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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)
Both astrocytes in the central nervous system and fibroblasts in somatic tissues are not only the major sources of extracellular matrix components but also of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), a family of enzymes directly involved in extracellular matrix breakdown. We have analyzed the regulation of the expression of MMPs and TIMPs (tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases) in human primary astrocytes stimulated with oncostatin M (OSM) and other extracellular mediators in comparison with normal human dermal fibroblasts. It was found that OSM induced/enhanced transcription of MMP-1 (interstitial collagenase) and
MMP-3
(
stromelysin 1
) in astrocytes, and MMP-1, MMP-9 (
gelatinase B
), and TIMP-1 in fibroblasts. Analysis of the signal transduction leading to activation of the MMP-1 gene revealed the presence of an OSM-responsive element (OMRE) encompassing the AP-1 binding site and the signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) binding element, which mediate activation by OSM. OMRE is also present in the TIMP-1 gene promoter and, although there are some differences in these two motifs, both appear to be targets for the simultaneous action of OSM-induced nuclear effectors. The induced enhancement of transcription by synergistically acting AP-1 and STAT binding elements in response to OSM is Raf-dependent. Cross-talk between the mitogen-activated protein kinase and JAK-STAT pathways is required to achieve maximal induction of the OMRE-driven transcription by OSM.
...
PMID:The mitogen-activated protein kinase and JAK-STAT signaling pathways are required for an oncostatin M-responsive element-mediated activation of matrix metalloproteinase 1 gene expression. 899 20
Scleritis is a sight-threatening inflammatory disorder of the eye characterized by the degradation of scleral matrix. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are ubiquitous proteolytic enzymes important in physiological and pathological processes, the activity of which is stringently controlled by the action of a family of natural antagonists, the tissue inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (TIMPs). We hypothesized that enhanced expression of MMPs, without the negative regulatory influence of TIMPs, may be a key feature of tissue destruction in inflammatory eye diseases, such as scleritis. The aim of this study was to localize and characterize cells expressing MMPs and TIMPs in sclera affected by necrotizing scleritis and, in a parallel study, to establish whether cytokines modulate MMP expression in cultured human scleral fibroblasts. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemical analyses indicated that resident scleral fibroblasts as well as inflammatory cells such as macrophages and T lymphocytes express
stromelysin
,
gelatinase B
, and TIMP-1 in necrotizing scleritis tissue. In addition, cytoplasmic immunoreactivity for tumor necrosis factor-alpha, an inducer of MMPs, was detected in infiltrating inflammatory cells. Cultured scleral fibroblasts stimulated with the combination of interleukin-1 alpha plus tumor necrosis factor-alpha increased TIMP-1 mRNA twofold above constitutive levels. By contrast, these cytokines induced a sevenfold increase in the steady-state levels of
stromelysin
mRNA. Using Western blotting,
stromelysin
and TIMP-1 protein production paralleled mRNA induction in cytokine-stimulated human scleral fibroblasts. Culture supernatants harvested from cytokine-stimulated human scleral fibroblasts were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gelatin substrate zymography. Our results revealed a prominent 92-kd gelatinolytic band corresponding to
gelatinase B
, which was inducible with interleukin-1 alpha. These data provide evidence for our hypothesis, that an imbalance between enzyme/inhibitor ratios may be the underlying mechanism of the tissue destruction characteristic of scleritis. Our results demonstrate the potential involvement of MMPs and their modulation by cytokines produced by infiltrating inflammatory cells in destructive ocular inflammation.
...
PMID:Increased expression of matrix metalloproteinases in vivo in scleritis tissue and in vitro in cultured human scleral fibroblasts. 903 78
The expression of extracellular-matrix (ECM)-degrading proteases has been shown to be necessary for invasion of tumor cells into surrounding tissue. For several tumor types, overexpression of these proteases is dependent upon interactions with adjacent fibroblast cell populations. We previously demonstrated activation of matrix metalloprotease (MMP) and urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPa) expression in a coculture model consisting of squamous cell carcinoma cells (SCC) with dermal fibroblasts. In the present study we have examined whether melanocytes, which are known to interact closely with keratinocytes of the basal epidermal layer, might influence ECM-degrading protease expression in SCC cells as well. Upon coculture of the human SCC cell line II-4 with the nontumorigenic mouse melanocyte cell line Melan-a or treatment of II-4 cells with Melan-a conditioned media, induction of expression of the MMP matrilysin and uPa was observed. In contrast, no induction was observed for
stromelysin
-1 or
92-kDa type IV collagenase
. Matrilysin/uPa-inducing activity was found to act at the level of gene transcription for both matrilysin and uPa and was ubiquitously expressed among six different human melanocytic cell strains/lines, ranging from primary normal melanocytes to cell lines established from metastatic melanoma lesions. These data demonstrate that melanocytic cells can exert a paracrine influence in SCC cells on the expression of specific proteases involved in ECM turnover and tumor invasiveness.
