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1.
Degradation of type I collagen by collagenases is an important part of extracellular remodeling. To understand the role of the hinge region of fibroblast collagenase in its collagenolytic activity, we individually substituted the 10 conserved amino acid residues at positions 264, 266, 268, 296, 272, 277, 284, 289, 307, and 313 in this region of the enzyme by their corresponding residues in MMP-3, a noncollagenolytic matrix metalloproteinase. The general proteolytic and triple helicase activities of all of the enzymes were determined, and their abilities to bind to type I collagen were assessed. Among the mutants, only G272D mutant enzyme exhibited a significant change in type I collagenolysis. The alteration of the Gly(272) to Asp reduced the collagenolytic activity of the enzyme to 13% without affecting its general proteolytic activity, substrate specificity, or the collagen binding ability. The catalytic efficiency of the G272D mutant for the triple helical peptide substrate [C(6)-(GP- Hyp)(4)GPL(Mca)GPQGLRGQL(DPN)GVR(GP-HYP)(4)-NH(2)](3) and the peptide substrate Mca-PLGL(Dpa)AR-NH(2) and its dissociation constant for the triple helical collagen were similar to that of the wild type enzyme, indicating that the presence of this residue in fibroblast collagenase is particularly important for the efficient cleavage of type I collagen. Gly(272) is evidently responsible for the hinge-bending motion that is essential for allowing the COOH-terminal domain to present the collagen to the active site.  相似文献   

2.
Collagens contain sequence- and conformation-dependent epitopes responsible for their digestion by collagenases at specific loci. A synthetic heterotrimer construct containing the collagenase cleavage site of collagen type I was found to mimic perfectly native collagen in terms of selectivity and mode of enzymatic degradation. The NMR conformational analysis of this molecule clearly revealed the presence of two structural domains, i.e. a triple helix spanning the Gly-Pro-Hyp repeats and a less ordered portion corresponding to the collagenase cleavage site where the three chains are aligned in extended conformation with loose interchain contacts. These structural properties allow for additional insights into the very particular mechanism of collagen digestion by collagenases.  相似文献   

3.
The dermal type I collagen of a patient with Ehlers-Danlos type VIIB (EDS-VIIB) contained normal alpha 2(I) chains and mutant pN-alpha 2(I)' chains in which the amino-terminal propeptide (N-propeptide) remained attached to the alpha 2(I) chain. Similar alpha 2(I) chains were produced by cultured dermal fibroblasts. Amino acid sequencing of tryptic peptides, prepared from the mutant amino-terminal pN-alpha 2(I) CB1' peptide, indicated that five amino acids, including the N-proteinase (the specific proteinase that cleaves the procollagen N-propeptide) cleavage site, had been deleted from the junction of the N-propeptide and the N-telopeptide (the nonhelical domain at the amino-terminus of the alpha chains of fully processed type I polypeptide chains) of the mutant pro-alpha 2(I)' chain. The corresponding 15 nucleotides, which were deleted from approximately half of the alpha 2(I) cDNA polymerase chain reaction products, of the alpha 2(I) cDNA polymerase chain reaction products, were encoded by the +1 to +15 nucleotides of exon 6 of the normal alpha 2(I) gene (COL1A2). These 15 nucleotides were deleted in the splicing of alpha 2(I) pre-mRNA to mRNA as a result of inactivation of the 3' splice site of intron 5 by an AG to AC mutation and the activation of a cryptic AG splice acceptor site corresponding to positions +14 and +15 of exon 6. Loss of the N-proteinase cleavage site explained the persistence of the pN-alpha 2(I)' chains in the dermis and in fibroblast cultures. Collagen production by cultured dermal fibroblasts was doubled, possibly due to reduced feedback inhibition by the N-propeptides. In contrast to previously reported cases of EDS-VIIB, Lys5 of the N-telopeptide was not deleted and appeared to take part in the formation of intramolecular cross-linkages. However, increased collagen solubility and abnormal extraction profiles of the mutant type I collagen molecules indicated that collagen cross-linking was abnormal in the dermis. The proband and her son were heterozygous for the mutation. It is likely that the heterozygous loss of the N-proteinase cleavage site, with persistence of a shortened N-propeptide, was the major factor responsible for the EDS-VIIB phenotype.  相似文献   

