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1.
1. A latent collagenase (EC 3.4.24.3) has been isolated from rheumatoid synovial fluids and purified by (NH4)2SO4 precipitation and column chromatography, utilising Sephadex G-150, DEAE Sephadex A-50 and Sephadex G-100 superfine grade. 2. The final preparation activated by trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4) had a specific activity against thermally reconstituted collagen fibrils of 259 micrograms collagen degraded/min per mg enzyme protein, representing a nearly 800-fold increase over that of the original rheumatoid synovial fluid. 3. The latent collagenase preparation can be activated by trypsin and to some extent by HgCl2 but not by 3 M NaSCN, 3.5 M NaCl, 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) or p-chloromercuribenzoate. 4. Inhibition studies and the acrylamide gel electrophoretic pattern of collagen degradation products showed that the trypsin-activated enzyme has the essential features of a neutral collagenase. 5. The molecular weights, determined by calibrated gel filtration, were 52 000 and 43 000 for the latent and the activated enzyme, respectively. 6. The nature of the latency of synovial fluid collagenase is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
1. An activator catalysing specifically conversion of latent forms of human leucocyte collagenase and gelatin-specific protease into the active forms, has been isolated from rheumatoid synovial fluid and purified 55-fold with a yield of 16%. 2. Molecular weight of the activator is about 35 000. 3. The activator is thermolabile, and is irreversibly inactivated at pH below 5.5 or in the presence of low concentrations of trypsin or papain; it is resistant to the action of lysozyme, hyaluronidase, diisopropylfluorophosphate, soybean trypsin inhibitor, p-chloromercuribenzoate, iodoacetamide and dithiothreitol. 4. The activator did not show any activity towards collagen, gelatin, casein, haemoglobin, histones, elastin or p-phenylazobenzyloxycarbonyl-peptide.  相似文献   

3.
Three human matrix degrading leukocyte proteinases, type I collagenase, gelatinase and a new type IV collagenase were isolated in latent and active form. Activation of all three latent enzymes could be achieved by treatment with either organomercurials or with trypsin. In addition the 90 kDa latent type I-collagenase could be activated by disulfides, while a newly discovered 70 kDa latent form could be activated with organomercurials or with trypsin. The active type I collagenase was inhibited by gamma-anticollagenase from human serum (and the leukocyte type I collagenase inhibitor, while the newly found type IV collagenase was inhibited only partially. The complexes formed from gamma-anticollagenase with type I collagenase, i. e. latent enzyme, are not reactive site associated complexes. The binding is not of a substrate-like and competitive manner. After inhibition of the enzyme though inactive against its natural substrates it is still hydrolyzing the synthetic low molecular weight octapeptide DNP-Pro-Gln-Gly-Ile-Ala-Gly-Gln-D-Arg-OH.  相似文献   

4.
The activation of latent pig synovial collagenase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Latent pig synovial collagenase (EC 3.4.24.7) can be activated by a variety of different treatments to give an active enzyme form of lower molecular weight which rapidly degrades collagen. Trypsin and plasmin effectively activated the latent collagenase whilst elastase and cathepsin G degraded most of the latent enzyme before it was activated. A number of mercurials were compared and maximum activation was achieved using 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate and phenylmercuric chloride. The latent collagenase bound to a mercurial-Sepharose column and was eluted in the active form with NaCl. The latent collagenase also activated spontaneously and the conditions which encouraged and prevented this activation were studied. High NaCl concentration, diisopropylphosphofluoridate, soybean trypsin inhibitor, low Zn2+ concentration and high and low pH all prevented the spontaneous activation of latent pig synovial collagenase.  相似文献   

5.
The functional role of mast cells in rheumatoid synovium was investigated by assessing the ability of mast cell tryptase to activate latent collagenase derived from rheumatoid synoviocytes. Tryptase, a mast cell neutral protease, was demonstrated in situ to reside in rheumatoid synovial mast cells, by an immunoperoxidase technique using a mouse mAb against tryptase, and in vitro to be released by dispersed synovial mast cells after both immunologic and nonimmunologic challenge. Each rheumatoid synovial mast cell contains an average of 6.2 pg of immunoreactive tryptase and the percent release values of this protease correlated with those of histamine (r = 0.58, p less than 0.01). The ability of purified tryptase to promote collagenolysis was demonstrated in a dose-dependent fashion using latent collagenase derived from rheumatoid synovium, synovial fluid, IL-1-stimulated cultured synoviocytes, and partially purified latent collagenase derived from conditioned media, with between 10 and 92% of the collagen substrate degraded. [3H] Collagen, treated with tryptase-activated latent collagenase, was subjected to electrophoresis on SDS polyacrylamide gels and autoradiography showed the collagen degradation pattern (A, B) characteristically produced by collagenase. Mast cell lysates also activated synovial latent collagenase yielding 24% digestion of collagen substrate. This activator in mast cell lysates could be inhibited by diisopropylflurophosphate or by immunoadsorption of tryptase. Thus, mast cells may activate metalloproteinases and play a role in the catabolism of collagen that occurs in rheumatoid synovium.  相似文献   

