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)

Although ANP or its smaller congeners are produced and secreted from rat hypothalami, the role or roles of neurotransmitter(s) in regulating their release and production from the neurons remains unclear. We report here that norepinephrine or epinephrine (NE/EPI) facilitates irANP secretion and pro-ANP mRNA expression in long term cultures of rat hypothalamic neurons through their effects on alpha 2-adrenoceptors. Hypothalami of 3 day-old Sprague-Dawley rats were removed and digested with collagenase. The dispersed cells were plated on poly-D-lysine coated culture dishes (10(6) cells/well) in Hepes buffered Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium supplemented with 8% fetal calf serum. Six days after plating, media were replenished with serum free media and the cultures incubated for 4 more days with vehicle or various doses of NE, EPI, alpha- or beta-adrenoceptor agonists in the presence of absence of antagonists. Culture media were then extracted with C18 Sep-pak and the levels of irANP determined by a well characterised RIA for ANP. NE or EPI treatment significantly increased irANP secretion from the cultures in a dose related manner with ED50 and Emax of approximately 0.2 microM and 1 microM respectively. The stimulation effect of NE was blocked by yohimbine (alpha 2-antagonist), but not prazosin (alpha 1-antagonist) or propranolol (beta-antagonist). Clonidine (alpha 2-agonist), but not phenylephrine (alpha 1-agonist) or isoprenaline (beta-agonist) mimicked the effects of NE or EPI. At the concentration of 0.1 microM, clonidine increased irANP release approximately 3 fold above that of control values (34.7 +/- 3.3; mean +/- SE, n = 4). These changes were accompanied by corresponding increments in the abundance of pro-ANP mRNA in the cultures as examined by a colorimetric Northern blot analysis. Our results indicate that NE or EPI, acting through its alpha 2-adrenoceptors, may modulate the function of ANP neurons in rat hypothalami by regulating the secretion and production of the neuropeptide at the genomic level.
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PMID:Norepinephrine stimulates immunoreactive (ir) atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) secretion and pro-ANP mRNA expression from rat hypothalamic neurons in culture: effects of alpha 2-adrenoceptors. 131 57

Brown adipose tissue and collagenase-isolated brown adipocytes were investigated in rats by means of 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. After chloroform-methanol extraction of brown adipose tissue, proton and natural abundance 13C spectra of the chloroform fraction showed resonances attributable to triglycerides, and were qualitatively similar to those of the corresponding fraction of white adipose tissue. By means of quantitative analysis of 1H spectra, fatty acid unsaturation and polyunsaturation in triglycerides were found to be lower in brown than white adipose tissue; moreover, unsaturation parameters decreased in triglyceride fatty acids of brown adipose tissue upon norepinephrine administration or cold acclimatization of rats, and were affected by the age of donors. The molar percentage of mono- and polyunsaturated C18 fatty acids in triglycerides was determined from 13C spectra and found to change in the early post-natal period. Isolated, agarose-embedded brown adipocytes from 4-day-old rats showed a number of peaks in the carbohydrate region of 1H spectra that were not present in spectra of white adipocytes and almost disappeared in brown fat cells of older animals. These peaks could be restored by insulin exposure. Natural abundance 13C spectra of isolated brown adipocytes were resolved enough to allow unambiguous assignment of resonances to carbons of fatty acids, glycerol, glucose, ethanolamine, and choline. Calculation of the mono- to polyunsaturated fatty acids ratio in the cells was also performed. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a useful tool for the investigation of brown adipose tissue and adipocytes therefrom.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance spectroscopy investigations of brown adipose tissue and isolated brown adipocytes. 789 17

We report further characterization of a cementum-derived protein that promotes the adhesion and spreading of periodontal cells. The cementum attachment protein (CAP) was extracted from bovine cementum, separated by diethylamino ethyl (DEAE)-cellulose chromatography, and purified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and C18 reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography. The purified preparation contained a single protein band migrating with M(r) 56,000. It did not cross-react with polyclonal antibodies to osteopontin, vitronectin, or other attachment proteins. The attachment activity was resistant to chondroitinase ABC digestion. An internal amino acid sequence of six peptides was determined by microsequencing, and the peptide sequences were not present in other attachment proteins described in cementum. Four sequences contained Gly-X-Y repeats typical of collagen helix. One 17 amino acid peptide had 82% homology with a type XII collagen domain. However, bovine type XII collagen did not promote fibroblast attachment. Although another 19-amino-acid-long peptide had 95% homology to bovine alpha 1 [I], two other peptides were only 74% and 68% homologous, and the CAP was not recognized by anti-type I collagen antibody. The attachment activity of CAP was susceptible to bacterial collagenase. The CAP did not cross-react with antibodies to type V, XII, and XIV collagens. These data and our previous immunostaining data indicate that the CAP is not related to other collagens or attachment proteins and that it is a collagenous attachment protein localized in cementum.
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PMID:Characterization of a collagenous cementum-derived attachment protein. 915 84