...
PMID:Melanocyte mediated paracrine induction of extracellular matrix degrading proteases in squamous cell carcinoma cells. 905 12
In this study, we describe the activity of CT1746, an orally-active synthetic MMP inhibitor that has a greater specificity for gelatinase A,
gelatinase B
and
stromelysin
than for interstitial collagenase and matrilysin, in a nude mouse model that better mimics the clinical development of human colon cancer. The model is constructed by surgical orthotopic implantation (SOI) of histologically-intact tissue of the metastatic human colon tumor cell line Co-3. Animals were gavaged with CT1746 twice a day at 100 mg/kg for 5 days after the SOI of Co-3 for 43 days. In this model CT1746 significantly prolonged the median survival time of the tumor-bearing animals from 51 to 78 days. Significant efficacy of CT1746 was observed on primary tumor growth (32% reduction in mean tumor area at day 36), total spread and metastasis (6/20 treated animals had no detectable spread and metastasis at autopsy compared to 100% incidence of secondaries in control groups). Efficacy of CT1746 could also be seen on reducing tumor spread and metastasis to individual organ sites such as the abdominal wall, cecum and lymph nodes compared to vehicle and untreated controls. We conclude that chronic administration of a peptidomimetic MMP inhibitor via the oral route is feasible and results in inhibition of solid tumor growth, spread and metastasis with increase in survival in this model of human cancer, thus converting aggressive cancer to a more controlled indolent disease.
...
PMID:Conversion of highly malignant colon cancer from an aggressive to a controlled disease by oral administration of a metalloproteinase inhibitor. 906 95
Decidual and placental relaxins have been proposed as autocrine/ paracrine hormones in the remodeling of collagen in the amnion and chorion in the last weeks of pregnancy. The matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) is a key enzyme in the degradation of the interstitial collagens which predominate in the fetal membranes. Distribution of the MMP-1 gene and of the MMP-1 protein was shown by in situ hybridization and immunolocalization, respectively, in amnion, chorion, and decidua collected from patients before the onset of spontaneous labor. The distribution of MMP-1 in the chorionic cytotrophoblast and decidua coincided with that of the human relaxin receptor, detected by tissue section autoradiography in tissues collected at the same stage of pregnancy. Fetal membrane explants were used to study the effect of exogenous human relaxin H2. These responded by a dose-dependent increase in expression of the MMP-1 gene, in its secreted protein, and in its enzyme activity in the medium. A similar dose-dependent increase in the tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) gene and protein upon exposure of the explants to relaxin H2 suggested a coordinated cascade system, resulting in increases in secreted activities of MMP-1,
MMP-3
(
stromelysin
), and MMP-9 (
gelatinase B
). There was no effect on the genes or proteins for MMP-2 (gelatinase A) or tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1), showing the specificity of the response. This coordinated regulation by relaxin H2 of tPA, MMP-1,
MMP-3
, and MMP-9 would result in more complete degradation of the fetal membrane extracellular matrix components.
...
PMID:An autocrine/paracrine role of human decidual relaxin. I. Interstitial collagenase (matrix metalloproteinase-1) and tissue plasminogen activator. 909 59
Interstitial collagen types I and III are the predominant collagens in the amniotic and chorionic connective tissues. However, this matrix also contains proteoglycans, fibronectin, laminin, and elastin, which together with the collagens may undergo partial degradation prior to fetal membrane rupture at term. In this study,
stromelysin
(
MMP-3
) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1 (TIMP-1) were immunolocalized in fetal membranes obtained at term prior to labor.
