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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)
We recently found that polyunsaturated lecithin prevents ethanol from causing cirrhosis in the baboon. Because transformation of lipocytes to transitional cells plays a key role in hepatic fibrogenesis in vivo, and because this process in alcohol-fed baboons was found to be attenuated by polyunsaturated lecithin, we focused on lipocytes to study the mechanism of the protective effect. Rat lipocytes cultured on plastic undergo spontaneous activation, accompanied by expression of
alpha-smooth muscle actin
isoform and production of substantial amounts of type I collagen. The latter was further increased on incubation with acetaldehyde. This in vitro model was used here to study how acetaldehyde-mediated collagen production and accumulation can be turned off. Addition of polyunsaturated lecithin (10 mumols/L) was found to prevent the acetaldehyde-induced increase in collagen accumulation by 83% (p less than 0.001). By contrast, a saturated phospholipid (10 mumols/L dilauroyl phosphatidylcholine), a monounsaturated one (10 mumols/L linoleoyl-palmitoyl phosphatidylcholine) or linoleic acid (20 mumols/L bound to albumin) had no such effect. Incorporation of [3H]proline into collagen and the expression of alpha-1 (I) procollagen mRNA were increased by acetaldehyde; the latter was not significantly affected by polyunsaturated lecithin. Polyunsaturated lecithin increased lipocyte
collagenase
activity by 100% (p less than 0.001), whereas dilauroyl phosphatidylcholine, linoleoyl-palmitoyl phosphatidylcholine and linoleic acid had no such action. We concluded that (a) polyunsaturated lecithin selectively prevents the acetaldehyde-induced increase in collagen accumulation in lipocyte cultures, whereas other phospholipids or linoleate have no such effect; and (b) polyunsaturated lecithin does not modify the acetaldehyde-mediated increase in alpha-1 (I) procollagen mRNA, but it increases
collagenase
activity, suggesting that the protective effect exerted by polyunsaturated lecithin against alcohol induced fibrosis in vivo is due at least in part to stimulation of
collagenase
activity, which may prevent excess collagen accumulation by offsetting increased collagen production.
...
PMID:Polyunsaturated lecithin prevents acetaldehyde-mediated hepatic collagen accumulation by stimulating collagenase activity in cultured lipocytes. 137 80
The objective of this study was to isolate, purify, culture, and characterize myoepithelial cells from bovine mammary glands. Myoepithelial cells were separated from other mammary and blood cells after
collagenase
digestion and centrifugation using metrizoate-ficoll gradients. Myoepithelial cells were identified by their characteristic morphology and cloned using selective detachment. They contained many densely packed myofilaments, very few cytoplasmic organelles, elongated surface projections, and a dense, irregularly shaped nuclei. Some cells were as large as 1.2 mm in culture. Myoepithelial cells contained an extensive network of cytoskeletal proteins, including
alpha-smooth muscle actin
, alpha-actinin, and vimentin. When cultured, they tended to repel one another and never grew as closely associated cells. The myoepithelial nature of these cells was verified by showing that they contracted in response to oxytocin, bound oxytocin, and did not produce casein. Myoepithelial cells from fetal and lactating glands grew very well in culture. Active division of myoepithelial cells could be maintained for at least 3 mo, and cells could be serially subcultured at least seven times. The successful isolation and culture of bovine mammary myoepithelial cells make utilization of these cells possible in order to study their role in mammary growth and differentiation and milk ejection.
...
PMID:Bovine mammary myoepithelial cells. 1. Isolation, culture, and characterization. 147 4
The following studies were undertaken to develop a cultured uterine myocyte model which would allow further clarification of the adrenergic signal transduction mechanisms utilized by these myocytes. After mechanical removal of the endometrium, rabbit uterine myocytes were isolated by an overnight enzymatic disaggregation using
collagenase
and DNase I. The isolated myocytes were maintained in culture in 75-cm2 flasks containing Waymouth's MB 751/1 medium-10% fetal bovine serum along with 10(-8) M estradiol, penicillin, streptomycin, and Fungizone. The phase contrast and electron micrographic appearance of these cells was consistent with that previously reported for smooth muscle myocytes in culture. Immunocytochemical studies utilizing monoclonal anti-
alpha-smooth muscle actin
antibodies confirmed the presence of smooth muscle actin in these cultured myocytes. Western blot studies similarly confirmed the presence of
alpha-smooth muscle actin
in rabbit myometrial tissue and the cultured myocytes, both the primary and F1 generation. After prelabeling the myocytes with [3H]inositol, adrenergic stimulation experiments demonstrated alpha-1 receptor mediated stimulation of inositol phosphates. Beta receptor stimulation experiments confirmed cAMP production in these cultured myocytes, and the ability of clonidine, an alpha-2 agonist, to inhibit forskolin stimulated cAMP production confirmed the presence of functional alpha-2 adrenergic receptors in these myocytes. In conclusion, these cultured rabbit uterine myocytes have provided an in vitro model which can be utilized to further clarify the adrenergic receptor signal transduction mechanisms in genital tract smooth muscle.