4.
The initial proteolytic events in the hydrolysis of rat tendon type I collagen by the class I and II collagenases from Clostridium histolyticum have been investigated at 15 degrees C. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis has been used to detect the initial cleavage fragments of both the alpha 1(I) and alpha 2 chains, which migrate at different rates in the buffer system employed. Experiments with the class I collagenases indicate that the first cleavage occurs across all three chains of the triple helix close to the C-terminus to produce fragments whose alpha chains have molecular weights of approximately 88,000. The second cleavage occurs near the N-terminus to reduce the molecular weight of the alpha chains to 80,000. Initial proteolysis by the class II collagenases occurs across all three chains at a site in the interior of the collagen triple helix to give N- and C-terminal fragments with alpha-chain molecular weights of 35,000 and 62,000, respectively. The C-terminal fragment is subsequently cleaved to give fragments with alpha-chain molecular weights of 59,000. These results indicate that type I collagen is degraded at several hyperreactive sites by these enzymes. Thus, initial proteolysis by these bacterial collagenases occurs at specific sites, much like the mammalian collagenases. These results with the individual clostridial collagenases provide an explanation for earlier data which indicated that collagen is degraded sequentially from the ends by a crude clostridial collagenase preparation.  相似文献   

5.
Degradation of fibrillar collagens is important in many physiological and pathological events. These collagens are resistant to most proteases due to the tightly packed triple-helical structure, but are readily cleaved at a specific site by collagenases, selected members of the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). To investigate the structural requirements for collagenolysis, varying numbers of GXY triplets from human type III collagen around the collagenase cleavage site were inserted between two triple helix domains of the Scl2 bacterial collagen protein. The original bacterial CL domain was not cleaved by MMP-1 (collagenase 1) or MMP-13 (collagenase 3). The minimum type III sequence necessary for cleavage by the two collagenases was 5 GXY triplets, including 4 residues before and 11 residues after the cleavage site (P4-P11'). Cleavage of these chimeric substrates was not achieved by the catalytic domain of MMP-1 or MMP-13, nor by full-length MMP-3. Kinetic analysis of the chimeras indicated that the rate of cleavage by MMP-1 of the chimera containing six triplets (P7-P11') of collagen III was similar to that of native collagen III. The collagenase-susceptible chimeras were cleaved very slowly by trypsin, a property also seen for native collagen III, supporting a local structural relaxation of the triple helix near the collagenase cleavage site. The recombinant bacterial-human collagen system characterized here is a good model to investigate the specificity and mechanism of action of collagenases.  相似文献   

