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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)
Doxycycline is a commonly used broad-spectrum antibiotic. Recently, it has been shown that it also inhibits the activity of mammalian collagenases and gelatinases, an activity unrelated to its antimicrobial efficacy. In this study, we show that doxycycline not only inhibits MMP-8 and MMP-9 (
gelatinase B
) activity, but also the synthesis of MMPs in human endothelial cells. Doxycycline (50 microM) completely inhibited the phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA)-mediated induction of MMP-8 and MMP-9, as measured by Western blotting and gelatin zymography, respectively. The inhibition was also observed at the mRNA level. No effect was observed on the expression of MMP-2 and of the
MMP
inhibitors TIMP-1 and TIMP-2. Chemically modified tetracyclines (CMTs) showed an inhibition similar to that of doxycycline, albeit less efficient. These observations demonstrate that endothelial cells display a specific regulation of MMPs, which may have implications for the pharmaceutical interaction in angiogenesis and angiogenesis-related diseases.
...
PMID:Inhibition of MMP synthesis by doxycycline and chemically modified tetracyclines (CMTs) in human endothelial cells. 997 33
The in vitro release of matrix-degrading proteinases from breast cancer cells is associated in part with shed membrane vesicles. To determine whether shed vesicles might play a similar role in ovarian cancer cells, we analyzed the shedding phenomenon in vivo and in vitro as well as the enzymatic content of their vesicles. This is the first time that an immunoelectron microscopical analysis revealed membrane vesicles carrying tumor-associated antigen alpha-Folate Receptor (alpha-FR), circulating in biological fluids (ascites and serum) of an ovarian carcinoma patient. These vesicles were trapped in a fiber network with characteristic fibrin periodicity. An ovarian cancer cell line (CABA I) established from ascitic fluid cells of this patient, grew in Matrigel and formed tubular structures suggesting invasive capability. Immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated strong cytoplasmic staining of CABA I cells with anti-matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) and anti-urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) antibodies. CABA I cells shed membrane vesicles, which were morphologically similar to those identified in vivo, as determined by electron microscopy. Gelatin zymography of vesicles isolated both in vivo and in vitro revealed major gelatinolytic bands of the
MMP
family, identified as the zymogen and active forms of
gelatinase B
(MMP-9) and gelatinase A (MMP-2). By casein-plasminogen zymography we observed high-molecular weight (HMW)-uPA and plasmin bands. Incubation of purified vesicles from CABA I cells with Matrigel led to cleavage of Matrigel components. Taken together, our results point to a possible role of shed vesicles, both in vivo and in vitro, in proteolysis that mediates invasion and spread of ovarian epithelial carcinoma cells.
...
PMID:Matrix-degrading proteinases are shed in membrane vesicles by ovarian cancer cells in vivo and in vitro. 1041 Nov 5
Normal wounds can heal by secondary intention (epidermal migration to cover a denuded surface) or by approximation of the wound edges (e.g., suturing). In healing by secondary intention, epidermis-derived MMPs are important. Keratinocyte migration begins within 3-6 hr post injury, as basal cells detach from underlying basal lamina and encounter a dermal substratum rich in type I collagen. Cell contact with type I collagen in vitro stimulates collagenase-1 expression, which is mediated by the alpha 2 beta 1 integrin, the major keratinocyte collagen-binding receptor. Collagenase-1 activity alone is necessary and sufficient for keratinocyte migration over a collagen subsurface. Stromelysins-1 and -2 are also found in the epidermis of normal acute wounds. Stromelysin-2 co-localizes with collagenase-1 and may facilitate cell migration over non-collagenous matrices of the dermis. In contrast, stromelysin-1 is expressed by keratinocytes behind the migrating front and which remain on basal lamina, i.e., the proliferative cell population. Studies with stromelysin-1-deficient mice that suggest this
MMP
plays a role in keratinocyte detachment from underlying basement membrane to initiate cell migration. In chronic ulcers,
MMP
levels are markedly elevated, in contrast to their precise temporal and spatial expression in acute wounds. Both collagenase-1 and stromelysin-1 are found in fibroblasts underlying the nonhealing epithelium, and stromelysin-1 expression is especially prominent. Two key questions underlie the use of
MMP
inhibitors and wound healing: (1) will these agents impair normal reepithelialization in wounds that heal by secondary intention; and (2) can
MMP
inhibitors be effective therapy for chronic ulcers? The answer to neither is known. Batimastat and marimastat appear not to interfere with normal wound healing, but only in sutured surgical wounds, a situation in which
MMP
expression has practically no role. We also show the first example of an in vivo immune response, contact hypersensitivity, which is dependent upon
MMP
activity. Using gene-deficient mice, we demonstrate that stromylysin-1 (MMP-3) is required for sensitization, whereas
gelatinase B
(MMP-9) is required for timely resolution of the reaction to antigenic challenge.
