Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0031099 (periodontitis)
12,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mammalian interstitial collagenases (E.C.3.4.24.7) are considered as key initiators of collagen degradation in periodontal diseases. However, the cellular sources of collagenases present in gingival crevicular fluid have not been completely clarified. Resident fibroblasts and epithelial cells as well as infiltrating neutrophils and monocyte/macrophages are potential sources of the enzymes. We have recently found significant differences in tetracycline inhibition between human neutrophil and fibroblast interstitial collagenases. To address the cellular source of collagenase present in gingival crevicular fluid in 2 distinct periodontal diseases, we studied the tetracycline inhibition of collagenase in gingival crevicular fluid of patients with localized juvenile periodontitis and adult periodontitis. Gingival crevicular fluid samples were collected from deep (greater than 5 mm) periodontal pockets and assayed for collagenase in the presence of 0-1000 microM doxycycline as well as a chemically modified tetracycline devoid of antimicrobial activity (4-de-dimethylaminotetracycline). The drug concentration required to inhibit 50% of collagenase activity (IC50) in localized juvenile periodontitis gingival crevicular fluid was 280 microM for doxycycline and 470 microM for 4-de-dimethylaminotetracycline. Significantly lower values, 10-20 microM, were obtained for collagenase in gingival crevicular fluid of patients with adult periodontitis. We propose that systemic tetracycline levels are efficient inhibitors of collagenase in gingival crevicular fluid in affected sites of patients with adult periodontitis but not of patients with localized juvenile periodontitis and that the fibroblast type interstitial collagenase is the predominant collagenase type in gingival crevicular fluid in affected sites of patients with localized juvenile periodontitis and the neutrophil collagenase in adult periodontitis gingival crevicular fluid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Tetracycline inhibition identifies the cellular origin of interstitial collagenases in human periodontal diseases in vivo. 132 40

Activation of latent human fibroblast-type and neutrophil interstitial procollagenases as well as degradation of native type I collagen by supra- and subgingival dental plaque extracts, an 80-kDa trypsinlike protease from Porphyromas gingivalis (ATCC 33277), a 95-kDa chymotrypsinlike protease from Treponema denticola (ATCC 29522), and selected bacterial species commonly isolated in periodontitis was studied. The bacteria included were Prevotella intermedia (ATCC 25261), Prevotella buccae (ES 57), Prevotella oris (ATCC 33573), Porphyromonas endodontalis (ES 54b), Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans (ATCC 295222), Fusobacterium nucleatum (ATCC 10953), Mitsuokella dentalis (DSM 3688), and Streptococcus mitis (ATCC 15909). None of the bacteria activated latent procollagenases; however, both sub- and supragingival dental plaque extracts (neutral salt extraction) and proteases isolated from cell extracts from potentially periodontopathogenic bacteria P. gingivalis and T. denticola were found to activate latent human fibroblast-type and neutrophil interstitial procollagenases. The fibroblast-type interstitial collagenase was more efficiently activated by bacterial proteases than the neutrophil counterpart, which instead preferred nonproteolytic activation by the oxidative agent hypochlorous acid. The proteases were not able to convert collagenase tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase (TIMP-1) complexes into active form or to change the ability of TIMP-1 to inhibit interstitial collagenase. None of the studied bacteria, proteases from P. gingivalis and T. denticola, or extracts of supra- and subgingival dental plaque showed any significant collagenolytic activity. However, the proteases degraded native and denatured collagen fragments after cleavage by interstitial collagenase and gelatinase. Our results indicate that proteases from periodontopathogenic bacteria can act as direct proteolytic activators of human procollagenases and degrade collagen fragments. Thus, in concert with host enzymes the bacterial proteases may participate in periodontal tissue destruction.
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PMID:Identification of proteases from periodontopathogenic bacteria as activators of latent human neutrophil and fibroblast-type interstitial collagenases. 139 63