...
PMID:Alpha-1, alpha-2, and beta adrenergic signal transduction in cultured uterine myocytes. 216 Sep 25
We analyzed in cultures from the human breast the potential of stromal cells resembling fibroblasts to undergo smooth muscle differentiation. The cellular components of the breast tissue from 10 biopsies were disaggregated by
collagenase
digestion and further purified by differential centrifugation into suspensions of single cells and intact blood vessels. These two fractions of stromal cells were plated in culture and their phenotypic traits analyzed within 24 hours. During this time, the blood vessel fraction gave rise to stromal cells with smooth muscle differentiation as judged immunocytochemically using monoclonal antibodies to alpha-/gamma-muscle actins, to
alpha-smooth muscle actin
, to type IV collagen, and to laminin. Furthermore, the cells of this fraction resembled smooth muscle cells based on 2D gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting determination of isoactin content. After 24 hours in culture, the single-cell fraction consisted of an almost pure population of cells not exhibiting smooth muscle differentiation but rather resembling fibroblasts. Maintenance of fibroblast-like cells without smooth muscle differentiation was possible for more than 14 days on chemically defined medium. These cells remained quiescent, as measured by cell quantification and immunoreactivity to the proliferation-associated antigen, Ki-67. Growth of these cells could be stimulated by adding serum at any time during the experimental period. Single-cell fractions from seven biopsies were allowed to grow exponentially in the presence of serum for up to 10 days, and the kinetics of smooth muscle differentiation were monitored immunocytochemically and biochemically. These experiments showed that
alpha-smooth muscle actin
synthesis was induced in 10 to 80% of the fibroblast-like cells after 4 to 11 days in culture. Both the final number of
alpha-smooth muscle actin
-positive cells and the onset of synthesis varied with the initial seeding density. Dose-response experiments (at constant cell density) revealed that serum exerted maximal effect at concentrations above 10%. It was therefore concluded that elements of smooth muscle differentiation may arise in non-smooth muscle stromal cells taken directly from human breast tissue.
...
PMID:Smooth muscle differentiation in cultured human breast gland stromal cells. 223 5
Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice spontaneously develop immune-mediated insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and nephropathy, providing an opportunity to study the early molecular events in a model of diabetic glomerulosclerosis. The expression of several genes coding for growth factors and extracellular matrix was examined in microdissected glomeruli, by the use of reverse transcription-competitive polymerase chain reaction, in diabetic NOD mice (mean duration of diabetes, 28.5 +/- 7 days) and age-matched nondiabetic NOD mice with normal glucose tolerance. The levels of mRNA coding for transforming growth factor-beta 1, tenascin, and laminin B1 increased 1.9-, 2.0-, and 1.7-fold, respectively, whereas platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-B, alpha 1(IV) collagen, 72-kd
collagenase
,
alpha-smooth muscle actin
, and beta-actin mRNA remained stable in the diabetic mice. The kidney advanced glycosylation end-products levels increased 2.1-fold in the diabetic mice, and the diabetic glomeruli showed an accumulation of tenascin and laminin but not of type IV collagen by immunofluorescence microscopy. There was no increase in cell number per glomerulus after the onset of diabetes, a finding consistent with stable PDGF-B and
alpha-smooth muscle actin
mRNA levels. These findings provide evidence that increased glomerular transforming growth factor-beta 1, but not PDGF-B, mRNA is associated with the up-regulation of tenascin and laminin expression after advanced glycosylation endproduct accumulation, early after the onset of diabetes.
...
