Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.4.24.3 (
collagenase
)
18,340
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The potential relationship of an intact membrane organization to the synthesis of chondroitin was examined before and after modification of a chick-embryo cartilage microsomal system with the non-ionic detergent Triton X-100. Incubations with labelled UDP-GlcA and UDP-GalNAc indicated that Triton X-100 had little effect on the amount of chondroitin synthesized to form one species of large proteochondroitin (Type I). However, Triton X-100 had a marked stimulatory effect on the formation of another smaller species of proteochondroitin (Type II). Presence of this detergent during chondroitin polymerization also resulted in chains that were slightly smaller. Neither of the two proteochondroitin species were
collagenase
-sensitive, nor did they contain dermatan-like regions. Thus in these respects they were unlike the small proteochondroitins (
PG-Lb
or PG-Lt) that have been found in chick-embryo cartilage. They also differed greatly in size from these small proteoglycans as well as from the large aggregatable proteochondroitin (PG-H) from the same source. Synthesis of the larger (Type I) proteochondroitin species was not affected by prior treatment of the microsomes with chondroitin ABC lyase at concentrations sufficient for elimination of synthesis of most of the smaller (Type II) proteochondroitin species. Use of chondroitin ABC lyase subsequent to synthesis of the chondroitin also resulted in preferential degradation of the smaller species. Thus there were differences in formation and limitation in access of the chondroitin ABC lyase to the two species, consistent with other differences described previously. These results indicate that there are separate loci within the microsomal membranes for synthesis of the two species.
...
PMID:Formation of two species of nascent proteochondroitin in separate loci of a microsomal preparation from chick-embryo epiphyseal cartilage. 165 3
Chick embryo epiphyseal cartilage has been shown to contain three different proteoglycan species (PG-H,
PG-Lb
, and PG-Lt). This report is concerned with the purification and characterization of the third proteoglycan, PG-Lt. The proteoglycan can be separated from the other two by virtue of its low buoyant density in a CsCl density gradient and further purified by consecutive ion exchange and gel chromatography. The final preparation is composed of PG-Lt monomer and PG-Lt oligomer. The amino acid composition of PG-Lt is quite different from that of PG-H and
PG-Lb
and rather resembles that of collagens with respect to high content of glycine and high degrees of hydroxylation of proline and lysine. PG-Lt monomer is composed of disulfide-bonded subunits of Mr congruent to 120,000 and 190,000 as demonstrated by its gel electrophoretic behavior after reduction with 2-mercaptoethanol. The latter, but not the former, contains dermatan sulfate chains with glucuronic acid/iduronic acid residues and yields a protein-enriched core molecule of Mr congruent to 100,000 after digestion with chondroitinase ABC. Both of the protein subunits are completely digestible with bacterial
collagenase
. Immunofluorescence microscopic examination of cartilage tissues, using an antibody against PG-Lt, shows that this proteoglycan exists in both the cartilage matrix and perichondrial noncartilagenous region. When chondrocytes are plated onto tissue culture dishes, the antibody stains strands found on the cell surfaces and in the intercellular space of substrate-attached cell layers, suggesting that PG-Lt mediates cell-to-cell and cell-to-substrate contacts.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of a third proteoglycan (PG-Lt) from chick embryo cartilage which contains disulfide-bonded collagenous polypeptide. 687 91