6.
Human neutrophils can be triggered to release the collagenolytic metalloenzymes, interstitial collagenase and 92 kDa type IV collagenase/gelatinase. We have isolated and sequenced a 2.3 kb cDNA from a chronic granulocytic leukemia cDNA library that encodes for human neutrophil type IV collagenase. With the exception of one amino-acid substitution at position 280 (Arg → Gln), the deduced amino-acid sequences of neutrophil gelatinase are identical to the amino-acid sequences of the enzyme isolated from fibrosarcoma cells. Expression of the cDNA in E. coli yielded a 72 kDa protein having a gelatinolytic activity on zymogram gel. The recombinant enzyme was activated with APMA and trypsin. The activation was accompanied by a reduction in molecular weight of ≈ 10 kDa; such a reduction is characteristic of matrix metalloproteinases. The recombinant gelatinase cleaved native type V and XI collagens. Native type I collagen was not a substrate for the enzyme. These data suggest that native and recombinant 92 kDa type IV collagenase produced in E. coli have similar biochemical properties. The successful expression of the collagenase in a prokaryotic system will greatly facilitate the structure-function characterization of the enzyme and allow a more precise analysis of its physiological and pathological roles.  相似文献   

7.
Production of procollagenase by cultured human keratinocytes   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Using a collagen film assay utilizing 14C-labeled type I collagen, we demonstrated that cultured human keratinocytes produced a procollagenase after treatment with the tumor-promoting phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). Production of collagenase paralleled alterations in cellular morphology induced by TPA. When procollagenase was immunoprecipitated with antibody to human fibroblast collagenase and analyzed on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, the zymogen was revealed as a 56- and 51-kDa doublet. The keratinocyte-derived collagenase was a neutral metalloprotease, required activation with trypsin for detection in the collagenase assay and produced the characteristic three-quarter and one-quarter length collagen cleavage products when incubated with type I collagen at 25 degrees C. The enzyme was inhibited by serum and cysteine and was largely unaffected by serine, thiol, and carboxyl protease inhibitors. Cycloheximide inhibited the TPA-induced production of collagenase, suggesting that the procollagenase was not stored preformed in the keratinocytes. Keratinocytes treated with a tumor-promoting analogue of TPA also produced collagenase, but cells treated with cytochalasin B, interleukin-1, or two non-tumor promoting phorbol esters did not. Keratinocyte-derived collagenase may play a role in wound healing and morphogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
Bone explants from foetal and newborn rabbits synthesize and release a collagenase inhibitor into culture media. Inhibitor production in the early days of culture is followed first by latent collagenase and subsequently active collagenase in the culture media. A reciprocal relationship exists between the amounts of free inhibitor and latent collagenase in culture media, suggesting strongly that the inhibitor is a component of the latent form of the enzyme. Over 90% of the inhibitory activity of culture media is associated with a fraction of apparent mol.wt. 30000 when determined by gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA 44. The inhibitor blocks the action of rabbit collagenase on both reconstituted collagen fibrils and collagen in solution. It inhibits the action of either active collagenase or latent collagenase activated by 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate. Latent collagenase activated by trypsin is usually much less susceptible to inhibition. The activity of the inhibitor is destroyed by heat, by incubation with either trypsin or chymotrypsin and by 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate. Collagenase activity can be recovered from complexes of enzyme (activated with 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate) with free inhibitor by incubation with either trypsin or 4-aminophenylmercuric acetate, at concentrations similar to those that activate latent collagenase from culture media. The rabbit bone inhibitor does not affect the activity of bacterial collagenase, but blocks the action of collagenases not only from a variety of rabbit tissues but also from other mammalian species.  相似文献   

