| Literature DB >> 2437124 |
H Y Lin, B R Wells, R E Taylor, H Birkedal-Hansen.
Abstract
Feeder-cell-independent serially propagating keratinocytes from rat oral mucosa (tongue) dissolved reconstituted type I [3H]collagen fibrils, although rather slowly. Analysis of the conditioned medium from such cultures revealed secretion of a Mr = 65,000 collagenase which remained almost entirely latent in the absence of exogenous protease activity. Addition of trypsin (0.1-1.0 microgram/ml) or plasmin (1.0-4.0 micrograms/ml) resulted in substantial acceleration of the collagenolytic process in stimulated secretion of latent collagenase and, at higher concentrations, in conversion of the latent enzyme to the catalytic form. The keratinocyte collagenase was indistinguishable from interstitial, fibroblast-type collagenases by several criteria including: cleavage of native type I collagen in solution at the characteristic collagenase-sensitive locus at 22 degrees C and dissolution of reconstituted type I collagen fibrils at 35 degrees C; activation by trypsin and by organomercurials and inhibition by Zn2+ and Ca2+ chelators; and cross-reaction with antibody to fibroblast-type procollagenase. Expression of collagenolytic activity in keratinocyte cultures was effectively regulated by cell density. The activity (on a per cell basis) was maximal at 10-20% confluence and was more than 95% "contact-inhibited" at subconfluent and early confluent densities (2-4 X 10(5)/cm2). Our findings show that mucosal keratinocytes possess a potent enzymatic apparatus for degradation of interstitial collagen fibrils which includes a classical vertebrate collagenase.Entities:
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Year: 1987 PMID: 2437124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157