MMP-3
stained the cells of the amniotic epithelium, fibroblasts and macrophages of the amniotic and chorionic matrix, and those of the chorionic cytotrophoblast; there was no staining in the maternal decidua. TIMP-1 showed a similar staining pattern, except that the staining was darker in some amniotic epithelial cells and was present in the maternal decidua. The maternal decidua produces the two human relaxins H1 and H2; the latter, when incubated with explants of human fetal membranes, caused a dose-dependent and significant increase in expression of the
MMP-3
gene and its secreted protein into the media. A significant effect of relaxin H2 on
92-kDa gelatinase
(MMP-9) gene expression was also shown--an effect requiring poly(A)+ RNA rather than total RNA. Both relaxin H1 and H2 caused a significant increase in secretion of MMP-9 protein and its enzyme activity in the media. The magnitude of the effects of the two relaxins was similar, in contrast to findings from other biological studies in which relaxin H2 was shown to be more active. Neither of the relaxins had any effect on 72-kDa gelatinase (MMP-2) activity or on the TIMP-1 protein or its activity. This study suggests that local relaxins may be involved in the degradation of the complex fetal membrane extracellular matrix and may cause activation of an enzyme cascade resulting in fully activated MMP-9. Such effects could be important in the degradative pathways occurring in the amnion and chorion in the peripartal period.
...
PMID:An autocrine/paracrine role of human decidual relaxin. II. Stromelysin-1 (MMP-3) and tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1). 909 60
Skin wound healing depends on cell migration and extracellular matrix remodeling. Both processes, which are necessary for reepithelization and restoration of the underlying connective tissue, are believed to involve the action of extracellular proteinases. We screened cDNA libraries and we found that six matrix metalloproteinase genes were highly expressed during rat skin wound healing. They were namely those of
stromelysin 1
, stromelysin 3, collagenase 3, gelatinase A (GelA),
gelatinase B
, and membrane type-1 matrix metalloproteinase (MT1-MMP). The expression kinetics of these MMP genes, the tissue distribution of their transcripts, the results of cotransfection experiments in COS-1 cells, and zymographic analyses performed using microdissected rat wound tissues support the possibility that during cutaneous wound healing pro-GelA and pro-
gelatinase B
are activated by MT1-MMP and
stromelysin 1
, respectively. Since MT1-MMP has been demonstrated to be a membrane-associated protein (Sato, H., T. Takino, Y. Okada, J. Cao, A. Shinagawa, E. Yamamoto, and M. Seiki. 1994. Nature (Lond.). 370: 61-65), our finding that GelA and MT1-MMP transcripts were expressed in stromal cells exhibiting a similar tissue distribution suggests that MT1-MMP activates pro-GelA at the stromal cell surface. This possibility is further supported by our observation that the processing of pro-GelA to its mature form correlated to the detection of MT1-MMP in cell membranes of rat fibroblasts expressing the MT1-MMP and GelA genes. These observations, together with the detection of high levels of the mature GelA form in the granulation tissue but not in the regenerating epidermis, suggest that MT1-MMP and GelA contribute to the restoration of connective tissue during rat skin wound healing.
...
PMID:Expression of matrix metalloproteinases during rat skin wound healing: evidence that membrane type-1 matrix metalloproteinase is a stromal activator of pro-gelatinase A. 910 37
We have investigated the role of proteinases in the developmental program of bone, cartilage, tongue muscle and epithelial differentiation and remodeling in the mandibular arch during murine embryogenesis. Expression of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and their tissue inhibitors (TIMPs) was tissue-specific with little or no expression in the epithelium of tooth buds, tongue or oral cavity. Gelatinase A mRNA transcripts were strongly expressed in the perichondrium of Meckel's cartilage and mesenchymal areas of embryonic day 13-15 mandibles, whereas
gelatinase B
, collagenase-3, TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 mRNA were found primarily in the ossifying areas of the mandibles. The skeletal muscle of the tongue expressed stromelysin-3, TIMP-2 and TIMP-3 mRNA while stromelysin-3, TIMP-2 and gelatinase A were seen in the overlying connective tissue layer. Gelatinase A,
gelatinase B
,
stromelysin
-1, urokinase, TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 mRNA and protein activities were also detected in cultured mandibular explants. Culture of day 10 mandibular explants with a hydroxamic acid metalloproteinase inhibitor, but not with inhibitors of metalloendopeptidases (thiorphan and phosphoramidon), serine proteinases (aprotinin), cysteine proteinases (leupeptin) and urokinase (amiloride), altered mandibular morphogenesis dramatically. Development of the tongue (glossogenesis) and cartilage, but not bone or teeth was affected. Formation of the oral sulcus and fusion of the two epithelia of the medial sulcus were inhibited, and number and migration of myoblasts decreased. The resulting 'tongue-tied phenotype' indicates that MMPs are involved in epithelial morphogenesis and the migration of myoblasts to the region of the tongue. Development of the anterior segment of Meckel's cartilage was also inhibited and proteoglycan content of the cartilage was reduced by inhibiting MMPs. Our data suggest that matrix metalloproteinases play a pivotal role in the morphogenesis of structures derived from epithelium (oral sulcus), cranial paraxial mesoderm (tongue) and cranial neural crest (Meckel's cartilage).