PMID:Overexpression of transforming growth factor-beta 1 mRNA is associated with up-regulation of glomerular tenascin and laminin gene expression in nonobese diabetic mice. 753 9
Chronic iron overload can result in hepatic fibrosis and cirrhosis. Activated lipocytes, through increased production of collagen and extracellular matrix, play an important role in hepatic fibrogenesis in several types of experimental liver injury, but their contribution to hepatic injury after iron overload is unknown. This study examines the effect of iron overload on lipocyte activation, in vivo. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were fed a chow diet supplemented with 1% carbonyl iron for up to 20 mo. Controls were fed the chow diet alone. Lipocytes were prepared by sequential pronase and
collagenase
perfusion of the livers, followed by density-gradient centrifugation. Lipocyte activation was assessed by immunohistochemistry of liver sections and by Western blot analysis of
alpha-smooth muscle actin
expression in freshly isolated lipocytes. In addition, to measure the biosynthetic capability of these lipocytes, collagen and noncollagen protein production was determined after 3 days in culture, using [3H]proline incorporation. The hepatic iron concentration was increased by eightfold in the iron-loaded rats, and lipocytes from these animals expressed
alpha-smooth muscle actin
. Collagen production was increased by 2.5-fold, and noncollagen protein production was elevated by twofold in lipocytes isolated from iron-loaded rats. In the iron-loaded livers, autofluorescent material with the characteristics of lipofusion was present in periportal zones. Chronic iron overload expression results in the activation of lipocytes, as determined by increased expression of
alpha-smooth muscle actin
and by increased production of both collagen and noncollagen protein. This activation may contribute to iron-induced hepatic fibrogenesis.
...
PMID:Chronic iron overload causes activation of rat lipocytes in vivo. 790 Aug 6
The present study was conducted to isolate and to characterize stromal cells from the human prostate and to study the effects of androgen and different growth factors in this model system. Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) tissue samples were obtained from transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP). Tissue specimens were mechanically and enzymatically dissociated by treatment with DNAse and
collagenase
. Epithelial cells were separated from stromal cells by discontinuous Percoll gradient centrifugation. The stromal cells obtained were cultured in phenol red-free RPMI-1640 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. Immunocytochemical analysis revealed that the stromal cell cultures were composed of both smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts. The short and broad, smooth muscle cells wee identified by using an antibody directed against
alpha-smooth muscle actin
. The thin and elongated fibroblasts stained positively for prolyl 4-hydroxylase. Smooth muscle cells were the predominant cell type in the present investigation. Typical cultures contained up to 99% of cells staining positively for
alpha-smooth muscle actin
. The prostate smooth muscle cultures were treated with dihydrotestosterone (DHT), bovine pituitary extract (BPE), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta). When cells were cultured in serum free RPMI-1640 supplemented with ITS+ (insulin, transferrin, and selenious acid) no significant (P > 0.05) mitogenic effect in medium supplemented with ITS+. In the presence of 10% charcoal-stripped fetal bovine serum (cFBS) DHT, at a concentration of 0.1 nM, was able to cause a slight but significant (P < 0.05) mitogenic effect on BPH smooth muscle cells growth. Basic FGF was able to stimulate BPH smooth muscle cells in a concentration-dependent fashion. The combination of DHT and 0.1 ng/ml bFGF was able to increase the proliferation of prostate smooth muscle cells above either agents alone. Addition of BPE to serum free RPMI-1640 caused a significant (P < 0.05) stimulation of cell proliferation in a concentration-dependent fashion. Addition to TGF-beta to serum or BPE containing RPMI-1640 caused a significant (P < 0.05) inhibition to cell proliferation in a concentration-dependent fashion. TGF-beta was cytostatic to the benign prostatic smooth muscle cells only in the presence of media containing growth stimulating factors found in charcoal-stripped serum or in bovine pituitary extract. These results demonstrated that stromal fraction isolated from BPH specimens was composed of both fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells. These cells could be cultured and were able to respond to various growth stimulatory and inhibitory agents.
...