Tetracyclines have recently been shown to inhibit the activity of mammalian matrix metalloproteinases, i.e. type I collagenase (MMP-1) and type IV collagenase/gelatinase (MMP-2). The specificity of this effect, however, has not been examined in detail. In the present study, doxycycline (a clinically widely used commercial tetracycline) and 4-de-dimethylaminotetracycline (CMT-1, a chemically modified non-antimicrobial tetracycline) were tested, at a wide range of concentrations, for their ability to inhibit human neutrophil and fibroblast interstitial collagenases, which are distinct gene products, as well as collagenase in human gingival crevicular fluid (an inflammatory exudate in periodontal lesions) obtained from adult, juvenile and diabetic adult periodontitis patients. The concentrations of these two tetracyclines, required to inhibit 50% of the collagenase activity (IC50), were found to be 15-30 microM for purified human neutrophil collagenase as well as collagenase in gingival crevicular fluid of adult periodontitis patients and diabetic adult periodontitis patients, thus approximating in vivo therapeutic tetracycline levels. In contrast, the fibroblast collagenase and collagenase in gingival crevicular fluid of patients with juvenile periodontitis were relatively resistant to tetracycline inhibition: the IC50 for doxycycline and CMT-1 were 280 and 500 microM, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Tetracycline inhibition identifies the cellular sources of collagenase in gingival crevicular fluid in different forms of periodontal diseases. 142 10

Interstitial collagenases (matrix metalloproteinase-1, EC 3.4.24.7), isolated from extracts of inflamed human gingiva, gingival crevicular fluid and saliva were characterized for their molecular weight, proteolytic and non-proteolytic activation and substrate specificity against soluble collagen types I, II and III. All three collagenases had Mr of 70 K. The enzymes existed predominantly in a latent form that could be activated by aminophenylmercuric acetate, gold thioglucose and hypochlorous acid. Among serine proteases tested, trypsin, chymotrypsin, neutrophil cathepsin G and a combination of trypsin and human gingival fibroblast prostromelysin activated gingival and salivary interstitial collagenases. Plasmin and plasma kallikrein, however, were relatively ineffective activators. The collagenases degraded soluble type I and II collagens at apparently equal rates but considerably faster than they did type III collagen. These findings suggest that the characteristics of interstitial collagenases found in inflamed human gingiva, gingival crevicular fluid and saliva are consistent with those of human neutrophil interstitial collagenase rather than the fibroblast-type interstitial collagenase. Thus, neutrophils are suggested to be the main source of such enzymes in inflamed human gingiva, crevicular fluid and saliva during adult periodontitis.
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PMID:The role of gingival crevicular fluid and salivary interstitial collagenases in human periodontal diseases. 196 17

We previously reported that low-dose doxycycline (DOXY) therapy reduces host-derived collagenase activity in gingival tissue of adult periodontitis (AP) patients. However, it was not clear whether this in vivo effect was direct or indirect. In the present study, inflamed human gingival tissue, obtained from AP patients during periodontal surgery, was extracted and the extracts partially purified by (NH4)2SO4 precipitation. The extracts were then analyzed for collagenase activity using SDS-PAGE/fluorography/laser densitometry, and for gelatinase activity using type I gelatin zymography as well as a new quantitative assay using biotinylated type I gelatin as substrate. DOXY was added to the incubation mixture at a final concentration of 0-1000 microM. The concentration of DOXY required to inhibit 50% of the gingival tissue collagenase (IC50) was found to be 16-18 microM in the presence or absence of 1.2 mM APMA (an optimal organomercurial activator of latent procollagenases); this IC50 for DOXY was similar to that exhibited for collagenase or matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-8 from polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) and from gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) of AP patients. Of interest, Porphyromonas gingivalis collagenase was also inhibited by similar DOXY levels (IC50 = 15 microM), however the collagenase activity observed in the gingival tissue extracts was found to be of mammalian not bacterial origin based on the production of the specific alpha A (3/4) and alpha B (1/4) collagen degradation fragments. In contrast, the inhibition of collagenase purified from culture media of human gingival fibroblasts (MMP-1) required much greater DOXY levels (IC50 = 280 microM). The predominant molecular forms of gelatinolytic activity presented in the AP patients gingival tissue extracts were found to closely correspond to the 92 kD PMN-type gelatinase (MMP-9) although small quantities of 72 kD fibroblast-type gelatinase (MMP-2), and some other low molecular weight gelatinases, were also detected. The IC50 of DOXY versus gingival tissue gelatinolytic activity was estimated at 30-50 microM measure using either type I gelatin zymography or the biotinylated type I gelatin assay. We conclude that MMPS in inflamed gingival tissue of AP patients, like those in GCF, originate primarily from infiltrating PMNs rather than resident gingival cells (fibroblasts and epithelial cells) or monocyte/macrophages, and that their pathologically-elevated tissue-degrading activities can be directly inhibited by pharmacologic levels of doxycycline.
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PMID:Doxycycline inhibits neutrophil (PMN)-type matrix metalloproteinases in human adult periodontitis gingiva. 777 65

