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)

Previous studies have shown that there is microscopic and biochemical evidence that rat parietal yolk sac synthesizes basement membrane (type IV) collagen; this study shows that a radioimmunoassay may be used for the detection of type IV collagen in such biosynthetic systems. Rat parietal yolk sacs incubated in medium containing (14C) proline either with or without alphaalpha-dipyridyl produced either unhydroxylated or hydroxylated (14C)collagen. The immunological reactivity of these two preparations was investigated using antibodies to bovine type IV collagen in a radioimmunoassay which demonstrated that the hydroxylated (14C)collagen preparation had a considerably higher level of antigenicity than the unhydroxylated (14C)collagen. Hydroxylated rat type IV (14C)collagen which had been reduced and alkylated was intermediate in antigenicity between hydroxylated and unhydroxylated material. These findings suggest that there are antigenic determinants which depend upon hydroxylation of the collagen molecule, and others dependent upon intact disulphide bonds. In addition, various levels of pepsin extracted unlabelled calf anterior lens capsule collagen caused inhibition of antibody binding to (14C)collagen. Rat type IV (14C)collagen which had been digested with collagenase was inactive in the radioimmunoassay, while pepsin digestion caused no reduction in antigenicity. These findings suggest that the antiserum is directed towards the collagenous part of the molecule and may be a useful tool in the detection of biosynthesized basement membrane collagen.
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PMID:Rat parietal yolk sac basement membrane. An investigation of the antigenic determinants using a radioimmunoassay. 6 39

Purified human granulocyte collagenase was inactivated by serum through the formation of complexes with alpha 1-antitrypsin and alpha 2-macroglobulin. A molar combining ratio of 1:1 was observed for each inhibitor. The affinity of alpha 2-macroglobulin was about 10 times that of alpha 1-antitrypsin for granulocyte collagenase. The molar concentration of alpha 1-antitrypsin in the blood exceeds that of alpha 2-macroglobulin by about 12 times, so that the inhibitors may be equally important for defence against granulocyte collagenase.
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PMID:Neutral proteases of human granulocytes. IV. Interaction between human granulocyte collagenase and plasma protease inhibitors. 6 76

The deposition of alpha-1-antitrypsin and alpha-2-macroglobulin, both known to be inhibitors of human skin collagenase, is significantly increased in keloids and in hypertrophic scars (as compared to normal skin). However, following intralesional triamcinolone treatment, a marked resorption of these abnormal scars occurs along with a significant reduction of the alpha-1-antitrypsin deposits. These findings suggest that alpha-globulins are involved in abnormal scar formation, and that triamcinolone may remove collagenase and/or protease inhibitors--thereby allowing activation of the collagenase with subsequent breakdown and resorption of the excessive collagen.
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PMID:Tissue alpha-globulins in keloid formation. 6 77

Most plasma proteins appear to be present in intima at concentrations that are a linear function of molecular weight and concentration in the plasma. Thus low density lipoprotein (LDL) (molecular weight, 2 X 10(6)) has the greatest retention relative to its plasma concentration, whereas the relative retention of albumin is only 15% of the relative retention of LDL. This gives rise to the concept that "whole plasma" crosses endothelium, and the steady state concentrations reflect rates of egress of the macromolecules, which in turn depend on molecular sieving. Fibrinogen is a major plasma protein in intima in addition to LDL and albumin, and there are also substantial amounts of the protease inhibitors alpha2-macroglobulin and alpha1-antitrypsin. Intima also contains insoluble derivatives of plasma--extracellular cholesterol, both free and esterified, and fibrin. The balances of intact LDL/"deposited" cholesterol and of fibrinogen/fibrin are closely linked with intimal morphology. Fibrinogen and electrophoretically mobile LDL are increased about threefold in gelatinous lesions, whereas there are only slight rises in fibrin and deposited cholesterol. In the deep layers of fibrous plaques, fibrin is increased fivefold and cholesterol up to thirtyfold. In these lipid-rich layers, LDL is rapidly lost on incubation of tissue samples, but in some gelatinous lesions it first increases and only decreases on longer incubation, suggesting release of a previously immobilized lipoprotein fraction. This immobilized lipoprotein was investigated by subjecting tissue samples to immunoelectrophoresis to remove mobile LDL and tissue enzymes, followed by treatment of the tissue with enzyme and measurement of the lipoprotein released on fresh immunoelectrophoresis plates. Plasmin or a crude collagenase released large amounts of lipoprotein from samples of amorphous atheroma lipid. For all samples the amount of lipoprotein released was highly correlated with the accumulation of deposited cholesterol, suggesting that immobilization of LDL may be an intermediate step in the irreversible deposition of extracellular cholesterol. Plasmin is highly effective in releasing immobilized lipoprotein, and the concentration of immobilized lipoprotein is significantly correlated with the concentration of insoluble fibrin, suggesting that the lipoprotein may in some way be immobilized by fibrin.
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PMID:Molecular interactions in human atherosclerotic plaques. 6 17

