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Query: EC:3.4.24.35 (
matrix metalloproteinase 9
)
2,207
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We established two cell lines of human smooth muscle cells (SMC) by transfection of cells from the aortic intima and aortic media with origin-minus simian virus 40 (ori-minus SV40) DNA. Ori-minus SV40 DNA very efficiently immortalized human smooth muscle cells in culture. Proteins that these cell lines produced included type I, III, IV, and V collagens, fibronectin, and human matrix metalloproteinases (MMP)-1 (tissue collagenase), -2 ("type IV collagenase"), and -3 (stromelysin). The protein production in these cell lines generally mimicked that of normal SMC, but the immortalization stimulated the cell line of medial SMC to produce excessive MMP-2 and to secrete MMP-9 (
92-kDa gelatinase
). However, since these cell lines did not show a fully malignant phenotype, we concluded that, in addition to the degradation of extracellular matrix macromolecules, including basement membrane components by MMP-2, -3, and/or -9, some additional factors must be involved for the
malignancy
of fully transformed cells and that these immortalized human aortic SMC, which share many characteristics with normal SMC, will prove useful to study the role(s) of metalloproteinases in atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Immortalization of human aortic smooth muscle cells with origin-minus simian virus 40 DNA. 133 71
Cell clones derived from a human melanoma metastasis selected for different integrin profiles were examined in vitro for invasive potential and biological and biochemical features potentially related to this process. Clones which expressed high levels of integrins showed high invasive potential, extracellular matrix degradation, and adhesion to gelatin-coated substrates. A correlation was also found between invasiveness and intracellular and extracellular plasminogen activator activity. Heparanase and
collagenase type IV
activities were apparently unrelated to invasiveness. gamma-Glutamyl transferase (GGT) activity was high in highly invasive clones, whereas melanin content was high in slightly invasive clones. Heterogeneity was also observed in cellular parameters such as cell dimensions, growth features and DNA index. The intrinsic biological and biochemical heterogeneity of a cell population derived from a single metastasis may be responsible for the different behaviour of clones, regardless of their invasive potential. Since slightly invasive cells are more differentiated than highly invasive cells,
malignancy
and differentiation are inversely correlated in such human melanoma clones.
...
PMID:Biological and enzymatic features of human melanoma clones with different invasive potential. 136 80
Many of the steps involved in
cancer
spread are potential targets for anti-metastatic treatment. Until recently, research aimed at inhibiting metastasis has concentrated on the proteases, especially on urokinase-type plasminogen activator and
collagenase IV
. However, recent data suggests that both adhesion proteins and motility factors could also serve as targets for new treatments to prevent
cancer
invasion and metastasis. Almost all the work to date using anti-metastatic agents has been carried out using either in vitro artificial membranes or with animal models. It is, however, likely that some of the inhibitors of experimental metastasis which are described will be evaluated in clinical trials in the near future.
...
PMID:Inhibiting tissue invasion and metastasis as targets for cancer therapy. 154 50
In 187 node-negative breast cancers, the expression of laminin receptors and
collagenase IV
was directly related in 52% of cases, independently of pathological (tumor size and histology) and biological (estrogen receptors and proliferative activity) features. Moreover, the presence of laminin receptors and
collagenase IV
did not appear to influence tumor proliferative activity, evaluated as 3H-thymidine labelling index. In this case series, relapse-free survival and overall survival at 6 years were significantly affected by tumor size, hormone receptor status and proliferative activity. Conversely, high levels of laminin receptors and
collagenase IV
failed to influence relapse-free or overall survival, whereas they were strong indicators of local-regional diffusion of the disease.
Int J
Cancer
1991 Jun 19
PMID:Laminin receptors, collagenase IV and prognosis in node-negative breast cancers. 164 75
Laminin, the major glycoprotein component of basement membrane, promotes the malignant phenotype. Cells which are adherent to laminin are more malignant than the non-adherent cells and in certain tumor cells, the number of laminin receptors is positively correlated with
malignancy
. Laminin also increases
collagenase IV
activity, an enzyme demonstrated to be critical for tumor spread. A site on laminin, containing the amino acid sequence SIKVAV, has been identified which when injected intravenously with B16F10 melanoma cells, causes an increase in the number of colonies on the surface of the lungs. This peptide does not affect tumor cell arrest in the vasculature or the immune system. It does promote angiogenesis in various in vitro and in vivo models, thereby facilitating tumor cell survival. When a complex mixture of laminin-enriched basement membrane components (Matrigel) is coinjected with tumor cells subcutaneously, tumor incidence and growth increases. Various tumor cell lines and primary isolates, which previously could not form tumors in mice, can be induced to grow rapidly in the presence of Matrigel. Slowly growing tumors or arrested tumors can also be induced to grow more quickly with additional injections of Matrigel. When an SIKVAV-containing synthetic peptide is coinjected with B16F10 tumor cells and Matrigel subcutaneously in mice, larger tumors are formed than that observed with either Matrigel or cells alone. Such studies define the role of laminin in tumor growth and spread and generate new models for studying therapeutic agents. Of particular interest is the ability to grow primary isolates which generally do not grow in mice.
