Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.35 (matrix metalloproteinase 9)
2,207 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

N-terminal analysis of aggrecan fragments lost from bovine nasal cartilage cultured in the presence of recombinant human interleukin 1alpha revealed a predominant ARGSVIL sequence with an additional ADLEX sequence. Production of the ARGSVIL-containing fragments has been attributed to the action of a putative proteinase, aggrecanase. The minor sequence (ADLEX) corresponds to a new reported cleavage product; comparison of this sequence with the available partial sequence of bovine aggrecan indicates that this is the product of a cleavage occurring towards the C-terminus of the protein. Matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitors inhibited aggrecan loss from bovine nasal explants incubated in the presence of recombinant human interleukin 1alpha. A strong correlation between inhibition of aggrecan metabolism and inhibition of stromelysin 1 (MMP 3) (r=0.93) suggests a role for stromelysin or a stromelysin-like enzyme in cartilage aggrecan metabolism. However, the compounds were approx. 1/1000 as potent in inhibiting aggrecan loss from the cartilage explants as they were in inhibiting stromelysin. There was little or no correlation between inhibition of aggrecan metabolism and inhibition of gelatinase B (MMP 9) or inhibition of collagenase 1 (MMP 1). Studies with collagenase inhibitors with a range of potencies showed a correlation between inhibition of collagenase activity and inhibition of collagen degradation in the cartilage explant assay. This indicates that in interleukin 1alpha-driven bovine nasal cartilage destruction, stromelysin (or a closely related enzyme) is involved in aggrecan metabolism, whereas collagenase is principally responsible for collagen degradation.
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PMID:Inhibition of bovine nasal cartilage degradation by selective matrix metalloproteinase inhibitors. 916 42

Connective tissues synthesise and secrete a family of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) which are capable of degrading most components of the extracellular matrix. Animal studies suggest that the MMPs play a role in bone turnover. Using specific polyclonal antisera, immunohistochemistry was used to determine the patterns of synthesis and distribution of collagenase (MMP-1), stromelysin (MMP-3), gelatinase A (MMP-2) and gelatinase B (MMP-9) and of the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-1 (TIMP-1) within developing human osteophytic bone. The different MMPs and TIMP showed distinct patterns of localisation. Collagenase expression was seen at sites of vascular invasion, in osteoblasts synthesising new matrix and in some osteoclasts at sites of resorption. Chondrocytes demonstrated variable levels of collagenase and stromelysin expression throughout the proliferative and hypertrophic regions, stromelysin showing both cell-associated and strong matrix staining. Intense gelatinase B expression was observed at sites of bone resorption in osteoclasts and mononuclear cells. Gelatinase A was only weakly expressed in the fibrocartilage adjacent to areas of endochondral ossification. There was widespread but variable expression of TIMP-1 throughout the fibrous tissue, cartilage and bone. These results indicate that MMPs play a role in the development of human bone from cartilage and fibrous tissue and are likely to have multiple functions.
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PMID:Distribution of matrix metalloproteinases and their inhibitor, TIMP-1, in developing human osteophytic bone. 927 57

Physical disruption of an atheromatous lesion often underlies acute coronary syndromes. Matrix-degrading enzymes, eg, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), may cause loss in mechanical integrity of plaque tissue that favors rupture. T lymphocytes accumulate at sites where atheromata rupture, but the mechanisms by which these immune cells may contribute to plaque destabilization are unknown. This study tested the hypothesis that the T-lymphocyte surface molecule CD40 ligand (CD40L), recently localized in atherosclerotic plaques, regulates the expression of MMPs in human vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs), the most numerous cell type in arteries. We report here that stimulated human T lymphocytes induced the expression of the matrix-degrading enzymes, ie, interstitial collagenase (MMP-1), stromelysin (MMP-3), gelatinase B (MMP-9), and activated gelatinase A (MMP-2), in human vascular SMCs by cell contact via CD40 ligation, as demonstrated by Western blot analysis, zymography, and antibody neutralization. Recombinant human CD40L (rCD40L) induced de novo synthesis of MMP-1, MMP-3, and MMP-9 on vascular SMCs and stimulated the expression of these enzymes to a greater extent than did maximally effective concentrations of tumor necrosis factor-alpha or interleukin-1beta, established agonists of MMP expression. Interferon gamma, another T-lymphocyte- derived cytokine, inhibited the induction of MMPs by rCD40L. Immunohistochemical analysis of human coronary atheromata colocalized MMP-1 and MMP-3 with CD40-positive SMCs. These results demonstrated that CD40 ligand, expressed on T lymphocytes, promoted the expression of matrix-degrading enzymes in vascular SMCs and thus established a new pathway of immune-modulated destabilization in human atheromata.
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PMID:Regulation of matrix metalloproteinase expression in human vascular smooth muscle cells by T lymphocytes: a role for CD40 signaling in plaque rupture? 928 47