To elucidate the mechanism of synovial damage in rheumatoid arthritis, we studied the activation of latent collagenases released from adherent rheumatoid synovial cells in culture. Latent enzyme was not complexed with alpha2 macroglobulin, the prinicpal proteinase inhibitor in serum, and could be activated by trypsin in the presence of alpha2 macroglobulin if sufficient proteinase was added to saturate inhibitor. Latent collagenase bound half as effectively to collagen fibrils as active enzyme. Plasmin was a threefold better activator of latent enzyme than trypsin and could be generated by addition of plasminogen to synovial-cell cultures. Production of both collagenase and plasminogen activator was inhibited by dexamethasone (10(-9) M). These studies emphasize in importance of control of activation in regulation collagenase activity, It is likely that rheumatoid synovium produces both latent collagenase and plasminogen activator; plasmin is activated from its zymogen, plasminogen, present in inflamed tissues, and in turn activates collagenase.
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PMID:Endogenous activation of latent collagenase by rheumatoid synovial cells. Evidence for a role of plasminogen activator. 6 27

In untreated patients with inoperable lung cancer, serum levels of alpha1-antitrypsin were found significantly increased in comparison to patients with non malignant diseases of the lung, alpha2-macroglobulin levels were unchanged in both groups of patients. There was also no difference in alpha2-macroglobulins in cancer patients reacting with DNCB and in non-reactors. Thus alpha2-macroglobulin levels do not seem to correlate with the immunestatus of cancer patients. Proteinase inhibitors are involved in a variety of biological processes including blood, clotting, digestion, and sperm capacitation. alpha1-antitrypsin, a alpha-globulin with a molecular weight of about 60,000 has been found to be decreased in patients' serum under several pathological conditions. A clear correlation exists between alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency and hereditary pulmonary emphysema (1, 2), respiratory distress syndrome (3), and juvenile cirrhoses of the liver (4). Elevated serum levels of alpha1-antitrypsin have also been found in some cancer cases. Thirty years ago a cancer test was developed on the basis of differences in the antiproteolytic activity in cancer patients' sera and in patients with other non-neoplastic diseases (5, 6). Several authors have tried to confirm these early data regarding specifity and sensitivity with respect to a screening test for cancer (7, 8). Methods of these authors were based mainly on enzyme substrate inhibition assays by addition of the patients' sera. Recently a commercially available test, based on immune-precipitation according to Mancini (9), has been developed (Behring-Werke, Partigen). By using this standardized method for determinating alpha1-antitrypsin, Harris et al. have recently demonstrated that patients with inoperable lung cancer have significantly elevated levels of this antiprotease in their sera (10), in comparison to patients with non malignant diseases of the lung. alpha2-macroglobulin is a serum protein with a molecular weight of 800,000 and with known antiprotease activity and can therefore bind trypsin, plasmin, elastase, and collagenase and it is known that alpha2-macroglobulin decreases with increasing of age. Changes of alpha-macroglobulin have also been observed in several pathological conditions (11). James et al. 4ave found decreases in serum of myeloma patients (12). An association between the development and function of lymphocytes and alpha2-macroglobulin has been suggested by several authors (13, 14). This alpha2-globulin has also been demonstrated on the surface of peripheral blood lymphocytes (15) and there is evidence that it is synthesized by lymphocytes (16). The purpose of the present study was to determine serum alpha1-antitrypsin levels in patients with inoperable lung cancer and to determine whether there is also an inverse correlation to alpha2-macroglobulin. It was further attempted to correlate alpha2-macroglobulin with general immunological parameters, as it is known that patients with lung cancer show a decreased general immune-reactivity (17).
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PMID:Serum levels of alpha1-antitrypsin and alpha2-macroglobulin in lung cancer. 6 86