6.
Interstitial collagen types I, II and III are highly resistant to proteolytic attack, due to their triple helical structure, but can be cleaved by matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) collagenases at a specific site, approximately three-quarters of the length from the N-terminus of each chain. MMP-2 and -9 are closely related at the structural level, but MMP-2, and not MMP-9, has been previously described as a collagenase. This report investigates the ability of purified recombinant human MMP-9 produced in insect cells to degrade native collagen types I and III. Purified MMP-9 was able to cleave the soluble, monomeric forms of native collagen types I and III at 37 degrees C and 25 degrees C, respectively. Activity against collagens I and III was abolished by metalloproteinase inhibitors and was not present in the concentrated crude medium of mock-transfected cells, demonstrating that it was MMP-9-derived. Mutated, collagenase-resistant type I collagen was not digested by MMP-9, indicating that the three-quarters/one-quarter locus was the site of initial attack. Digestion of type III collagen generated a three-quarter fragment, as shown by comparison with MMP-1-mediated cleavage. These data demonstrate that MMP-9, like MMP-2, is able to cleave collagens I and III in their native form and in a manner that is characteristic of the unique collagenolytic activity of MMP collagenases.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism of triple helical collagen unwinding and cleavage by collagenases in the matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) family is complex and remains enigmatic. Recent reports show that triple helicase activity is initiated by the hemopexin C domain of membrane type 1-MMP, whereas catalytically inactive full-length interstitial collagenase (MMP-1) exhibits full triple helicase functionality pointing to active site determinants that are needed to complete the triple helicase mechanism. In MMP-8, the neutrophil collagenase, a conserved Gly at the S(3)' substrate specificity subsite is replaced by Asn(188) that forms a highly unusual cis bond with Tyr(189), a conserved active site residue in the collagenases. Only in MMP-1 is the S(3)' Gly also replaced, and there too a cis configured Glu-Tyr occurs. Thus, this high energy peptide bond coupled to the canonical Tyr may be important in the collagenolytic process. In a systematic mutagenesis investigation of the MMP-8 S(3)' subsite we found that introducing an S(3)' Gly(188) into MMP-8 reduced collagenolytic efficiency by approximately 30% with a corresponding reduction in cleavage of a synthetic peptide fluorescence resonance energy transfer substrate analogue of the alpha2(I) collagen chain cleavage site. The substitution of Asn(188) to Leu, a hydrophobic residue of similar size to the highly polar Asn and designed to retain the cis bond, revealed the importance of hydrogen bonding to bound substrate with both collagenolytic and peptidic activities reduced approximately 3-fold. In contrast, the specificity for type I collagen of the mutant Y189F dropped 3-fold without any significant alteration in general peptidase activity. Therefore, S(3)' and in particular the hydrogen bonding potential of Tyr(189) is a specific molecular determinant for MMP-8 triple helicase activity. The cis bond connection to Asn(188) juxtaposes these two side chains for closely spaced hydrogen bonding with substrate that improves collagenolytic and general catalytic efficiency that could be exploited for new collagenase-specific inhibitor drugs.  相似文献   

8.
We have studied the degradation of type X collagen by human skin fibroblast and rat uterus interstitial collagenases and human 72-kDa type IV collagenase. The interstitial collagenases attacked the native type X helix at two loci, cleaving residues Gly92-Leu93 and Gly420-Ile421, both scissions involving Gly-X bonds of Gly-X-Y-Z-A sequences. However, the human and rat interstitial enzymes displayed an opposite and substantial selectivity for each of these potential sites, with the uterine enzyme catalyzing the Gly420-Ile421 cleavage almost 20-fold faster than the Gly92-Leu93 locus. Values for enzyme-substrate affinity were approximately 1 microM indistinguishable from the corresponding Km values against type I collagen. Interestingly, in attacking type X collagen, both enzymes manifested kinetic properties intermediate between those characterizing the degradation of native and denatured collagen substrates. Thus, energy dependence of reaction velocity revealed a value of EA of 45 kcal, typical of native interstitial collagen substrates. However, the substitution of D2O for H2O in solvent buffer failed to slow type X collagenolysis significantly (kH/kD = 1.1), in contrast to the 50-70% slowing (kH/kD = 2-3) observed with native interstitial collagens. Since this lack of deuterium isotope effect is characteristic of interstitial collagenase cleavage of denatured collagens, we investigated the capacity of another metalloproteinase with substantial gelatinolytic activity, 72-kDa type IV collagenase, to degrade type X collagen. The 72-kDa type IV collagenase cleaved type X collagen at both 25 and 37 degrees C, and at loci in close proximity to those attacked by the interstitial enzymes. No further cleavages were observed at either temperature with type IV collagenase, and although values for kcat were not determined (due to associated tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2), catalytic rates appeared to be substantial in comparison to the interstitial enzymes. In contrast, type X collagen was completely resistant to proteolysis by stromelysin. Type X collagen thus appears to be highly unusual in its susceptibility to degradation by both interstitial collagenase and another member of the metalloproteinase gene family.  相似文献   