The attachment of the blastocyst to the uterine luminal epithelium and the subsequent invasion by trophoblast cells through the stroma and deciduum occur in a highly regulated manner by remodeling of the extracellular matrix. We investigated the temporal and spatial expression of mRNAs for four matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs; MMP-2 [gelatinase A], MMP-3 [stromelysin 1], MMPs; MMP-2 [gelatinase B], and MMP-13 [collagenase 3]) and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs; TIMP-1, TIMP-2, and TIMP-3) in the mouse uterus from days 1 to 8 of pregnancy. Northern blot analyses showed the transcripts for MMP-2, MMP-3, RNA on these days. However, MMP-13 mRNA was not detected in the uterus, and only weak signals for MMP-3 mRNA were detected in the myometrium. Striking expression was observed with MMP-2 mRNA in the subepithelial stroma on days 3-5. With the progression of decidualization on day 6, signals were primarily in the secondary decidual zone. On day 8, MMP-2 mRNA was localized at the site of placenta formation in the mesometrial pole. Signals for MMP-9 mRNA were first detected in a small population of stromal cells exclusively at the site of implantation on day 5 at the antimesometrial pole. However, the most pronounced expressed was noted in trophoblast giant cells on day 8. TIMP-1 mRNA was present in the myometrium on day 1. On days 2-5, modest signals were detected in the stroma, and on days 6 and 8, they were in the secondary decidual zone. Localization of TIMP-2 mRNA was similar to that of TIMP-1 except it was restricted to the stroma on day 1. The regulation of TIMP-3 was more pronounced. While a gradual increase in signals was observed in stromal cells from days 1 to 4, strong signals were detected in antimesometrial stromal cells at the sites of blastocyst attachment on day 5. On days 6 and 7, even stronger signals were present in the primary decidual zone surrounding the embryo, and on day 8 signals were localized primarily in the mesometrial decidual bed. These results suggest that MMP-2 may participate in the early phase of decidualization and neovascularization required for placentation. The restricted MMP-9 expression in stromal cells on day 5 and in trophoblast giant cells on day 8, coupled with the expression of TIMP-3 in the stroma surrounding the embryo, suggests that a fine balance between MMP-9 and TIMP-3 may regulate trophoblast invasion in the uterus.
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PMID:Expression of matrix metalloproteinases and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases in the mouse uterus during the peri-implantation period. 929 79

In prior work we showed that a metallogelatinase is secreted from dog mastocytoma cells and directly activated by exocytosed mast cell alpha-chymase. The current work identifies the protease as a canine homologue of progelatinase B (92-kDa gelatinase, MMP-9), determines the sites cleaved by alpha-chymase, and explores the regulation of gelatinase expression in mastocytoma cells. To obtain a cDNA encoding the complete sequence of mastocytoma gelatinase B, a 2. 3-kilobase clone encoding progelatinase was isolated from a BR mastocytoma library. The sequenced cDNA predicts a 704-amino acid protein 80% identical to human progelatinase B. Regions thought to be critical for active site latency, such as the Cys-containing propeptide sequence, PRCGVPD, and the catalytic domain sequence, HEFGHALGLDHSS, are entirely conserved. Cleavage of progelatinase B by purified dog alpha-chymase yielded an approximately 84-kDa product that contained two NH2-terminal amino acid sequences, QTFEGDLKXH and EGDLKXHHND, which correspond to residues 89-98 and 92-101 of the cDNA predicted sequence, respectively. Thus, alpha-chymase cleaves the catalytic domain of gelatinase B at the Phe88-Gln89 and Phe91-Glu92 bonds. Like BR cells, the C2 line of dog mastocytoma cells constitutively secrete progelatinase B which is activated by alpha-chymase. By contrast, non-chymase-producing C1 cells secrete a gelatinase B (which remains in its proform) only in response to 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. Whereas 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate stimulation of BR cells produced a approximately 15-fold increase in gelatinase B mRNA expression, dexamethasone down-regulated its expression by approximately 5-fold. Thus, extracellular stimuli may regulate the amount of mast cell progelatinase B expressed by mast cells. These data further support a role for mast cell alpha-chymase in tissue remodeling involving gelatinase B-mediated degradation of matrix proteins.
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PMID:Dog mast cell alpha-chymase activates progelatinase B by cleaving the Phe88-Gln89 and Phe91-Glu92 bonds of the catalytic domain. 932 84