Benign and malignant prostatic tissue was removed in surgery and partitioned for (a) ultrastructural study, (b) tissue culture, and (c) (c) immunochemical study. Fourteen malignant and 18 benign prostatic cancer specimens were examined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) for the presence of viruses or virus-like particles. Viruses could not be identified with assurity in thin sections. Acinar cells of normal, benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH), and neoplastic prostate tissue were examined in the scanning electron microscope and TEM and found to be extremely heterogenous in their surface morphologies. Three major types of surface morphologies were present: microvillous, ruffled, and bare. All three types of cells were present in normal, BPH, and neoplastic acini. A collagenase procedure was utilized to remove the stromal cells from glandular structures prior to in vitro cultivation. Partially purified extracts from 71 human urothelial tumors and 75 human urothelial nontumor tissues were used as competing antigens in competition radioimmunoassay in an effort to detect the presence of one of the structural components of type-C ribonucleic acid viruses, the p30 core protein. The urothelial tumors tested included 42 BPH specimens and 18 prostatic carcinoma specimens. Thirty-eight percent of the prostatic carcinoma tissues and 48% of the BPH tissues demonstrated the presence of a protein antigenically similar to the p30 core protein of an oncogenic RNA virus.
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PMID:Morphologic and immunologic studies of human prostatic carcinoma. 6 19

Urogenital tissue specimens were maintained in culture for 2 years. Epithelioid growth was enhanced with use of collagenase digestion rather than trypsinization. Twenty of 34 prostate cancer cell cultures survived more than ten in vitro passages, during which time four of 20 demonstrated epithelioid morphology. One epithelioid line (T-157) survived 32 in vitro passages. The cells demonstrated lack of contact inhibition in culture, were slightly positive in acid phosphatase tests, and reacted positively with cytomegalovirus (CMV)-immune sera in indirect immunofluorescence (IF) tests. These cells, which were proven to be of human male origin, failed to yield infectious virus and could be re-isolated from a nodule induced by the cells when injected sc into weanling athymic nude mice. The serum of the patient from which the tumor cells were derived demonstrated high CMV antibody titers and reacted with the virus-specific membrane and intracellular antigens of CMV-transformed human cells in IF tests. A CMV strain isolated from one of the normal prostate cell cultures established an in vitro long-term persistent infection of human embryo lung cells which resulted in the development of two transformed cell lines. The transformed cells possessed CMV antigenic markers and induced non-differentiated tumors when transplanted into athymic nude mice. The results constitute further evidence of the transforming capacity of CMV, and suggest that the virus may be oncogenic in its natural (human) host.
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PMID:Cytomegalovirus and cancer of the prostate: in vitro transformation of human cells. 6 20

This report attempts to summarize our present knowledge of rheumatoid synovial collagenase and its natural serum inhibitors, beta1-anticollagenase and alpha2-macroglobulin, in relation to cartilage collagen resorption in the rheumatoid joint. Immunolocalization of collagenase across the cartilage/pannus junction is described, and in the light of the finding of the specific, small molecular weight beta1-anticollagenase we propose a model of cartilage erosion based on the interaction between collagenase and its natural inhibitors.
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PMID:Collagenase and its natural inhibitors in relation to the rheumatoid joint. 6 52

A cross-linked fragment (peptide T1X) with a molecular weight of 13,000 could be isolated from a tryptic digest of insoluble type III collagen of calf skin. Peptide T1X was conjugated on to bovine serum albumin by glutaraldehyde and used for immunization of rabbits. The antisera reacted in passive haemagglutination and radioimmune assay with peptide T1X, type III collagen and its constituent alpha1(III) chain. Little or no reaction was observed with type I collagen and alpha1(I) chain. While rabbit antisera to neutral salt-soluble type III Collagen also showed a strong binding for 125I-labelled peptide T1X much less reaction was observed with antisera to type I collagen. The antigenicity of type III collagen was largely destroyed by pepsin treatment suggesting that it resided in non-helical segments. A fragment of peptide T1X produced by digestion with collagenase retained antigenic activity. The data indicated that the aminoterminal region of type III collagen contains strong antigenic determinants located in a non-helical sequence of about sixteen amino acids. Antibodies to these antigenic determinants were purified and rendered specific for type III collagen by immunoadsorption. The antibodies stained in indirect immunofluorescence tests particularly those regions in various connective tissues which are rich in reticulin fibres. Different staining patterns were observed with antibodies to type I collagen.
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PMID:Production and specificity of antibodies against the aminoterminal region in type III collagen. 6 19


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