...
PMID:Role of matrix metalloproteinases and their inhibition in cutaneous wound healing and allergic contact hypersensitivity. 1041 17
The balance between production and activation of MMPs and their inhibition by TIMPs is a crucial aspect of cancer invasion and metastasis. On the basis of the concept that MMPs synthesized in tissues seep into the bloodstream, we have examined
MMP
levels in the plasma of patients with cancer. In colorectal, breast, prostate, and bladder cancer, most patients with aggressive disease have increased plasma levels of
gelatinase B
. In patients with advanced colorectal cancer, high levels of either
gelatinase B
or TIMP complex were associated with shortened survival. We propose that these assays may be clinically useful in characterizing metastatic potential in selected kinds of cancer. In rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), serum and plasma levels of stromelysin-1 were approximately 3-5-fold increased. Fluctuating serum stromelysin-1 levels in SLE did not correspond with change in disease activity. In SLE, stromelysin-1 may be a component of the chronic tissue repair process rather than being responsible for inciting tissue damage. On the basis of these observations, we conclude that measurement of plasma/serum
MMP
and TIMP levels may provide important data for selecting and following patients considered for treatment with drugs that interfere with
MMP
activity.
...
PMID:Measurement of matrix metalloproteinases and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases in blood and tissues. Clinical and experimental applications. 1041 33
Gelatinase B is a matrix metalloproteinase (MMP-9) involved in tissue remodeling, development, cancer, and inflammation. Neutrophils produce three major forms of (pro)
gelatinase B
: 92 kDa monomers, homodimers, and complexes of
gelatinase B
covalently bound to neutrophil gelatinase B-associated lipocalin (NGAL). In contrast to the case for other proteinases, little information about the glycosylation of any natural human
MMP
is available. Here, both
gelatinase B
and NGAL were purified from human peripheral blood neutrophils, and the entire contents of the released N- and O-glycan pools were analyzed simultaneously using recently developed high-performance liquid chromatography-based technology. The results are discussed within the context of the domain structure of
gelatinase B
and a molecular model of NGAL based on data from this study and the three-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) structure of the protein. More than 95% of the N-linked glycans attached to both
gelatinase B
and NGAL were partially sialylated, core-fucosylated biantennary structures with and without outer arm fucose. The O-linked glycans, which were estimated to comprise approximately 85% of the total sugars on
gelatinase B
, mainly consisted of type 2 cores with Galbeta1,4GlcNAc (lactosamine) extensions, with or without sialic acid or outer arm fucose. This paper also contains the first report of O-linked glycans attached to NGAL. Although both proteins were isolated from neutrophils and contained O-linked glycans mainly with type 2 cores, the glycans attached to individual serine/threonine residue(s) in NGAL were significantly smaller than those on
gelatinase B
. In contrast to NGAL,
gelatinase B
contains a region rich in Ser, Thr, and Pro typical of O-glycosylated mucin-like domains.
...