Dietary supplementation of fish oil containing eicosapentaenoic acid (C20:5 n-3, EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (C22:6 n-3, DHA) has been shown to exert protective effects on ischemic/reperfused hearts. We determined whether deprivation of fish oil from the diet paradoxically enhances susceptibility of cardiomyocytes to hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced injury and whether supplementation with either EPA or DHA overcomes such alterations. Rats were fed with fish-oil-rich (FOR) diet, fish-oil-deprived (FOD) diet alone, FOD diet with EPA (1 g/kg/day), or FOD diet with DHA (1 g/kg/day) for 4 weeks. The FOD diet reduced n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) and increased n-6 PUFAs such as linoleic (C18:2) and arachidonic acids (C20:4) in myocardial phospholipids. EPA or DHA supplementation increased its incorporation into phospholipid pools. Cardiomyocytes isolated by treatment with collagenase were subjected to 150 min of hypoxia and subsequent reoxygenation for 15 min. In the FOD diet group, the number of surviving rod-shaped cells after hypoxia and reoxygenation was smaller than that of the FOR group. Supplementation with EPA did not affect the number of rod-shaped cells, but attenuated reoxygenation-induced reduction in the number of square-shaped cells. In contrast, DHA supplementation did not afford any protection. The results suggest that deprivation of fish oil from dietary intake enhances the susceptibility of cardiomyocytes to hypoxic injury, and EPA, but not DHA, is capable of salvaging cardiomyocytes from hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced damage.
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PMID:Long-term supplementation with eicosapentaenoic acid salvages cardiomyocytes from hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced injury in rats fed with fish-oil-deprived diet. 968 70

The matrix metalloproteinases gelatinase A (MMP-2) and gelatinase B (MMP-9) are implicated in the physiological and pathological breakdown of several extracellular matrix proteins. In the present study, we show that long-chain fatty acids (e.g. oleic acid, elaidic acid, and cis- and trans-parinaric acids) inhibit gelatinase A as well as gelatinase B with K(i) values in the micromolar range but had only weak inhibitory effect on collagenase-1 (MMP-1), as assessed using synthetic or natural substrates. The inhibition of gelatinases depended on fatty acid chain length (with C18 > C16, C14, and C10), and the presence of unsaturations increased their inhibitory capacity on both types of gelatinase. Ex vivo experiments on human skin tissue sections have shown that micromolar concentrations of a long-chain unsaturated fatty acid (elaidic acid) protect collagen and elastin fibers against degradation by gelatinases A and B, respectively. In order to understand why gelatinases are more susceptible than collagenase-1 to inhibition by long-chain fatty acids, the possible role of the fibronectin-like domain (a domain unique to gelatinases) in binding inhibitory fatty acids was investigated. Affinity and kinetic studies with a recombinant fibronectin-like domain of gelatinase A and with a recombinant mutant of gelatinase A from which this domain had been deleted pointed to an interaction of long-chain fatty acids with the fibronectin-like domain of the protease. Surface plasmon resonance studies on the interaction of long-chain fatty acids with the three individual type II modules of the fibronectin-like domain of gelatinase A revealed that the first type II module is primarily responsible for binding these compounds.
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PMID:Involvement of fibronectin type II repeats in the efficient inhibition of gelatinases A and B by long-chain unsaturated fatty acids. 1127 59

In previous studies we established a rat model of acute tendinitis including functional and mechanical measures of healing. Achilles' tendinitis was induced by injection of collagenase, an enzyme that produces localized fiber digestion and edema formation. As quantitative measures of tissue inflammation, hypercellularity and edema were evaluated in injured tendons in comparison with controls. Using the rat tendinitis model, we have applied isotope-coded affinity tag analysis (ICAT) methodology to indicate localized tendon healing by quantitating protein expression. This novel proteomics method allows detection of subtle differences in protein levels that provide a detailed picture of tendinitis healing. The method involves a new class of chemical linkers used to differentially label cysteine residues from similar peptides in control and treated protein samples with heavy (deuterium off of backbone) and light (hydrogen off of backbone) ICAT reagents that are otherwise chemically identical. Proteins were extracted under liquid nitrogen from control untreated or injured Achilles' tendons 72 hours after collagenase-injection. These proteins were digested with endoproteinase Glu-C and trypsin and the resulting peptide mixtures were evaluated using reverse-phase C18 HPLC and Tristricine SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The two ICAT-modified peptide populations were mixed, affinity-purified and analyzed using microcapillary liquid chromatography and electrospray ionization tandem mass-spectroscopy. The process resulted in relative abundance and charge-to-mass ratio data used in conjunction with database searching to identify proteins expressed differentially in the two treatment groups. By analyzing different time periods in the healing process, an accurate model of the healing rat tendon can be made.
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PMID:Use of proteomics methodology to evaluate inflammatory protein expression in tendinitis. 1272 41