9.
Human gingival fibroblast gelatinase (type IV collagenase) has been purified to homogeneity using a combination of ion exchange chromatography, gel filtration and affinity chromatography. The purified proenzyme electrophoresed under reducing conditions as a single band of 72 kDa which could be activated to a species of 65 kDa. Gelatinase was activated by organomercurials by a process apparently initiated by a conformational change and involving self-cleavage. It was not activated by trypsin or plasmin unlike the other family members, collagenase and stromelysin. Gelatinase otherwise exhibited properties typical of the metalloproteinases: it was inhibited by metal chelating agents and by the specific inhibitor TIMP (tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases). Its major substrate was shown to be denatured collagen although it was also able to degrade native type IV and V collagens. A polyclonal antibody was raised in a sheep using the purified enzyme as antigen. The antiserum recognised and specifically inhibited the 72-kDa gelatinase but not a 95-kDa gelatinase from pig leukocytes. It was used in immunolocalisation studies on human fibroblasts to investigate the regulation of the production of the two Mr forms of gelatinase. These studies clearly demonstrate that human fibroblasts constitutively synthesize and secrete 72-kDa gelatinase but that 95-kDa gelatinase was inducible by agents such as cytokines. The significance of these results in relation to the likely in vivo r?le of gelatinases is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Fluorescent-labelled polymeric collagen fibrils have been prepared which contain three fluoresein residues in the telopeptide regions and four fluorescein residues in the helical region of each tropocollagen unit within the polymer. This material has been used as a substrate for the study of enzymes present in the synovial fluid of inflamed rheumatoid joints which are capable of degrading polymeric collagen fibrils. Two enzyme systems were observed, one inhibited by EDTA and having the properties of the known synovial collagenase, the other having the properties of a neutral protease. The neutral protease was found to be present in sonicates of the polymorphonuclear leucocytes in the synovial fluids of inflamed joints. This enzyme attacked the telopeptides of fluorescein-labelled polymeric collagen fibrils and was similar to trypsin in removing two residues of fluorescein-labelled peptides per tropocollagen molecule within the polymeric collagen fibrils but did not depolymerise the polymeric collagen fibrils.  相似文献   

11.
We have isolated an activator of collagenase from medium conditioned with articular cartilage. The activity is contained in an acidic protein appearing as a doublet band of Mr 57,000 and 56,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels. Both components of the doublet have identical isoelectric points as demonstrated by gel electrophoresis. Purified synovial collagenase has a high dependence on the presence of this factor for activity. Other known activators of latent proteolytic enzymes such as trypsin and mercurials will stimulate collagenase but only if activator protein is present. The activator protein is itself a latent metalloprotease because in the presence of p-aminophenylmercuric acetate and calcium it will digest casein. The caseinase activity and collagenase activation activity have identical heat inactivation profiles, both being stable to a temperature of 60 degrees C and partially inactivated at 80 degrees C. The synthesis of the activator is localized in the superficial zone of articular cartilage.  相似文献   

12.
H P Heinz  D Brackertz  M Loos 《FEBS letters》1988,228(2):332-336
Native serum C1q, the collagenous-like subcomponent of the first component of complement, is not recognized by polyclonal anti-collagen type II antibodies. However, when purified C1q was subjected to limited proteolysis by collagenase it showed antigenic cross-reactivity with collagen type II. The same cross-reactivity was observed with hemolytically active C1q in synovial fluids of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), whereas C1q from synovial fluids of patients with osteoarthritis (OA), villo-nodular synovitis and ankylosing spondylitis was not recognized by this antibody. However, incubation of synovial fluid C1q of OA patients with synovial fluid leucocytes from RA patients led to an alteration of OA-C1q which was now recognized by the anti-collagen type II antibody.  相似文献   

13.
Cartilaginous wear particles were retrieved from synovial fluid aspirates of human diarthrodial joints and added to cultures of human or murine mononuclear phagocytes or human synovial cells. In each case, addition of the wear particles elevated the production of proteinases active at neutral pH against collagen, gelatin, azocasein and the synthetic pentapeptide phenylazobenzyloxycarbonyl-L-Pro-L-Leu-Gly-L-Pro-D-Arg. Synovial cells secreted more than five times as much collagenase as the same number of the other cells. All types of cell secreted significant quantities of enzymes active against the noncollagenous substrates. Mild treatment of the spent media with trypsin stimulated all of these enzymic activities. The spent culture media of synovial cells which had been exposed to cartilaginous wear particles released hydroxyproline and glycosaminoglycan from powdered cartilage, indicating the production of enzymes which degrade both the collagen and proteoglycan of the cartilaginous matrix. Cultures of mononuclear phagocytes, in contrast, while solubilizing chondroitin sulphate from cartilage, released very little hydroxyproline. The ability of wear particles to elicit these effects suggests a role for them in the pathogenesis of oesteoarthritis and other types of joint deterioration.  相似文献   

