas gelatinases (MMP2 and MMP9) digest the denatured collagen fragments. A method has been developed to quantitate the activity of
collagenase
(
MMP1
) and gelatinase (MMP9) in conditioned medium from fibroblast cell cultures. The assay, which uses the fluorogenic substrate Dnp-Pro-Cha-Gly-Cys(Me)-His-AlaLys(Nma)NH2, is technically simple and amenable to high throughput analysis. Addition of specific inhibitors of the metalloproteinases allows for simultaneous measurement of both
collagenase
and gelatinase activity.
...
PMID:Method to analyze collagenase and gelatinase activity by fibroblasts in culture. 1047 60
Angiogenesis is impaired in aging. Delayed neovascularization is due, in part, to slowed endothelial cell migration. Migration requires an optimal level of adhesion to matrix proteins, a process mediated by matrix-degrading metalloproteases (MMPs) such as
MMP1
. To determine whether impaired angiogenesis in aging is associated with altered synthesis and activity of
MMP1
, we examined the expression of
collagenase
and tissue inhibitor of metalloprotease 1 (TIMP1) by immunostain of angiogenic sponge implants from young and aged mice. To characterize the relevance of MMP activity during the movement of aged endothelial cells, the secretion of
MMP1
and TIMP1 by late-passage human microvascular endothelial cells (hmEC aged in vitro) and their non-aged (young) counterparts was quantified. The migration of aged human microvascular endothelial cells and the effect of inhibition of TIMP1 on the migration of aged hmEC or collagen I was also measured. Relative to young mice, granulation tissue from aged mice showed less expression of
collagenase
and increased expression of TIMP1. In vitro, aged hmEC were deficient in
MMP1
secretion (55 +/- 13% relative to young cells) and activity but showed increased expression of TIMP1 (280 +/- 109% relative to young cells). Aged hmEC migrated significantly less distance than did young hmEC over a 5-day period (59 +/- 8% relative to young cells). In the presence of a blocking antibody to TIMP1, aged hmEC showed a significant increase in the distance migrated on collagen I over a 5 day period (142 +/- 11% relative to untreated aged hmEC). We propose that deficient
MMP1
activity contributes to impaired cellular movement in aged microvascular endothelial cells and that perturbations that enhance
collagenase
activity increase their migratory ability and angiogenic potential.
...
PMID:A deficit in collagenase activity contributes to impaired migration of aged microvascular endothelial cells. 1067 22
Several lines of evidence indicate that there may be an inflammatory component to the pathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD), the major form of degenerative dementia in the elderly. Activity of inflammatory cells, and the elaboration of toxic molecules by such cells may be a significant factor in disease progression. In peripheral inflammatory states, the increased activity of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) enzymes are a major cause of tissue breakdown and secondary damage in diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. The activity of such enzymes in the normal or diseased central nervous system is, however, not well characterized. We have therefore determined the levels of MMP 1 (
collagenase
) in the normal human brain and in AD.
MMP1
levels were relatively low though were significantly elevated by approximately 50% in AD in all cortical areas examined. Given the activity towards collagen of
MMP1
, it is possible that enhanced
MMP1
activity in AD, may contribute to the blood-brain barrier dysfunction seen in AD.
...
PMID:Brain matrix metalloproteinase 1 levels are elevated in Alzheimer's disease. 1098 41
To understand the mechanism of invasion and metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the expression of c-met and Ets-1, and the effect of HGF on these cell's motility and invasion ability were examined in four hepatoma cell lines. The analysis revealed that the overexpression of c-met and Ets-1 is closely connected with the motility and invasion ability of the HCC cell lines. Invasion activity of HepG2 and HLE cells were enhanced by the addition of HGF to medium. HGF regulated c-met transcription in HepG2 and Bel-7402 cells, HGF also induced Ets-1 transcription in Bel-7402 cell. Bel-7402 cells stably transduced with the human Ets-1 gene showed significantly increased invasion potentials compared to parental and mock-transfected cells. The expression level of c-met,
MMP1
, MMP9, and u-PA in Bel-7402 cells transfected with Ets-1 were markedly increased, and as a consequence of c-met expression increase. Bel-7402 cells transfected with Ets-1 were more responsive to exogenous HGF stimulation in invasiveness and motility ability. In addition, conditioned by antisense Ets-1 oligonucleotide-treat-Bel-7402 cells transfected with Ets-1 gene and HLE hepatoma cells showed markedly reduced invasion activity, and down-regulated the transcription of Ets-1, c-met, u-PA,
MMP-1
, and MMP-9. These results strongly suggest that Ets-1 has a crucial role in the invasive property in hepatoma cell lines, and there may exist a loop to enhance the invasive ability of hepatoma cell lines.
...
PMID:Invasiveness of hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines: contribution of hepatocyte growth factor, c-met, and transcription factor Ets-1. 1152 16
Cathepsin K, a lysosomal papain-like cysteine protease, forms collagenolytically highly active complexes with chondroitin sulfate and represents the most potent mammalian
collagenase
. Here we demonstrate that complex formation with glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) is unique for cathepsin K among human papain-like cysteine proteases and that different GAGs compete for the binding to cathepsin K. GAGs predominantly expressed in bone and cartilage, such as chondroitin and keratan sulfates, enhance the collagenolytic activity of cathepsin K, whereas dermatan, heparan sulfate, and heparin selectively inhibit this activity. Moreover, GAGs potently inhibit the
collagenase
activity of other cysteine proteases such as cathepsins L and S at 37 degrees C. Along this line
MMP1
-generated collagen fragments in the presence of GAGs are stable against further degradation at 28 degrees C by all cathepsins but cathepsin K, whereas thermal destabilization at 37 degrees C renders the fragments accessible to all cathepsins. These results suggest a novel mechanism for the regulation of matrix protein degradation by GAGs. It further implies that cathepsin K represents the only lysosomal collagenolytic activity under physiologically relevant conditions.
...
PMID:Regulation of collagenase activities of human cathepsins by glycosaminoglycans. 1464 29
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