9.
The dermis of a child with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IV (EDS-IV) contained about 11% of the normal amount of type III collagen and cultured dermal fibroblasts produced a reduced amount of type III procollagen which was secreted poorly. Type III collagen produced by these cells contained normal and abnormal alpha-chains and cyanogen bromide peptides. The site of the structural defect in the abnormal alpha 1 (III) chains was localized to the region of Met797, which is at the junction of the two carboxyl-terminal CB5 and CB9 cyanogen bromide peptides. Chemical cleavage of heteroduplexes formed between EDS-IV mRNA and a normal cDNA clone covering the CB5 and CB9 region showed that about 100 nucleotides were mismatched. Sequencing of amplified and cloned cDNA spanning the mutant region revealed a 108 nucleotide deletion corresponding to amino acid residues Gly775 to Lys810. The deleted nucleotide sequence corresponded to sequences that, by analogy to the organization of the type I collagen genes, should be precisely encoded by exon 41 of the COL3A1 gene. Sequencing of amplified genomic DNA, prepared using disimilar amounts of primers specific for exons 41 and 42, displayed a base substitution (G-to-A) in the highly conserved GT dinucleotide of the 5' splice site of intron 41. Normal sequences were also obtained from the normal allele. It is likely that the GT-to-AT transition at the splice donor site of intron 41 generated an abnormally spliced mRNA in which sequences of exon 40 and 42 were joined together with maintenance of the reading frame. The corresponding peptide deletion included the cyanogen bromide cleavage site Met797-Pro798 and the mammalian collagenase cleavage site at Gly781-Ile782. These losses account for the resistance of EDS-IV collagen to cyanogen bromide and mammalian collagenase digestion. Cultured fibroblasts produced normal homotrimer, mutant homotrimer, and mixed heterotrimer type III collagen molecules. The mutant homotrimer molecules were the major pepsin-resistant species and about 69% of the alpha 1(III) mRNA was in the mutant form.  相似文献   

10.
The gelatinolytic activity of rat uterus collagenase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The collagenase produced by rat uterine cells in culture has been examined for its ability to degrade denatured collagen. Acting as a gelatinase, rat uterus collagenase was able to successfully degrade the denatured chains of collagen types I through V. In addition, the enzyme produced multiple cleavages in these chains and displayed values for Km of 4-5 microM, compared to values of 1-2 microM when native collagen was used as substrate. Furthermore, rat uterus collagenase degraded the alpha 2 chain of denatured type I collagen at a significantly faster rate than the alpha 1 chain, as previously observed for human skin fibroblast collagenase. In contrast to the action of human skin collagenase, however, the rat uterus enzyme was found to be a markedly better gelatinase than a collagenase, degrading the alpha chains of denatured type I guinea pig skin collagen at rates some 7-15-fold greater than native collagen. Human skin collagenase degrades the same denatured chains at rates ranging from 13-44% of its rate on native collagen. Rat uterus collagenase, then, is approximately 50 times better a gelatinase than is human skin collagenase. In addition to its ability to cleave denatured collagen chains at greater rates than native collagen, the rat uterus collagenase also attacked a wider spectrum of peptide bonds in gelatin than does human skin collagenase. In addition to cleaving the Gly-Leu and Gly-Ile bonds characteristic of its action on native collagen, rat uterus collagenase readily catalyzed the cleavage of Gly-Phe bonds in gelatin. The rat enzyme was also capable of cleaving Gly-Ala and Gly-Val bonds, although these bonds were somewhat less preferred by the enzyme. The cleavage of peptide bonds other than Gly-Leu and Gly-Ile appears to be a property of the collagenase itself and not a contaminating protease. Thus, it appears that the collagenase responsible for the degradation of collagen during the massive involution of the uterus might also act as a gelatinase to further degrade the initial products of collagenolysis to small peptides suitable for further metabolism.  相似文献   