14.
The action of purified rheumatoid synovial collagenase and human neutrophil elastase on the cartilage collagen types II, IX, X and XI was examined. At 25 degrees C, collagenase attacked type II and type X (45-kDa pepsin-solubilized) collagens to produce specific products reflecting one and at least two cleavages respectively. At 35 degrees C, collagenase completely degraded the type II collagen molecule to small peptides whereas a large fragment of the type X molecule was resistant to further degradation. In contrast, collagen type IX (native, intact and pepsin-solubilized type M) and collagen type XI were resistant to collagenase attack at both 25 degrees C and 35 degrees C even in the presence of excess enzyme. Mixtures of type II collagen with equimolar amounts of either type IX or XI did not affect the rate at which the former was degraded by collagenase at 25 degrees C. Purified neutrophil elastase, shown to be functionally active against soluble type III collagen, had no effect on collagen type II at 25 degrees C or 35 degrees C. At 25 degrees C collagen types IX (pepsin-solubilized type M) and XI were also resistant to elastase, but at 35 degrees C both were susceptible to degradation with type IX being reduced to very small peptides. Collagen type X (45-kDa pepsin-solubilized) was susceptible to elastase attack at 25 degrees C and 35 degrees C as judged by the production of specific products that corresponded closely with those produced by collagenase. Although synovial collagenase failed to degrade collagen types IX and XI, all the cartilage collagen species examined were degraded at 35 degrees C by conditioned culture medium from IL1-activated human articular chondrocytes. Thus chondrocytes have the potential to catabolise each cartilage collagen species, but the specificity and number of the chondrocyte-derived collagenase(s) has yet to be resolved.  相似文献   

15.
Type VII collagen is the major structural protein of anchoring fibrils, which are believed to be critical for epidermal-dermal adhesion in the basement membrane zone of the skin. To elucidate possible mechanisms for the turnover of this protein, we examined the capacities of two proteases, human skin collagenase, which degrades interstitial collagens, and a protease with gelatinolytic and type IV collagenase activities, to cleave type VII collagen. At temperatures below the denaturation temperature, pepsin cleaves type VII collagen into products of approximately 95 and approximately 75 kDa. Human skin collagenase cleaved type VII collagen into two stable fragments of approximately 83 and approximately 80 kDa, and the type IV collagenase (gelatinase) produced a broad band of approximately 80 kDa as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Cleavage of type VII collagen was linear with time and enzyme concentration for both enzymes. Although the Km values were similar for both enzymes, the catalytic rate of cleavage by type IV collagenase is much faster than by interstitial collagenase, and shows a greater rate of increase with increasing temperature. Sequence analysis of the cleavage products from both enzymes showed typical collagenous sequences, indicating a relaxation in the helical part of the type VII collagen molecule at physiological temperature which makes it susceptible to gelatinolytic degradation. Interstitial collagenase from both normal skin cells and cells from patients with recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa, a severe hereditary blistering disease in which both an anchoring fibril defect and excessive production of collagenase can be observed, produced identical cleavage products from type VII collagen. These data suggest a pathophysiological link between increased enzyme levels and the observed decrease or absence of anchoring fibrils.  相似文献   

16.
Latent and active collagenase were extracted from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Separation of the two forms of the enzyme was performed by gel filtration on Sepharose 6 B. The latent form of the enzyme was detected from chromatographic fractions after a brief treatment with trypsin or exposure of the fractions to the sulfhydryl reagent phenylmercuric chloride. Latent enzyme eluted before active enzyme from the column, indicating a higher apparent molecular weight. Partially purified latent enzyme exhibited an apparent molecular size of 70-75 kDa as estimated by gel filtration. A value of 50-55 kDa was obtained for active enzyme. Without activation the latent enzyme did not degrade soluble collagen substrate. This was demonstrated by a quantitative viscometric assay and also by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, when no typical cleavage products of collagen could be seen. Latent enzyme could not be obtained unless serine protease inhibitors were present during the extraction and purification procedures. The effects of the activators trypsin, phenylmercuric chloride, phenylmethyl sulfonyltrypsin, and N-ethylmaleimide on the latent human polymorphonuclear leukocyte collagenase were studied. Contrary to the suggestion that inactive proteases activate latent human polymorphonuclear leukocyte collagenase, the inactive phenylmethyl sulfonyl-trypsin could not activate latent collagenase.  相似文献   

