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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)
Mast cell activation in vivo is often associated with areas of oedema and connective-tissue degradation. Tryptase and
chymase
are the major serine proteinases released by mast cells, but they appear to have little activity on most components of the extracellular matrix. The matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) are purported to degrade almost all connective tissue elements and are secreted by cells in the form of inactive precursors. Since the mechanisms of MMP activation in vivo are poorly understood we have examined the potential of mast cell proteinases to activate the precursor forms of human collagenase (MMP-1), stromelysin (MMP-3), gelatinase A (MMP-2) and
gelatinase B
(MMP-9). Mast cell proteinases prepared from purified dog mastocytoma cells were shown to process and activate purified precursor forms of both MMP-1 and MMP-3. Using antipain and chymostatin, inhibitors for tryptase and
chymase
, respectively, it was demonstrated that both pMMP-1 and pMMP-3 were effectively processed and activated by the
chymase
component. By contrast, tryptase activated only pMMP-3. The mast cell proteinases were unable to process or activate purified precursor forms of MMP-2 and MMP-9. However, MMP-3 previously activated by mast cell proteinases was shown to activate pMMP-9, but not pMMP-2. Since we have no evidence that mast cells express these four metalloenzymes, the release of mast cell serine proteinases following activation/degranulation could contribute to local metalloproteinase activation and subsequent matrix degradation.
...
PMID:Mast cell proteinases activate precursor forms of collagenase and stromelysin, but not of gelatinases A and B. 803 91
Gelatinolytic metalloproteinases implicated in connective tissue remodeling and tumor invasion are secreted from several types of cells in the form of inactive zymogens. In this report, characterization of gelatinase activity secreted by the BR line of dog mastocytoma cells reveals a phorbol-inducible, approximately 92-kD, Ca2+ - and Zn2+ -dependent proenzyme cleaved over time to smaller, active forms. Incubation of cells with the general serine protease inhibitor, PMSF, prevented proenzyme cleavage and permitted its purification free of activation products. The NH2-terminal 13 amino acids of the purified mastocytoma progelatinase are 50-67% identical to those of human, mouse, and rabbit 92-kD progelatinase (
gelatinase B
; matrix metalloproteinase-9). Degranulation of mastocytoma cells using ionophore A23187 greatly accelerated proenzyme cleavage, suggesting that a serine protease present in secretory granules hydrolyzed the progelatinase to active fragments. To identify the activating protease, cells were coincubated with ionophore and a panel of selective serine protease inhibitors. Soybean trypsin inhibitor and succinyl-L-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-chloromethylketone, which inhibit
mast cell chymase
, prevented progelatinase activation. Inhibitors of tryptase and dog mast cell protease (dMCP)-3, i.e., aprotinin or bis(5-amidino-2-benzimidazolyl) methane (BABIM), did not. In further experiments using highly purified enzymes, mastocytoma cell
chymase
activated 92-kD progelatinase in the absence of other enzymes or cofactors; tryptase and dMCP-3, however, had no effect. These data demonstrate that dog mastocytoma cells secrete a metalloproteinase related to progelatinase B that is directly activated outside of the cell by exocytosed
chymase
, and provide the first demonstration of a cell that activates a matrix metalloproteinase it secretes by cosecreting an activating enzyme. In mastocytomas, this pathway may facilitate tumor invasion of surrounding tissues, and in normal mast cells, it could play a role in tissue remodeling and repair.
...
PMID:Dog mastocytoma cells secrete a 92-kD gelatinase activated extracellularly by mast cell chymase. 860 22
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.
...
PMID:Dog mast cell alpha-chymase activates progelatinase B by cleaving the Phe88-Gln89 and Phe91-Glu92 bonds of the catalytic domain. 932 84
Our prior work shows that cultured BR cells derived from dog mastocytomas secrete the 92-kDa proenzyme form of
gelatinase B
. We provided a possible link between mast cell activation and metalloproteinase-mediated matrix degradation by demonstrating that alpha-
chymase
, a serine protease released from secretory granules by degranulating mast cells, converts progelatinase B to an enzymatically active form. The current work shows that these cells also secrete gelatinase A. Furthermore, gelatinases A and B both colocalize to alpha-
chymase
-expressing cells of canine airway, suggesting that normal mast cells are a source of gelatinases in the lung. In BR cells,
gelatinase B
and alpha-
chymase
expression are regulated, whereas gelatinase A expression is constitutive. Progelatinase B mRNA and enzyme expression are strongly induced by the critical mast cell growth factor, kit ligand, which is produced by fibroblasts and other stromal cells. Induction of progelatinase B is blocked by U-73122, Ro31-8220, and thapsigargin, implicating phospholipase C, protein kinase C, and Ca2+, respectively, in the kit ligand effect. The profibrotic cytokine TGF-beta virtually abolishes the
gelatinase B
mRNA signal and also attenuates kit ligand-mediated induction of
gelatinase B
expression, suggesting that an excess of TGF-beta in inflamed or injured tissues may alter mast cell expression of
gelatinase B
, which is implicated in extracellular matrix degradation, angiogenesis, and apoptosis. In summary, these data provide the first evidence that normal mast cells express gelatinases A and B and suggest pathways by which their regulated expression by mast cells can influence matrix remodeling and fibrosis.