The temporal relationship of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and a specific tissue inhibitor (TIMP-1) has been examined by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and substrate zymography, after balloon catheter angioplasty of the rat carotid artery. The contralateral uninjured carotid artery was used as a comparative control. Of the MMPs examined, only MMP-2 (72-kDa gelatinase) was produced constitutively by normal uninjured arteries. After injury, MMP-2 mRNA levels fell compared with the uninjured arteries; by 24 hours, levels had increased 2-fold. Zymography showed that the inactive form of MMP-2 predominated in uninjured vessels, but after injury, the level of the active form was increased. MMP-9 (92-kDa gelatinase) mRNA levels and activity peaked at 6 hours after injury and were still detectable at 7 days. MMP-3 (stromelysin) expression was detectable at low levels as early as 2 hours after injury and showed an approximate 2-fold increase of expression at 7 days. The presence of the active protein paralleled the mRNA expression. The inhibitor TIMP-1 mRNA was first detected 6 hours after injury and showed a marked peak of expression at 24 hours; however, no expression was detected by 7 days. The presence of a constitutively expressed, low molecular weight caseinolytic enzyme (27 kDa) was observed, and the induction of a caseinolytic enzyme (30 kDa) was noted that was induced as early as 2 hours after injury, peaked at 6 hours, and was barely detectable by 7 days. These results demonstrate that the process of extracellular matrix breakdown by MMPs after balloon catheter-induced injury is controlled by a tightly regulated temporal response by the genes responsible for the production of these enzymes and their inhibitor and by post-translational activation of the proenzymes.
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PMID:Expression of matrix metalloproteinases and their inhibitor TIMP-1 in the rat carotid artery after balloon injury. 932 85

Human progelatinase B was activated by collagenase-3 in a time-dependent fashion. Activation proceeded through an intermediate form of Mr 86,000 to the final active form of Mr 82,000. N-terminal amino acid sequence determination demonstrated that the Glu40-Met41 peptide bond was initially hydrolysed followed by cleavage of the Arg87-Phe88 peptide bond releasing the rest of the propeptide domain which was accompanied by the achievement of maximal enzymatic activity as revealed using a quenched fluorescent substrate. Kinetic analysis of activation revealed that the rates were dependent on the concentration of the proenzyme as well as active collagenase-3. Active gelatinase B did not contribute to the activation rate of the proenzyme initiated by collagenase-3 and our results indicate that progelatinase B activation proceeds via bimolecular cleavage with collagenase-3 involving sequential cleavage of the propeptide in two steps. The activation rates were not dependent on C-terminal domain interactions between progelatinase B and collagenase-3, as assessed using wild-type and C-terminal deletion mutants of both enzymes. Since elevated levels of both gelatinase B and collagenase-3 have been observed in arthritis and breast cancer pathology these enzymes may well form a proteolytic cascade in these diseases which allows rapid turnover of the extracellular matrix.
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PMID:Activation of progelatinase B (proMMP-9) by active collagenase-3 (MMP-13). 934 90

The glomerular basement membrane (GBM) is damaged in diabetes through complex mechanisms that are not fully understood. Prominent among them is nonenzymatic protein glycation leading to the formation of so-called advanced glycation end products (AGEs). We examined the effects of in vitro glycation of intact collagen type IV in bovine lens capsule (LBM) and kidney glomerular (GBM) basement membranes on their susceptibility to matrix metalloproteinases, using stromelysin 1 (MMP-3) and gelatinase B (MMP-9). Sites of cleavage of unmodified LBM collagen were located in the triple helical region. In vitro glycation by glucose severely inhibited the release of soluble collagen cleavage peptides by MMP-3 and MMP-9. The distribution of AGEs within the three domains of collagen IV (7S, triple helical, and noncollagenous NC1) were compared for LBM glycation using AGE fluorescence, pentosidine quantitation, and immunoreactivity towards anti-AGE antibodies that recognize the AGE carboxymethyllysine (CML). Marked asymmetry was observed, with the flexible triple helical domain having the most pentosidine and fluorescent AGEs but the least CML. The in vivo relevance of these findings is supported by preliminary studies of AGE distribution in renal basement membrane (RBM) collagen IV domains from human kidneys of two insulin-dependent diabetics and one normal subject. Pentosidine and fluorescent AGE distributions of diabetic RBM were similar to LBM, but the CML AGE in diabetic kidney was less in the triple helical domain than in NC1. Our results support the hypothesis that nonenzymatic glycation of collagen IV contributes to the thickening of basement membranes, a hallmark of diabetic nephropathy.
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PMID:Nonenzymatic glycation of type IV collagen and matrix metalloproteinase susceptibility. 935 Jun 53