11.
Purified polymorphonuclear leukocyte elastase degraded native human liver type III collagen at 27 degrees C by making a cleavage through the triple helix. The enzyme had no effect on human type I collagen. The reaction was inhibited by phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride (PhCH2SO2F) but not by EDTA. The collagen reaction products were identical with those generated by human rheumatoid synovial collagenase when analyzed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel filtration. NH2-trminal sequence analysis indicated that the enzyme cleaved at an isoleucyl-threonyl bond located 4 residues on the carboxyl side of the established cleavage site for animal collagenases. Therefore, it is likely that in pathologic states, type III collagen can be selectively depleted from the matrix by this enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
We have studied the susceptibility of fibrils formed from fetal bovine skin type III collagen to proteolytic enzymes known to cleave within the helical portion of the molecule (vertebrate and microbial collagenase, polymorphonuclear elastase, trypsin, thermolysin) and to two general proteases of broad specificity (plasmin, Pronase). Fibrils reconstituted from neutral salt solutions, at 35 degrees C, were highly resistant to nonspecific proteolysis by general proteases such as polymorphonuclear elastase, trypsin, and thermolysin but were rapidly dissolved by bacterial and vertebrate collagenases at rates of 12-45 mol X mol-1 X h-1. In solution, type III collagen was readily cleaved by each of the proteases (with the exception of plasmin), as well as by the true collagenases, although at different rates. Turnover numbers determined by viscometry at 35 degrees C were: human collagenase, approximately equal to 1500 h-1; microbial (clostridial) collagenase, approximately equal to 100 h-1; and general proteases, 23-52 h-1. In addition it was shown that pronase cleaves type III collagen in solution at 22 degrees C by attacking the same Arg-Gly bond in the alpha 1(III) chain as trypsin. However, like other proteases, Pronase was rather ineffective against fibrillar forms of type III collagen. It was also shown that transition of type III collagen as well as type I collagen to the fibrillar form resulted in a significant gain of triple helical thermostability as evidenced by a 6.8 degrees C increase in denaturation temperature (Tm = 40.2 degrees C in solution; Tm = 47.0 degrees C in fibrils).  相似文献   

13.
Collagen fibrils become resistant to cleavage over time. We hypothesized that resistance to type I collagen proteolysis not only marks biological aging but also drives it. To test this, we followed mice with a targeted mutation (Col1a1r/r) that yields collagenase‐resistant type I collagen. Compared with wild‐type littermates, Col1a1r/r mice had a shortened lifespan and developed features of premature aging including kyphosis, weight loss, decreased bone mineral density, and hypertension. We also found that vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in the aortic wall of Col1a1r/r mice were susceptible to stress‐induced senescence, displaying senescence‐associated ß‐galactosidase (SA‐ßGal) activity and upregulated p16INK4A in response to angiotensin II infusion. To elucidate the basis of this pro‐aging effect, vascular SMCs from twelve patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery were cultured on collagen derived from Col1a1r/r or wild‐type mice. This revealed that mutant collagen directly reduced replicative lifespan and increased stress‐induced SA‐ßGal activity, p16INK4A expression, and p21CIP1 expression. The pro‐senescence effect of mutant collagen was blocked by vitronectin, a ligand for αvß3 integrin that is presented by denatured but not native collagen. Moreover, inhibition of αvß3 with echistatin or with αvß3‐blocking antibody increased senescence of SMCs on wild‐type collagen. These findings reveal a novel aging cascade whereby resistance to collagen cleavage accelerates cellular aging. This interplay between extracellular and cellular compartments could hasten mammalian aging and the progression of aging‐related diseases.  相似文献   