PMID:Stromal cells of the human prostate: initial isolation and characterization. 860 97
Cells from the muscular layer of neonatal (3-day-old) rabbit urinary bladders were dissociated with
collagenase
, and cultured in M199 supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and antibiotic-antimycotic. Cells in culture were of two types: long and short. The short cells were thick and spindle-shaped, and the long cells were flat and elongated. The long cells can be about 15 times longer than the short cells. The short cells do not divide, but the long cells divide readily. Expressions of smooth muscle and non-muscle myosins,
alpha-smooth muscle actin
, vimentin, and h-caldesmon were determined by immuno-fluorescence microscopy using specific antibodies. Both types of cells react strongly with antibodies against smooth and non-muscle myosins. Unlike the short cells, the long cells also contain alpha-actin and vimentin. The expression of h-caldesmon was very weak in both cell types. Also, cells dissociated from the smooth muscle layers of adult (6-month-old) rabbit bladder were cultured under the same conditions as the cells from the neonatal bladders to see if the heterogeneity of smooth muscle cells, exhibited by cells from neonatal rabbits, is also shown by cells from adult bladder. Two types of cells were also identified. The cells were then fixed and examined with the same panel of antibodies that we used for the neonatal cells. The long cells from adult bladder muscle express similar proteins to those in the neonatal long cells, and the short cells were stained positively with smooth muscle myosin, non-muscle myosin,
alpha-smooth muscle actin
, and lightly with caldesmon. Although the absence of vimentin in the short cells from adults is similar to that from neonatal, the strong expression of alpha-actin in the adult short cells is unlike the short cells from neonatal rabbits, in which their expression is barely detectable.
...
PMID:Identification of two types of smooth muscle cells from rabbit urinary bladder. 870 36
Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors have been shown to minimize fibrosis of the kidney tubulointerstitium in several diseases. In addition to lowering angiotensin II levels, ACE inhibitors can increase kinin levels and subsequently increase nitric oxide formation. To determine whether nitric oxide generation is a component of the beneficial effect of ACE inhibitors on renal fibrosis, enalapril, enalapril plus NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) or L-arginine was administered to rats that had undergone unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO). Ureteral obstruction caused significant increases in interstitial volume, monocyte macrophage infiltration, interstitial collagen IV and
alpha-smooth muscle actin
expression, transforming growth factor-beta 1 mRNA, collagen IV mRNA, and tissue inhibitor of
metalloproteinase-1
mRNA. Enalapril treatment significantly blunted the increase in all parameters during UUO. Cotreatment of the animals with enalapril and L-NAME reversed the beneficial effect of enalapril in the obstructed kidney for all parameters. Treatment of animals with UUO with L-arginine significantly blunted the increase in all parameters except for transforming growth factor-beta 1 mRNA expression. In the enalapril- plus-L-NAME-treated animals, there were modest but significant increases in monocyte/macrophage infiltration of the interstitium and glomerulus, and collagen IV and
alpha-smooth muscle actin
expression in the interstitium of the contralateral unobstructed kidney. The urine nitrite concentration was significantly increased by either enalapril or L-arginine treatment, whereas L-NAME significantly reduced urine nitrite concentration. These results suggest that treatment modalities that increase nitric oxide formation have a beneficial effect on the progression of cellular and molecular parameters of tubulointerstitial fibrosis caused by obstruction of the ureter.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide generation ameliorates the tubulointerstitial fibrosis of obstructive nephropathy. 891 81
1. The mechanisms whereby angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors reverse cardiac remodelling appear to involve angiotensin and/or bradykinin receptors. Previously we reported that cultured rat cardiac fibroblasts express angiotensin II (AII) receptors. In the present study we compared AII receptor binding, gene expression of angiotensinogen and the AII, Subtype 1A (AT1A) receptor, as well as morphological changes induced by selected hormonal treatments in cultured fibroblasts derived from SHRLJ or WKYLJ rats. 2. Fibroblasts were isolated from adult rat left ventricle by either
collagenase
B or
collagenase
P digestion. Collagenase B yielded cell preparations from SHRLJ which grew slower than cells from WKYLJ rats and expressed nearly two-fold fewer AII receptors (compared to WKYLJ) while
collagenase
P yielded SHRLJ cells with similar binding and growth properties to WKYLJ. A good correlation was observed between receptor binding and AII receptor, type 1A (AT1A) mRNA concentrations. In the presence of steroids
collagenase
B cells showed a higher tendency to transform towards a preadipocyte cell type, estimated by the formation of lipid containing vacuoles/cell, while
collagenase
P cells, mainly the SHRLJ type, start to differentiate toward a myofibroblast-like cell type in the presence of AII, as calculated by the expression of
alpha-smooth muscle actin
. 3. From the results obtained in this study it is evident that a subset of fibroblasts can be isolated from the SHRLJ heart using
collagenase
B or P which differ in growth rates, AII receptor binding, AT1A and angiotensinogen mRNA levels, morphology and steroid responsiveness when compared to fibroblasts isolated from cardiac WKYLJ tissue.
...
PMID:Differences in cultured cardiac fibroblast populations isolated from SHR and WKY rats. 907 84
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