17.
1. The addition of heparin to the culture fluid of mouse tibiae or calvaria did not cause any significant resorption of bone collagen or mineral. However, heparin (or analogue sulfated polyanions), enhanced greatly the amount of latent, trypsin-activatable collagenase (i.e. procollagenase) released by the bones in the medium without influencing that of directly active collagenase which was always very low. Heparin appeared to act by increasing the production of the enzyme which is immediately excreted. Procollagenase and collagenase are not stored in bone tissue, even under conditions where it is in active resorption. 2. Parathyroid hormone induced in the explants a resorption of both mineral and collagen that was inhibited by calcitonin. These hormones, however, had no influence on the release of procollagenase or collagenase either in the presence or in the absence of heparin. 3. Once activated, bone collagenase digested the collagen of the bone explants, and more extensively after their demineralization. Thus the latent collagenase that accumulates around non-resorbing bones has to be considered as a precursor, (and not as a residue), of active enzyme. 4. Active collagenase added to incipient cultures of bones disappeared with a half-life of 24 h. The lost enzyme could, however, not be reactivated by trypsin and thus was not transformed into latent procollagenase.  相似文献   

18.
Latent and active collagenase were demonstrated following direct extraction from normal skin homogenates with 0.1M calcium chloride at 60 degrees C. 83% of the collagenase activity was in latent form and could be maximally activated with trypsin. Partial activation of the latent enzyme could also be demonstrated by incubation of the skin extract without added trypsin. This endogenous activation was inhibited by the addition of soya bean trypsin inhibitor, trasylol, di-isopropylphosphofluoridate and phenylmethanesulphonylfluoride, none of which inhibited collagenase directly. This suggests that the skin extracts contain a collagenase activating enzyme with the inhibition profile of a serine proteinase. A chymotryptic proteinase with a similar inhibition profile was extracted from normal human skin and partially purified. This enzyme activated fibroblast procollagenase derived from tissue culture of normal skin. The procollagenase was also partially activated by plasmin and chymotrypsin. This is the first demonstration of a collagenase activating enzyme in human skin and raises the possibility that collagenase activation by this mechanism may be responsible for collagen degradation in some disease processes.  相似文献   

19.
An enzyme that was capable of releasing small fragments containing hydroxynorleucine from the c-terminal extra-helical region of the alpha 1 chain of reduced (tritiated) soluble type I collagen was found, along with collagenase, in medium that had been conditioned by the culture of human gingival fibroblasts (Gin-1). The enzyme was present in a latent form or forms and could be activated by treatment with either trypsin or p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. It was maximally active at neutral pH and inhibited by EDTA. It is suggested that this enzyme, acting within a region of the molecule which is of major importance in stabilizing fibrillar collagen through intermolecular cross-linking, could potentially play an important role in collagen turnover in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
The separation and further purification of human polymorphonuclear-leucocyte collagenase and gelatinase, using modifications of the method of Cawston & Tyler [(1979) Biochem J. 183, 647-656], are described. The final preparations yielded collagenase of specific activity 260 units/mg and gelatinase of specific activity 13 000 units/mg. Gelatinase was purified to apparent homogeneity in a latent form, and analysis of the activation of 125I-labelled latent enzyme by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and gel-filtration techniques suggested that no peptide material was lost on conversion into the active form. The purified natural inhibitors alpha 2-macroglobulin, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases ('TIMP') and amniotic-fluid inhibitor of metalloproteinases all inhibited the two polymorphonuclear-leucocyte metalloproteinases, but the last two inhibitors were slow to act and complete inhibition was difficult to attain. Collagenase degraded soluble types I and III collagen equally efficiently, but soluble type II collagen less well. Gelatinase alone had little activity on these substrates, although it enhanced the action of collagenase. Gelatinase was capable of degrading soluble types IV and V collagen at 25 degrees C, whereas collagenase was only active at higher temperatures when the collagens were susceptible to trypsin activity. By using tissue preparations of insoluble collagens (type I, II or IV) the activity of leucocyte collagenase was low and gelatinase activity was negligible, as measured by the solubilization of hydroxyproline-containing material. The two enzymes together were two or three times more effective in the degradation of these insoluble collagens.  相似文献   

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