...
PMID:Matrix metalloproteinases regulate morphogenesis, migration and remodeling of epithelium, tongue skeletal muscle and cartilage in the mandibular arch. 910 68
Decorin (DCN) is a ubiquitous proteoglycan comprised of a core protein attached to a single dermatan/chondroitin sulphate glycosaminoglycan chain. It may play a role in regulation of collagen fibrillogenesis and function as a reservoir of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) in the extracellular milieu. We have examined the susceptibility of DCN to five different matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs): MMP-1 (tissue collagenase), MMP-2 (gelatinase A),
MMP-3
(
stromelysin 1
), MMP-7 (matrilysin) and MMP-9 (
gelatinase B
). MMP-2 and
MMP-3
digest DCN into seven major fragments in a similar pattern. The N-terminal sequence of the two fragments generated by MMP-2 and
MMP-3
is Leu211-Lys-Gly-Leu-Asn, but that of the others is Asp1-Glu-Ala-Ser-Gly. MMP-7 cleaves DCN into three major fragments which have the N-termini Asp1-Glu-Ala-Ser-Gly, Glu2-Ala-Ser-Gly-Ile and Leu244-His-Leu-Asp-Asn. Activities of MMP-1 and MMP-9 against DCN are negligible. The values of Km for the MMPs capable of degrading DCN are very similar (10-12 microM), but the kcat/Km value for MMP-7 (30.5 microM-1.h-1) is 4.5-fold higher than those for MMP-2 and
MMP-3
. Incubation of a DCN-TGF-beta1 complex with MMP-2, -3 or -7 results in release of TGF-beta1 from the complex. These data indicate proteolytic degradation of DCN by MMP-2,
MMP-3
and MMP-7, and suggest the possibility that, under pathophysiological conditions, the digestion by the MMPs may induce tissue reactions mediated by TGF-beta1 released from DCN in the connective tissues.
...
PMID:Degradation of decorin by matrix metalloproteinases: identification of the cleavage sites, kinetic analyses and transforming growth factor-beta1 release. 914 53
To study the role of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in early vertebrate development, we cloned cDNAs for six different MMPs from the frog Xenopus laevis embryos at different stages of development and describe here a novel MMP called XMMP. Xenopus XMMP has 604 amino acids including a putative signal peptide of 22 residues. At the carboxyl-terminal end of the propeptide, XMMP has a 37-amino acid-long insertion domain containing a segment that is 38% identical with a rat vitronectin sequence between residues 108-135. Following this domain is an RRKR motif, a putative cleavage site for intracellular activation by furin proteinases. XMMP lacks a proline-rich linker peptide, or hinge region, typically found in other MMPs between the catalytic domain and carboxyl-terminal "hemopexin/vitronectin-like" domain. In XMMP, the carboxyl-terminal domain is composed of four tandem repeats that are 21-33% identical to a sequence (residues 213-264) encoded by vitronectin exon-5. Interestingly, XMMP gene is transiently expressed during Xenopus embryo development. XMMP mRNA of 3.0 kilobase pairs was undetected in the blastula stage embryo, induced in gastrula embryo, expressed in neurula embryo, and then down-regulated in pretailbud embryo. In comparison, other Xenopus MMP genes that we have cloned show a different developmental regulation. In blastula embryo, the only MMP gene expressed was found to be
92-kDa type IV collagenase
, which was also expressed in the gastrula, neurula, and pretailbud embryos. Expression of
stromelysin
-1, stromelysin-3, and two different membrane type-MMPs was first detected in the neurula and pretailbud embryos. These results suggest that MMPs and the novel XMMP reported here play a role in Xenopus early development.
...
PMID:A novel matrix metalloproteinase gene (XMMP) encoding vitronectin-like motifs is transiently expressed in Xenopus laevis early embryo development. 915 98
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