Cancer
Metastasis Rev 1991 Oct
PMID:Basement membrane and the SIKVAV laminin-derived peptide promote tumor growth and metastases. 176 67
We have studied the effects of interferons (IFNs) on the attachment,
collagenase IV
activity, chemotactic migration and in vitro invasion of human melanoma (A2058) cells treated for various time periods with human recombinant interferon alpha (hrIFN-alpha) or gamma (hrIFN-gamma). The cells treated with hrIFN alpha for a short time period attached more readily to purified basement membrane components, type IV collagen and laminin, than control cells. The stimulating effect of hrIFN gamma on the attachment was seen, however, when the cells were treated for a longer period of time (3 days) with this drug. The short-term treatment with hrIFN alpha also enhanced the in vitro invasion of cells through a reconstituted basement membrane compared to findings with untreated control cells. Pre-treatment of 3 days or more was, however, needed for hrIFN gamma to promote the invasion of A2058 cells. Both IFNs increased the secretion of basement membrane (type IV) collagen degrading metalloproteinase (
collagenase IV
) activity from human melanoma cells. Further, chemotaxis, i.e., directed migration of A2058 cells to laminin, was enhanced by both IFNs. In contrast, the attachment,
collagenase IV
activity, chemotaxis, and in vitro invasion were markedly inhibited when the cells were treated for an extended time period (7 days) with the IFNs. Interferons also inhibited cell proliferation after 4 days of exposure. These results suggest that time of treatment with interferons modulates the invasive capacity of human melanoma cells in vitro, causing initially a transient enhancement of invasion followed by an inhibition of invasive propensity after extended exposure to these drugs, and that different biochemical steps required for successful invasion are regulated in parallel by interferons alpha and gamma.
Int J
Cancer
1991 Feb 20
PMID:Recombinant interferon alpha and gamma modulate the invasive potential of human melanoma in vitro. 184 57
Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) in general, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related KS (AIDS-KS) in particular, is a highly invasive and intensely angiogenic neoplasm of unknown cellular origin. We have recently established AIDS-KS cells in long term culture and reported the development of KS-like lesions in nude mice inoculated with these cells. Here, we have examined the in vitro invasiveness of basement membrane by AIDS-KS cells, as well as the effect(s) of their supernatants on the migration and invasiveness of human vascular endothelial cells. AIDS-KS cells were highly invasive in the Boyden chamber invasion assay and formed invasive, branching colonies in a 3-dimensional gel (Matrigel). Normal endothelial cells form tube-like structures on Matrigel. AIDS-KS cell-conditioned media induced endothelial cells to form invasive clusters in addition to tubes. KS-cell-conditioned media, when placed in the lower compartment of the Boyden chamber, stimulated the migration of human and bovine vascular endothelial cells across filters coated with either small amounts of collagen IV (chemotaxis) or a Matrigel barrier (invasion). Basic fibroblast growth factor could also induce endothelial cell chemotaxis and invasion in these assays. However, when antibodies to basic fibroblast growth factor were used the invasive activity induced by the AIDS-KS-cell-conditioned media was only marginally inhibited, suggesting that the large quantities of basic fibroblast growth factor-like material released by the AIDS-KS cells are not the main mediators of this effect. Specific inhibitors of laminin and
collagenase IV
action, which represent critical determinants of basement membrane invasion, blocked the invasiveness of the AIDS-KS cell-activated endothelial cells in these assays. These data indicate that KS cells appear to be of smooth muscle origin but secrete a potent inducer of endothelial cell chemotaxis and invasiveness which could be responsible for angiogenesis and the resulting highly vascularized lesions. These assays appear to be a model to study the invasive spread and angiogenic capacity of human AIDS-related KS and should prove useful in the identification of molecular mediators and potential inhibitors of neoplastic neovascularization.