Phospholipase C (PLC) is a putative virulence factor of several pathogenic bacteria. We studied if exogenous PLC would perturb epithelial behavior in infected tissues. Gelatin and casein zymography of cell culture medium indicated that the broad-spectrum PLC of Bacillus cereus induced matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) production in epithelial cells of human skin (NHEK), human gingiva (HGE), and porcine periodontal ligament (PLE). In all three cell types, the strongest increase (ninefold) at 0.1 U/ml was seen in the MMP-9 (92-kDa gelatinase) activity, and the effect was dose dependent in the range of 0.1 to 1.0 U/ml. A relatively weaker increase (twofold) in MMP-2 (72-kDa gelatinase) was also observed in each cell type. PLC induction of MMP-3 (48-kDa stromelysin) was also seen in NHEK and HGE on gelatin and more sensitively for PLE by casein zymography (fivefold). Total gelatinolytic activity as measured by degradation of 14C-labeled denatured type I collagen increased by about 18-fold (NHEK), 12-fold (HGE), and 14-fold (PLE). Northern analysis showed a clear increase in the MMP-9, and a minor increase in MMP-3 mRNA levels but no significant increase in MMP-2 mRNA levels. Further studies with PLE revealed that MMP-9 induction by PLC progressively increased with the length of cell culture time in the absence of serum. PLC induction of MMPs was polar, with MMP-9 and MMP-3 secreted primarily in the apical direction and MMP-2 secreted mainly in the basal direction. The PLC effect was blocked by neomycin, an inhibitor of the phosphoinositol signal pathway. No significant effects were observed in MMP expression with the calcium ionophore A23187 or phospholipase A2. Morphologically, PLC treatment resulted in reduced contacts between the cultured cells and loss of the cell surface microvilli. These results suggest that PLC secreted by bacterial pathogens may disrupt epithelium of infected tissue and increase the subepithelial tissue destruction through induction of MMPs.
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PMID:Bacterial phospholipase C upregulates matrix metalloproteinase expression by cultured epithelial cells. 939 78

A potential physiological role of stromelysin-1 (MMP-3) in the expression or activation of gelatinase A (MMP-2) or gelatinase B (MMP-9) in the wall of injured arteries was studied with the use of homozygous MMP-3-deficient (MMP-3-/-) mice. One week after perivascular electric injury of the carotid or femoral artery in wild-type (MMP-3+/+) or MMP-3-/- mice, 70 kD and 65 kD proMMP-2 levels were enhanced by twofold to fourfold, with corresponding increases of 20- to 40-fold for active 61 kD and 58 kD MMP-2, and of 10- to 80-fold for 94 kD proMMP-9. Active MMP-2 species represented approximately one third of the total MMP-2 concentration for both MMP-3+/+ and MMP-3-/- mice. Active 83 kD MMP-9 was not detected in noninjured carotid or femoral arteries, whereas one week after injury its contribution to the total MMP-9 level was 11% to 18% for MMP-3+/+ and MMP-3-/- mice. Immunostaining of arterial sections confirmed enhanced expression of both MMP-2 and MMP-9 after vascular injury. Double immunostaining showed colocalization of MMP-9 with macrophages in the adventitia, whereas MMP-2 was also detected mainly in the adventitia but failed to colocalize with smooth muscle cells. Cell culture experiments confirmed comparable ratios of active versus latent MMP-2 in skin fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells derived from MMP-3+/+ and MMP-3-/- mice. Addition of plasmin(ogen) did not significantly affect activation of proMMP-2. In MMP-3+/+ and MMP-3-/- macrophages, comparable levels of 94 kD proMMP-9 were detected, and plasmin(ogen)-mediated conversion to 83 kD MMP-9 was obtained in both genotypes. These data thus indicate that proMMP-2 activation may occur via a plasmin- and MMP-3-independent mechanism, whereas plasmin can directly activate proMMP-9 via a MMP-3-independent mechanism.
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PMID:Stromelysin-1 (MMP-3)-independent gelatinase expression and activation in mice. 949 Jun 89


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