PMID:Glycosylation of natural human neutrophil gelatinase B and neutrophil gelatinase B-associated lipocalin. 1052 40
Cutaneous aging and chronic exposure to UV irradiation leads to alterations in the appearance and biochemical composition of the skin. Members of the
MMP
family have been involved in the destruction of the extracellular matrix. Among them, gelatinases A and B were found to display elastolytic activity, in vitro. In this study, we first determined the ex vivo elastolytic potential of both endopeptidases, using human skin tissue sections and computerized morphometric analyses, and compared it with those of neutrophil elastase. In such conditions,
gelatinase B
(50 nM) induced 50% elastolysis. The percentage of elastic fibers degraded by gelatinase A (10-100 nM) never exceeded 10%. Elastolysis by
gelatinase B
and leukocyte elastase was characterized by a decrease in fiber length and an increase in the average diameter of the fibers. In addition,
gelatinase B
exhibited fibrillin-degrading activities. On the contrary, gelatinase A (50 nM) elicited up to 50% hydrolysis of collagen fibers, preferentially degrading type III collagen fibers. Gelatinase B did not promote any collagen degrading activity. Our data suggested that in vivo gelatinases could disrupt most extracellular matrix structures of human skin. Gelatinase B and to a much lesser extent, gelatinase A would degrade components of the elastic fibers network while gelatinase A, but not
gelatinase B
, would alter mostly collagen fibers and also degrade constituents of the dermo-epidermal junction.
...
PMID:Analysis of the ex vivo specificity of human gelatinases A and B towards skin collagen and elastic fibers by computerized morphometry. 1084 97
The substrate specificity of human collagenase 3 (MMP-13), a member of the matrix metalloproteinase family, is investigated using a phage-displayed random hexapeptide library containing 2 x 10(8) independent recombinants. A total of 35 phage clones that express a peptide sequence that can be hydrolyzed by the recombinant catalytic domain of human collagenase 3 are identified. The translated DNA sequence of these clones reveals highly conserved putative P1, P2, P3 and P1', P2', and P3' subsites of the peptide substrates. Kinetic analysis of synthetic peptide substrates made from human collagenase 3 selected phage clones reveals that some of the substrates are highly active and selective. The most active substrate, 2, 4-dinitrophenyl-GPLGMRGL-NH(2) (CP), has a k(cat)/K(m) value of 4.22 x 10(6) m(-)(1) s(-)(1) for hydrolysis by collagenase 3. CP was synthesized as a consensus sequence deduced from the preferred subsites of the aligned 35 phage clones. Peptide substrate CP is 1300-, 11-, and 820-fold selective for human collagenase 3 over the MMPs stromelysin-1,
gelatinase B
, and collagenase 1, respectively. In addition, cleavage of CP is 37-fold faster than peptide NF derived from the major
MMP
-processing site in aggrecan. Phage display screening also selected five substrate sequences that share sequence homology with a major
MMP
cleavage sequence in aggrecan and seven substrate sequences that share sequence homology with the primary collagenase cleavage site of human type II collagen. In addition, putative cleavage sites similar to the consensus sequence are found in human type IV collagen. These findings support previous observations that human collagenase 3 can degrade aggrecan, type II and type IV collagens.
...
PMID:Substrate specificity of human collagenase 3 assessed using a phage-displayed peptide library. 1090 30
Remodeling of the extracellular matrix during tissue development, wound repair and tumor cell invasion depends on the coordinated regulation of cell adhesion receptors, matrix proteins and enzymes that proteolyse the extracellular matrix. Integrin alpha3beta1 is a major receptor on epidermal keratinocytes for laminin-5 in the cutaneous basement membrane and is required for normal basement membrane organization during skin development. alpha3beta1 is also expressed at high levels in the majority of adherent transformed cells and in most tumors, and it could have similar roles in extracellular matrix remodeling during tumorigenesis and cell invasion. In the present study, we show that alpha3beta1 expression is required in immortalized mouse keratinocytes (MK) for the production of the matrix metalloproteinase MMP-9/
gelatinase B
, an
MMP
that is coexpressed with alpha3beta1 in epithelial cell carcinomas and during wound healing, and contributes to the invasive potential of some tumor cells. MMP-9 was expressed in MK cells derived from wild-type mice, but not in MK cells derived from alpha3-null mice. Reconstitution of alpha3beta1 expression in alpha3-null MK cells through transfection with the alpha3 subunit restored MMP-9 secretion, indicating an alpha3beta1-dependent pathway for MMP-9 production. alpha3beta1-dependent expression of MMP-9 was associated with the immortalized phenotype, since nonimmortalized, primary keratinocytes required soluble growth factors, but not alpha3beta1, for efficient expression of MMP-9. Our results suggest that an alpha3beta1-independent pathway(s) for MMP-9 production is suppressed in keratinocytes immortalized with large T antigen, and that an alpha3beta1-dependent pathway is required for sustained production of MMP-9 in the absence of other pathways.