Eight adult periodontitis (AP) patients were studied immunohistochemically to determine the presence of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) MMP-1, MMP-3, and MMP-8 in the marginal gingival and gingival granulation tissue specimens obtained from periodontal flap surgery after scaling and root planing. Clinically healthy gingival tissue specimens obtained from impacted third-molar extraction operations served as controls. MMP-type-specific antisera were applied by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex staining method. Moderate immunoreactivity for neutrophil collagenase (MMP-8) was found both in the AP patients' marginal gingival connective tissue and in gingival granulation tissue specimens. Immunoreactivity for fibroblast-type collagenase (MMP-1) and stromelysin-1 (MMP-3) was detected only in the AP patients' gingival granulation tissue specimens. In the control specimens, no immunoreactivity for the MMPs could be detected. For the first time, this finding demonstrates immunohistochemically the presence of MMP-8 in human inflamed gingiva in situ, and further highlights the importance of MMP-8 in periodontal tissue destruction, evidently during the acute phase(s) of the disease. However, our results confirm and extend previous studies indicating that other types of MMPs from resident gingival cell sources also seem to participate in the chronic and destructive course of periodontal inflammation.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical study of neutrophil- and fibroblast-type collagenases and stromelysin-1 in adult periodontitis. 787 57

Human gingival fibroblasts were treated with recombinant interleukin-1 (IL-1) to determine the effect of this stimulus on the relative expression of collagenase (MMP-1), stromelysin (MMP-3) and plasminogen activator (PA) mRNA. The steady-state mRNA levels for these genes were determined on Northern blots. IL-1 induced steady-state levels of these mRNAs to different extents. Nuclear run-on transcription studies showed that IL-1 induction of neutral metalloproteinase may be transcriptionally regulated. Actinomycin D and protein kinase inhibitors decreased the mRNA production for all three metalloproteinases, whereas cycloheximide decreased the production of collagenase and stromelysin mRNA. Protein kinase inhibitors (H7/H8) decreased production of the three mRNAs to different extents. This study demonstrates a potentially important role for IL-1 in the regulation of metalloproteinase expression in human gingival fibroblasts. The ability of IL-1 to induce the expression of stromelysin, collagenase and PA may define a pivotal role for this cytokine in the pathogenesis of periodontitis.
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PMID:Mechanistic features associated with induction of metalloproteinases in human gingival fibroblasts by interleukin-1. 798 Jan 14

It is known that the host responds to an increased concentration of collagenase [or matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-1] by preferentially expressing mRNA for the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1) in order to overcome tissue destruction due to periodontitis. To further elucidate the relation between MMPs and TIMPs in periodontitis-affected tissues, the expression of mRNA for MMP-1, -3 and -8, and TIMP-1 and -2, in 10 gingival samples from patients and five from healthy individuals was assessed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. The diseased group showed significantly higher levels of MMP-1, -3, -8 and TIMP-1 mRNA relative to beta-actin than the control group (mean +/- SE: diseased vs healthy (%): 0.26 +/- 0.05 vs 0.018 +/- 0.0040 for MMP-1; 0.09 +/- 0.16 vs 0.063 +/- 0.016 for MMP-3; 0.068 +/- 0.017 vs 0.006 +/- 0.0010 for MMP-8; 12.66 +/- 2.90 vs 2.71 +/- 0.54 for TIMP-1; p < 0.01). TIMP-2 did not significantly differ between the two groups (1.79 +/- 0.33 vs 1.42 +/- 0.53; p > 0.05). The preferential increase in the level of MMP-3 mRNA relative to that of MMP-1 and -8 in inflamed gingiva would be relevant to tissue destruction because MMP-3 is a broad-spectrum MMP and a pivotal activator of latent MMP-1 and -8. Therefore, the overall increase in MMP-1, -3 and -8 mRNA in periodontitis-affected gingiva might account for a concerted action of MMPs during connective tissue destruction in periodontitis.
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PMID:Expression of mRNA for matrix metalloproteinases and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases in periodontitis-affected human gingival tissue. 873 11