Cancer
Res 1991 May 15
PMID:Supernatants of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-related Kaposi's sarcoma cells induce endothelial cell chemotaxis and invasiveness. 202 45
The capacity of solid tumours to invade the surrounding tissue and to metastasize, is correlated with the formation and degradation of structural elements in the vicinity of the tumour cells. Substances with both procoagulant activity and fibrinolytic activity are important factors in the formation or degradation of a "fibrin-fibronectin-gel matrix". This gel is subsequently transformed into the extracellular matrix, which, together with cells, will form the tumour stroma. When analyzing tumour stroma degradation products, it is obvious that the protease plasmin catalyses the disintegration of fibrin and fibronectin. Additional compounds of the tumour stroma and of the basal membrane are also, at least in part, broken down by plasmin or other proteases, such as
collagenase IV
and cathepsin D. The plasminogen activator urokinase (uPA) seems to play a central role as it was shown that elevated content of uPA is correlated with a high risk of early relapse and shorter overall survival, at least in breast cancer. It has been shown, that by means of quantifying uPA, patients with a relative high or low risk can even be selected within the classical risk groups, which so far are defined by the locoregional extension of the tumour and the hormone receptor status only. Evidently, as uPA content in human breast cancer tissue is an independent prognostic factor, one may speculate, that those experimental or in vitro data, which correlated increase in uPA-synthesis with
malignancy
, may be of direct relevance for human tumour biology. Moreover, due to these recent observations on the prognostic significance of tumour-associated proteases, new aspects for the selection of risk collectives within the node-negative breast cancer patients for adjuvant therapy have to be considered. It may well be possible, that one may affect tumour invasion and metastasis by inhibiting protease action of solid tumours by disturbing the binding of proteases to tumour cell surface receptors. As it is only a quantitative aspect, which separates benign physiological processes from tumour cell pathophysiology, experimental evidence suggests, that less drastic forms of palliative therapy can be proposed.
...
PMID:[Clinical and prognostic significance of tumor-associated proteases in gynecologic oncology]. 204 Apr 18
Prognostic variables in breast cancer are urgently needed to individualize adjuvant cytotoxic therapy, especially in those patients where metastases in the lymph nodes have not been detected (node-negative disease). So far histomorphological criteria, the determination of receptors for steroid hormones or EGF (epidermal growth factor), the protease cathepsin D or DNA-ploidy are used to distinguish between low- and high-risk patients. High-risk patients have a higher incidence of recurrences and/or shorter overall survival after surgery of the primary tumour than low-risk patients. High-risk patients (node-positive; hormone-receptor-negative) would receive adjuvant hormone therapy or chemotherapy. In the node-negative patient, adjuvant therapy is only recommended if a high content of cathepsin D and aneuploidy of the tumour (or high S-phase in diploid tumours) has been diagnosed. Determination of cathepsin D in tumour extracts as a variable in breast cancer patients is based on the fact that invasion and metastasis is correlated with elevated levels of tumour-associated proteases such as cathepsins B and D,
collagenase IV
and plasminogen activators. The urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) which is secreted by tumour cells as an enzymatically inactive proenzyme (pro-uPA) seems to play a key role in mediating tumour cell invasion in
cancer
tissues. Receptor-bound uPA converts enzymatically inactive plasminogen into the serine protease plasmin which then degrades the extracellular matrix surrounding the tumour cells (tumour stroma). We localized pro-uPA/uPA immunohistochemically in paraffin-embedded formalin-fixed breast cancer tissue sections. Pro-uPA/uPA was detected in the cytoplasm and on the plasma membrane of the tumour cells reflecting receptor-bound pro-uPA/uPA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Tumour-associated fibrinolysis: the prognostic relevance of plasminogen activators uPA and tPA in human breast cancer. 213 50
Tumor proteinases are considered to be important in the process of
cancer
invasion and metastasis. We have proposed that the surface membrane localization of these proteinases places them in an optimal site to facilitate the invasion of surrounding extracellular matrix. In this study, we have used the organic solvent, n-butanol, and the detergent, n-octyl-glucoside, to sequentially extract metalloproteinases from crude plasma membranes of human RWP-I pancreatic cancer cells. Anion exchange chromatography and gel permeation chromatography were employed to further purify enzymes with the capacity to degrade gelatin, type-IV collagen, and carboxymethylated transferrin. Gelatin zymography was used to demonstrate proteinase bands of 92, 70 and 62-kDa. Immunoblotting of solubilized, partially purified pancreatic cancer plasma membrane proteins using polyclonal rabbit antibodies, which have specificity for type-IV collagenase/gelatinase, resulted in the recognition of a 70-kDa protein, but not the
92-kDa gelatinase
. A type-IV collagenase/gelatinase of 68-kDa was similarly identified in A2058 human melanoma
cancer
cell plasma membranes.
Int J
Cancer
1990 Jun 15
PMID:Extraction of type-IV collagenase/gelatinase from plasma membranes of human cancer cells. 216 1
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