...
PMID:Mouse keratinocytes immortalized with large T antigen acquire alpha3beta1 integrin-dependent secretion of MMP-9/gelatinase B. 1091 Jul 75
Rats were subjected to acute lung injury by the intra-alveolar formation of IgG immune complexes of bovine serum albumin (BSA) and anti-BSA. In this model of injury, complement activation occurs and large numbers of neutrophils invade the interstitium and alveolar space. In the present study, animals were treated with intratracheal catalase concomitantly with anti-BSA or after a lag period of 5-120 min. Catalase treatment at time-zero or at 5 min post injury failed to prevent lung injury as indicated by permeability change, histological features, and neutrophil influx. However, treatment after a delay of 15-30 min (but not 120 min) afforded substantial protection. Consistent with past findings [19], lung injury was accompanied by an accumulation of
matrix metalloproteinase 9
(
MMP-9
) in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid. There was a strong correlation between inhibition of injury and reduction in
MMP-9
levels. In vitro studies conducted in parallel revealed that unstimulated alveolar macrophages did not produce measurable
MMP-9
, while there was a large induction following exposure to the same immune complexes that initiated injury in vivo. MMP-2 was also slightly upregulated under the same conditions. Concomitant treatment with catalase greatly inhibited
MMP-9
production by macrophages in response to immune complexes, but this treatment had little effect on basal production of either
MMP-9
or MMP-2 by macrophage. The same concentration of catalase that suppressed
MMP-9
elaboration also inhibited the production of tumor necrosis factor alpha. In contrast, when neutrophils were treated with catalase and then exposed to immune complexes, the antioxidant failed to prevent the release of either MMP-2 or
MMP-9
. Taken together, these findings demonstrate that antioxidant treatment interferes with elaboration of MMPs by alveolar macrophages. Protection against lung injury is correlated with reduction in
MMP
levels in the BAL fluid.
...
PMID:Time-dependent inhibition of immune complex-induced lung injury by catalase: relationship to alterations in macrophage and neutrophil matrix metalloproteinase elaboration. 1096
We have isolated a novel 75-kDa gelatinase from a chicken macrophage cell line, HD11. Biochemical and immunological characterization of the purified enzyme demonstrated that it is distinct from the chicken 72-kDa gelatinase A (MMP-2). The enzyme is capable of specific gelatin binding and rapid gelatin cleavage. Incubation with an organomercurial compound (p-aminophenylmercuric acetate) induces proteolytic processing and activation of this enzyme, and the resultant gelatinolytic activity is sensitive to both zinc chelators and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases. A full-length cDNA for the enzyme has been cloned, and sequence analysis demonstrated that the enzyme possesses the characteristic multidomain structure of an
MMP
gelatinase including a cysteine switch prodomain, three fibronectin type II repeats, a catalytic zinc binding region, and a hemopexin-like domain. The 75-kDa gelatinase is produced by phorbol ester-treated chicken bone marrow cells, monocytes, and polymorphonuclear leukocytes, cell types that charac- teristically produce the 92-kDa mammalian
gelatinase B
(MMP-9). The absence of a 90-110-kDa gelatinase in these cell types indicates that the 75-kDa gelatinase is likely the avian counterpart of
gelatinase B
. However, the protein is only 59% identical to human
gelatinase B
, whereas all previously cloned chicken
MMP
homologues are 75-90% identical to their human counterparts. In addition, the new 75-kDa chicken gelatinase lacks the type V collagen domain that is found in all mammalian gelatinase Bs. Furthermore, the secreted enzyme appears structurally distinct from known gelatinase Bs and the activated enzyme can cleave fibronectin, which is not a substrate for mammalian
gelatinase B
. Thus the results of this study indicate that a second
MMP
gelatinase exists in chickens, and although it is MMP-9/
gelatinase B
-like in its overall domain structure and expression pattern, it appears to be biochemically divergent from mammalian
gelatinase B
.
...
PMID:The isolation, characterization, and molecular cloning of a 75-kDa gelatinase B-like enzyme, a member of the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family. An avian enzyme that is MMP-9-like in its cell expression pattern but diverges from mammalian gelatinase B in sequence and biochemical properties. 1101 Sep 69
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