Numerous data strongly suggest the involvement of cytokines and the matrix metalloproteinase collagenase (MMP-1) in the pathogenesis of periodontitis. Recently, we have demonstrated that, upon culturing under the influence of IL-1 alpha + EGF, a large amount of inactive procollagenase (MMP-1) is stored in the extracellular matrix of periosteal tissue. We now show that this endogenous reservoir of proenzyme can be operative after activation with plasmin and is able to induce a rapid and almost complete breakdown of the collagenous extracellular matrix. The level of collagen degradation following activation showed a strong correlation with the amount of proenzyme that was incorporated in the tissue. The highest level of degradation (70% of the total amount of collagenous proteins) was found with the IL-1 alpha + EGF-treated explants, followed by those treated with IL-1 alpha alone (35%). Explants cultured with EGF or in the absence of cytokines, containing only small amounts of procollagenase, showed little collagen breakdown following plasmin activation (7%). Inhibition of metalloproteinases by EDTA, or blockage of plasmin by PMSF, prevented the degradation in all explants irrespective of the amount of proenzyme present in the tissue. Our findings demonstrate that endogenous proenzyme stored in a native connective tissue matrix can be activated at a later time interval which results in a massive breakdown of the tissue. This study shows a possible pathway of collagenase-induced breakdown without recent de novo synthesis of the enzyme. Such a sequence may be operative in chronic inflammatory diseases, such as periodontitis, where production of procollagenase under the influence of cytokines spans a longer time period, whereas breakdown is often characterized by a cyclic behaviour.
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PMID:Cytokine-induced endogenous procollagenase stored in the extracellular matrix of soft connective tissue results in a burst of collagen breakdown following its activation. 891 51

Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and serine proteinases seem to be related to tissue destruction in periodontitis. The presence of MMPs in gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) and saliva, however, has not been studied comprehensively with the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)-technique. We therefore examined the levels of MMP-1, -3, -8 and -9, and their endogenous inhibitor, tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases (TIMP-1), in GCF and saliva of patients with adult periodontitis (AP) and localized juvenile periodontitis (LJP). Elevated levels of MMP-1 were detected in LJP GCF compared to AP and control GCF. Elevated levels of TIMP-1 were also detected in LJP GCF in comparison to AP and control GCF. Higher MMP-8 levels were detected in AP GCF compared to LJP and control GCF. The relative low levels of MMP-3 were present in all studied GCF samples. Elevated levels of MMP-8 were further detected in saliva of AP compared to LJP and the controls. Both MMP-1 and TIMP-1 were detected in all studied saliva samples, but not significant differences were detected between the studied groups. Our ELISA-results confirm that (i) PMN MMP-8 and MMP-9 are the main collagenase and gelatinase in AP GCF, whereas GCF collagenase in LJP seems to be of the MMP-1-type; (ii) only low levels of TIMP-1, endogenous MMP-inhibitor, are present in AP GCF, which emphasises the importance of doxycycline as a possible adjunctive drug in the treatment of AP patients; (iii) tests based on specific antibodies against PMN MMPs, especially MMP-8, might serve as a reliable method of measuring and monitoring enzyme levels in GCF from different periodontitis patients.
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PMID:Matrix metalloproteinases and their inhibitors in gingival crevicular fluid and saliva of periodontitis patients. 899 58


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