...
PMID:Mast cell expression of gelatinases A and B is regulated by kit ligand and TGF-beta. 1022 34
Expression of HPV16 early region genes in basal keratinocytes of transgenic mice elicits a multistage pathway to squamous carcinoma. We report that infiltration by mast cells and activation of the matrix metalloproteinase MMP-9/
gelatinase B
coincides with the angiogenic switch in premalignant lesions. Mast cells infiltrate hyperplasias, dysplasias, and invasive fronts of carcinomas, but not the core of solid tumors, where they degranulate in close apposition to capillaries and epithelial basement membranes, releasing mast-cell-specific serine proteases MCP-4 (
chymase
) and MCP-6 (tryptase). MCP-6 is shown to be a mitogen for dermal fibroblasts that proliferate in the reactive stroma, whereas MCP-4 can activate progelatinase B and induce hyperplastic skin to become angiogenic in an in vitro bioassay. Notably, premalignant angiogenesis is abated in a mast-cell-deficient (KITW/KITWWv) HPV16 transgenic mouse. The data indicate that neoplastic progression in this model involves exploitation of an inflammatory response to tissue abnormality. Thus, regulation of angiogenesis during squamous carcinogenesis is biphasic: In hyperplasias, dysplasias, and invading cancer fronts, inflammatory mast cells are conscripted to reorganize stromal architecture and hyperactivate angiogenesis; within the cancer core, upregulation of angiogenesis factors in tumor cells apparently renders them self-sufficient at sustaining neovascularization.
...
PMID:Inflammatory mast cells up-regulate angiogenesis during squamous epithelial carcinogenesis. 1036 56
In vascular tissues,
chymase
catalyzes the production of angiotensin II, which plays a crucial role in vascular diseases. Recent clinical studies and animal models of vascular proliferation and atherosclerosis have provided evidence that angiotensin II formed by
chymase
is involved in these processes. These observations suggest that
chymase
might promote the development of vascular proliferation and atherosclerosis. Chymase also activates
matrix metalloproteinase 9
, which promotes aortic aneurysm and angiogenesis, and thus
chymase
inhibitors might also prevent the progression of abdominal aortic aneurysm and angiogenesis. We propose that
chymase
is a novel target for preventing vascular diseases.
...
PMID:Chymase as a novel target for the prevention of vascular diseases. 1538 Sep 35
Previous work has shown that endothelial cell (EC)-derived matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) regulate regression of capillary tubes in vitro in a plasmin- and MMP-1 dependent manner. Here we report that a number of serine proteases can activate MMP-1 and cause capillary tube regression; namely plasma kallikrein, trypsin, neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G, tryptase and
chymase
. Plasma prekallikrein failed to induce regression without coactivators such as high molecular weight kininogen (HMWK) or coagulation Factor XII. The addition of trypsin, the neutrophil serine proteases (neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G) and the mast cell serine proteases (tryptase and
chymase
) each caused MMP-1 activation and collagen type I proteolysis, capillary tubular network collapse, regression and EC apoptosis. Capillary tube collapse is accompanied by collagen gel contraction, which is strongly related to the wound contraction that occurs during regression of granulation tissue in vivo. We also report that proMMP-10 protein expression is markedly induced in ECs undergoing capillary tube morphogenesis. Addition of each of the serine proteases described above led to activation of proMMP-10, which also correlated with MMP-1 activation and capillary tube regression. Treatment of ECs with MMP-1 or MMP-10 siRNA markedly delayed capillary tube regression, whereas gelatinase A (MMP-2),
gelatinase B
(MMP-9) and stromelysin-1 (MMP-3) siRNA-treated cells behaved in a similar manner to controls and regressed normally. Increased expression of MMP-1 or MMP-10 in ECs using recombinant adenoviral delivery markedly accelerated serine protease-induced capillary tube regression. ECs expressing increased levels of MMP-10 activated MMP-1 to a greater degree than control ECs. Thus, MMP-10-induced activation of MMP-1 correlated with tube regression and gel contraction. In summary, our work demonstrates that MMP-1 zymogen activation is mediated by multiple serine proteases and MMP-10, and that these events are central to EC-mediated collagen degradation and capillary tube regression in 3D collagen matrices.
...
PMID:MMP-1 activation by serine proteases and MMP-10 induces human capillary tubular network collapse and regression in 3D collagen matrices. 1587 Jan 7