Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:6.2.1.7 (BAL)
1,977 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To investigate simultaneously localization and relative activity of MMPs during extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling in bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis in rat, we analyzed the time course of the expression, activity and/or concentration of gelatinases MMP-2 and MMP-9, collagenase MMP-1, matrylisin MMP-7, TIMP-1 and TIMP-2, both in alveolar space (cellular and extracellular compartments) and in lung tissue. MMP and TIMP expression was detected (immunohistochemistry) in lung tissue. MMP activity (zymography) and TIMP concentration (ELISA) were evaluated in lung tissue homogenate (LTH), BAL supernatant (BALs) and BAL cell pellet (BALp) 3, 7, 14, and 28 days after bleomycin intratracheal instillation. Immunohistochemistry showed an extensive MMP and TIMP expression from day 7 in a wide range of structural and inflammatory cells in treated rats. MMP-2 was present mainly in epithelia, MMP-9 in inflammatory cells. MMP-2 and MMP-9 activity was increased respectively in BAL fluid and BAL cells, with a peak at day 7. TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 concentration (ELISA) enhancement was delayed at day 14. In conclusion gelatinases and their inhibitors are significantly activated during bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis. Marked changes in gelatinases activity are observed early in the alveolar compartment, with a prevailing extracellular activity of MMP-2 and a predominant intracellular distribution of MMP-9, while enzyme activity changes in lung parenchyma were less evident. In the repairing phase the reduction of gelatinases activity is synchronous with a peak of alveolar concentration of their inhibitors.
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PMID:Time course of matrix metalloproteases and tissue inhibitors in bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis. 1721 41

Pulmonary fibrosis is characterized by excessive deposition of extracellular matrix in interstitium resulting in respiratory failure associated with inflammation showing mainly neutrophil (PMN) recruitment. The turn over of extracellular matrix is partially regulated by proteases such as metalloproteinases (MMPs) and their inhibitors (TIMPs). We investigated the impact of PMN depletion on the MMP/TIMP-1 imbalance and the development of fibrosis in mice induced by bleomycin (0.3 mg/mouse). Administration of 200 microL of rabbit anti-mouse PMN antibody i.p. blunted the neutrophil influx detected in BAL and in whole blood one day after bleomycin administration. At day(14), hydroxyproline content was increased both in anti-PMN treated and control mice, without any difference between groups. At day one, bleomycin elicited a raise in pro-MMP-9 level in BAL that was significantly attenuated in anti-PMN depleted mice, whereas TIMP-1 and MMP-2 release were similar in both groups at day(1) and day(14). Higher RNA levels were observed in PMN-treated mice at day(1) for MMP-9 and MMP-2 and at day(14) for MMP-2 only. At day(14), bleomycin elicited a raise of TIMP-1 protein and RNA levels regardless of anti-PMN treatment, whereas MMP-9 returned to basal level. Bleomycin enhanced MMP-8 level in BAL at day(14) only for the control group. The amount of MMP-8 was more important in BAL from anti-PMN treated mice than in control mice at day(1) and day(14). PMN-depletion and the associated modifications in pro-MMP-9/TIMP-1 imbalance in lung during the early inflammatory phase do not alter susceptibility to bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis.
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PMID:Influence of early neutrophil depletion on MMPs/TIMP-1 balance in bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis. 1749 92

Height to crown base (HCB) of a tree is an important variable often included as a predictor in various forest models that serve as the fundamental tools for decision-making in forestry. We developed spatially explicit and spatially inexplicit mixed-effects HCB models using measurements from a total 19,404 trees of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) on the permanent sample plots that are located across the Czech Republic. Variables describing site quality, stand density or competition, and species mixing effects were included into the HCB model with use of dominant height (HDOM), basal area of trees larger in diameters than a subject tree (BAL- spatially inexplicit measure) or Hegyi's competition index (HCI-spatially explicit measure), and basal area proportion of a species of interest (BAPOR), respectively. The parameters describing sample plot-level random effects were included into the HCB model by applying the mixed-effects modelling approach. Among several functional forms evaluated, the logistic function was found most suited to our data. The HCB model for Norway spruce was tested against the data originated from different inventory designs, but model for European beech was tested using partitioned dataset (a part of the main dataset). The variance heteroscedasticity in the residuals was substantially reduced through inclusion of a power variance function into the HCB model. The results showed that spatially explicit model described significantly a larger part of the HCB variations [R2adj = 0.86 (spruce), 0.85 (beech)] than its spatially inexplicit counterpart [R2adj = 0.84 (spruce), 0.83 (beech)]. The HCB increased with increasing competitive interactions described by tree-centered competition measure: BAL or HCI, and species mixing effects described by BAPOR. A test of the mixed-effects HCB model with the random effects estimated using at least four trees per sample plot in the validation data confirmed that the model was precise enough for the prediction of HCB for a range of site quality, tree size, stand density, and stand structure. We therefore recommend measuring of HCB on four randomly selected trees of a species of interest on each sample plot for localizing the mixed-effects model and predicting HCB of the remaining trees on the plot. Growth simulations can be made from the data that lack the values for either crown ratio or HCB using the HCB models.
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PMID:Modelling individual tree height to crown base of Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.). 2904 91