C18 unsaturated fatty acids were here found to inhibit proMMP (matrix metalloproteinase)-3 activation by plasmin. This effect was suppressed by lysine ligand competitors, indicating that it was mediated by binding to kringle domains. Surface plasmon resonance analysis demonstrated that oleic acid interacted to a similar extent with plasmin and kringle 5 (KD values of 3.4 x 10(-8) and 5.9 x 10(-8)M) while interaction with kringles 1-2-3 was 10-fold lower. Furthermore, oleic acid stimulated the amidolytic activity of plasmin and mini-plasmin, but not micro-plasmin. Oleic acid also enhanced u-PA (urokinase-type plasminogen activator)-mediated plasminogen activation over 50-fold. Taken together, these data indicate that inhibition of plasmin-induced proMMP-3 activation by unsaturated fatty acids was mediated through their preferential binding to kringle 5. The influence of elaidic acid on the plasmin/MMP-3/MMP-1 proteolytic cascade was assessed ex vivo. Exogenous addition of plasmin to dermal fibroblasts or supplementation of gingival fibroblast culture medium with plasminogen triggered this cascade. In both instances, elaidic acid totally abolished proMMP-3 and proMMP-1 activation. Additionally, a significant decrease in lattice retraction and collagen degradation in a range similar to that obtained with Batimastat was observed when human gingival fibroblasts were cultured in plasminogen-containing type I collagen gels, indicative of the dual influence of unsaturated fatty acids on MMP activation and activity. In conclusion, unsaturated fatty acids or molecules with similar structures could be attractive target for the development of natural pharmacological inhibitors directed against plasmin and/or MMPs in different pathological contexts such, skin UV irradiation, vascular diseases and tumour growth and invasion.
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PMID:Inhibition of plasmin-mediated prostromelysin-1 activation by interaction of long chain unsaturated fatty acids with kringle 5. 1475 64

The effects of a novel amphiphilic vitamin C derivative, disodium isostearyl 2-O-L-ascorbyl phosphate (disodium 2-(1,3,3-trimethyl-n-butyl)-5,7,7-trimethyl-n-octyl-L-ascorbyl phosphate, VCP-IS-2Na), possessing a C18 alkyl chain attached to a stable sodium L-ascorbic acid 2-phosphate (VCP-Na), on the proliferation of fibroblasts and collagen synthesis, and inhibition of matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) in normal human fibroblasts, NHDFs and NB1RGBs, were evaluated. Compared with proliferation of non-treated fibroblasts, VCP-IS-2Na at 50 microM increased proliferation to 123 and 135% of that in NHDFs and NB1RGBs. On the other hand, L-ascorbic acid (vitamin C) and VCP-Na had little effect on proliferation. At a concentration of 5.0-50 microM, VCP-IS-2Na stimulated collagen synthesis with an effectiveness comparable to that of vitamin C and VCP-Na. The amount of type I collagen in the culture medium was increased by treatment with VCP-IS-2Na for 72 h, in a concentration-dependent manner. Maximum increases of 126 and 1067% were seen with VCP-IS-2Na at 50 microM in NHDFs and NB1RGBs, respectively, whereas vitamin C and VCP-Na only had a small effect. VCP-IS-2Na had a small inhibitory effect on MMP-1, but vitamin C did not inhibit MMP-1, and VCP-Na had very little effect. VCP-IS-2Na exerted its collagen synthesis-promoting activity after being converted to vitamin C by phosphatase. This vitamin C promoted proliferation, collagen synthesis and inhibition of MMP-1, which are prolonged through sustained conversion of VCP-IS-2Na.
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PMID:Effect of a novel ascorbic derivative, disodium isostearyl 2-O-L-ascorbyl phosphate on human dermal fibroblasts: increased collagen synthesis and inhibition of MMP-1. 1837 41

Magnesium is one of the commonly used dietary supplements. Therefore, this study was to evaluate the content of short, medium and long-chain fatty acids and their esters in isolated rat hepatocytes induced by magnesium and/or ethanol. Isolation of hepatocytes was carried out by the Seglen's enzymatic method using collagenase. To thus prepared samples ethanol and/or MgCl2 solution were added, respectively, so that their concentrations were as follows: 150 mM/dm3 ethanol and/or 2 mM/dm3 MgCl2, 4 mM/dm3 MgCl2. The contents of short, medium and long-chain fatty acids and those of ester-bound acids were determined. The statistical evaluation of the experiment was made by comparing the area normalized for the analysed fatty acids in hepatocytes incubated for 5 h in the presence of the test substances. The effect of magnesium ions on the content of fatty acids and their esters in isolated hepatocytes incubated for 5 h depended on their concentration in the medium. A normalizing effect of magnesium ions on ethanol-induced changes in the content of C14-C17, C18-C20 and C21-C24 fatty acids was demonstrated. A normalizing effect of magnesium on ethanol-induced changes in the content of ester-bound fatty acids in hepatocytes was not confirmed.
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PMID:Changes in the content of short, medium and long-chain fatty acids in isolated hepatocytes incubated in the presence of magnesium ions and/or ethanol. 2438 87