14.
A 36-residue peptide containing the bond cleaved by animal collagenases was isolated from a digest of chick skin collagen α1-CB7 by Staphylococcus V8 protease. This cleavage site peptide, in contrast to the 36-residue α1-CB2, showed no tendency to renature to the triple helical form, as monitored by molecular sieve chromatography and the determination of circular dichroism spectra. These results provide a direct demonstration that the conformation of the α1[I] chain immediately around the collagenase cleavage site in the native molecule must be of a lower degree of helicity than other portions of the chain. This is considered to be an important factor in the collagenase specificity, in providing access to the sensitive bonds, but enzyme binding sites, probably located in the adjacent region(s) of maximum helicity, are also considered necessary to produce the maximum reaction rate.  相似文献   

15.
Type I collagen cleavage is crucial for tissue remodeling, but its homotrimeric isoform is resistant to all collagenases. The homotrimers occur in fetal tissues, fibrosis, and cancer, where their collagenase resistance may play an important physiological role. To understand the mechanism of this resistance, we studied interactions of α1(I)3 homotrimers and normal α1(I)2α2(I) heterotrimers with fibroblast collagenase (MMP-1). Similar MMP-1 binding to the two isoforms and similar cleavage efficiency of unwound α1(I) and α2(I) chains suggested increased stability and less efficient unwinding of the homotrimer triple helix at the collagenase cleavage site. The unwinding, necessary for placing individual chains inside the catalytic cleft of the enzyme, was the rate-limiting cleavage step for both collagen isoforms. Comparative analysis of the homo- and heterotrimer cleavage kinetics revealed that MMP-1 binding promotes stochastic helix unwinding, resolving the controversy between different models of collagenase action.  相似文献   

16.
The class I and IIClostridium histolyticum collagenases (CHC) have been used to identify hyperreactive sites in rat type I, bovine type II, and human type III collagens. The class I CHC attack both collagens at loci concentrated in the N-terminal half of these collagens starting with the site closest to the N-terminus. The class II CHC initiate collagenolysis by attacking both collagens in the interior to produce a mixture of C-terminal 62,000 and a N-terminal 36,000 fragments. Both fragments are next shortened by removal of a 3000 fragment. These results are very similar to those reported earlier for the hydrolysis of rat type I collagen by these CHC, indicating that the three collagens share many hyperreactive sites. Similar reactions carried out with the respective gelatins show that they are cleaved at many sites at approximately the same rate. Thus, the hyperreactivity of the sites identified must be attributed to their environment in the native collagens. N-terminal sequencing of the fragments produced in these reactions has allowed the identification of 16 cleavage sites in the α1(I), α2(I), α1(II), and α1(III) collagen chains. An analysis of the triple helical stabilities of these cleavage site regions as reflected by their imino acid contents fails to yield a correlation between reactivity and triple helical stability. The existence of these hyperreactive CHC cleavage sites suggests that type I, II, and III collagens contain regions that have specific nontriple helical conformations. The sequence of these sites presented here now makes it possible to investigate these conformations by computational and peptide mimetic techniques.  相似文献   

17.
Despite the apparent uniformity of the collagen molecule, vertebrate and invertebrate collagenases cleave it in one region only. We suggest that the enzyme recognises the cleavage site by the arrangement of the imino acids proline and hydroxyproline on either side of a region where the helical conformation of the collagen molecule is less stable. This less stable region could fold out of the rigid collagen molecule allowing the two recognition sites to be simultaneously attached to identical subunits in the same collagenase molecule. Class II DNA restriction endonucleases are confronted by a similar recognition problem in cleaving the DNA molecule at a specific site and it is generally accepted that here recognition is achieved by a sequence of bases with two-fold symmetry. We postulate that collagenase may, like the DNA restriction enzyme, be active in the dimeric form and that it recognises its substrate site by a similar two-fold symmetric arrangement of imino acid residues.  相似文献   

18.
Sequence specificities of human fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The sequence specificities of human fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases have been investigated by measuring the rate of hydrolysis of 60 synthetic oligopeptides covering the P4 through P'5 subsites of the substrate. The choice of peptides was patterned after both known cleavage sites in noncollagenous proteins and potential cleavage sites (those containing Gly-Ile-Ala, Gly-Leu-Ala, or Gly-Ile-Leu sequences) found in types I, II, III, and IV collagens. The initial rate of hydrolysis of the P1-P'1 bond of each peptide has been measured under first-order conditions ([SO] much less than KM), and kcat/KM values have been calculated from the initial rates. The amino acids in subsites P4 through P'4 all influence the hydrolysis rates for both collagenases. However, the effects of substitutions at each site are distinctive and are consistent with the view that human fibroblast and neutrophil collagenases are homologous but nonidentical enzymes. For peptides with unblocked NH2 and COOH termini, occupancy of subsites P3 through P'3 is necessary for rapid hydrolysis. Compared with the alpha 1(I) cleavage sequence, none of the substitutions investigated at subsites P3, P2, and P'4 produces markedly improved substrates. In contrast, many substitutions at subsites P1, P'1, and P'2 improve specificity. The preferences of both collagenases for alanine in subsite P1 and tryptophan or phenylalanine in subsite P'2, is noteworthy. Human neutrophil collagenase accommodates aromatic residues in subsite P'1 much better than human fibroblast collagenase. The subsite preferences observed for human fibroblast collagenase in these studies agree well with the residues found at cleavage sites in noncollagenous substrates. However, the sequence specificities of these collagenases cannot explain the failure of these enzymes to hydrolyze many potentially cleavable but apparently protected sites in intact collagens. This represents additional support for the notion that the local structure of collagen is important in determining the location of collagenase cleavage sites.  相似文献   

19.
Decorin, fibromodulin and lumican are small leucine-rich repeat proteoglycans (SLRPs) which interact with the surface of collagen fibrils. Together with other molecules they form a coat on the fibril surface which could impede the access to collagenolytic proteinases. To address this hypothesis, fibrils of type I or type II collagen were formed in vitro and treated with either collagenase-1 (MMP1) or collagenase-3 (MMP13). The fibrils were either treated directly or following incubation in the presence of the recombinant SLRPs. The susceptibility of the uncoated and SLRP-coated fibrils to collagenase cleavage was assessed by SDS/PAGE. Interaction with either recombinant decorin, fibromodulin or lumican results in decreased collagenase cleavage of both fibril types. Thus SLRP interaction can help protect collagen fibrils from cleavage by collagenases.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Chemical and enzymatic properties of four collagenases newly isolated from anaerobic Clostridium histolyticum, aerobic Achromobacter iophagus, and from two lower eucaryotes, the fungus Entomophthora coronata and the insect Hypoderma lineatum are reviewed.The problems of their biosynthesis and precursors, namely the effect of induction of collagenase and neutral proteinase in Achromobacter by their macromolecular substrates are discussed.The two bacterial collagenases are Zn-metallo-enzymes; the highly purified Clostridium collagenase contains cyst(e)ine, serine phosphate and tryptophan additionally to amino acids reported previously. Achromobacter collagenase has the highest specific activity of all collagenases; it yields by autolysis enzymatically active degraded forms. The active dimer is composed of two identical subunits of molecular weight 35,000. Similarities between Achromobacter collagenase, thermolysin and Bacillus subtilis neutral proteinase in molecular weight, amino acid composition, and amino acids important for the active sites are discussed.The two collagenases from low eucaryotes are serine proteinases; Hypoderma collagenase is homologous to the trypsin family in the amino terminal sequence.The initial cleavage of native collagen by highly purified bacterial collagenases occurs in the central helical part of the a chains and not progressively from the amino terminal end. One of the two initial cleavages produced by Achromobacter collagenase is situated in the region cleaved specifically by vertebrate collagenases, but with different bond specificity. The same is true for the insect collagenase. Entomophthora collagenase is a proteinase of broad specificity which also cleaves collagen in its helical parts. All four collagenases also degrade other proteins according to their bond specificity.  相似文献   

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