| Literature DB >> 26025392 |
Richard Kelwick1, Ines Desanlis2, Grant N Wheeler3, Dylan R Edwards4.
Abstract
The ADAMTS (A Disintegrin and Metalloproteinase with Thrombospondin motifs) enzymes are secreted, multi-domain matrix-associated zinc metalloendopeptidases that have diverse roles in tissue morphogenesis and patho-physiological remodeling, in inflammation and in vascular biology. The human family includes 19 members that can be sub-grouped on the basis of their known substrates, namely the aggrecanases or proteoglycanases (ADAMTS1, 4, 5, 8, 9, 15 and 20), the procollagen N-propeptidases (ADAMTS2, 3 and 14), the cartilage oligomeric matrix protein-cleaving enzymes (ADAMTS7 and 12), the von-Willebrand Factor proteinase (ADAMTS13) and a group of orphan enzymes (ADAMTS6, 10, 16, 17, 18 and 19). Control of the structure and function of the extracellular matrix (ECM) is a central theme of the biology of the ADAMTS, as exemplified by the actions of the procollagen-N-propeptidases in collagen fibril assembly and of the aggrecanases in the cleavage or modification of ECM proteoglycans. Defects in certain family members give rise to inherited genetic disorders, while the aberrant expression or function of others is associated with arthritis, cancer and cardiovascular disease. In particular, ADAMTS4 and 5 have emerged as therapeutic targets in arthritis. Multiple ADAMTSs from different sub-groupings exert either positive or negative effects on tumorigenesis and metastasis, with both metalloproteinase-dependent and -independent actions known to occur. The basic ADAMTS structure comprises a metalloproteinase catalytic domain and a carboxy-terminal ancillary domain, the latter determining substrate specificity and the localization of the protease and its interaction partners; ancillary domains probably also have independent biological functions. Focusing primarily on the aggrecanases and proteoglycanases, this review provides a perspective on the evolution of the ADAMTS family, their links with developmental and disease mechanisms, and key questions for the future.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26025392 PMCID: PMC4448532 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-015-0676-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1The ADAMTS (A Disintegrin And Metalloproteinase with ThromboSpondin motifs) family. The basic domain organization of the 19 ADAMTS family members and their major functional groups. Structurally the ADAMTS members are broadly organized into a proteinase domain and an ancillary domain. The proteinase domain comprises the signal, pro, metalloproteinase and disintegrin-like domains. The greatest variability between ADAMTS members is found in the ancillary domain, which is composed of one or more thrombospondin type 1 sequence repeats (TSRs), a cysteine-rich domain and a spacer domain. Some family members also have one or more specialist domains as part of their ancillary domain, as listed in the key on the right. The diagram is drawn to scale
Fig. 2Evolution of the ADAMTS family. a A schematic representation of the relationships of the eight vertebrate ADAMTS clades and the probable events (gene duplications and a retrotransposition) that have contributed to the expansion of the family. The figure is not to scale in terms of evolutionary distance. COMP, cartilage oligomeric protein; vWFCP, von-Willebrand-factor-cleaving protease. b Phylogenetic tree of the ADAMTS genes inferred by the maximum likelihood method based on the JTT matrix-based model [144]. The bootstrap consensus tree inferred from 1,000 replicates was taken to represent the evolutionary history of the taxa analyzed [145]. Branches corresponding to partitions reproduced in less than 50 % bootstrap replicates were collapsed. Initial tree(s) for the heuristic search were obtained by applying the neighbor-joining method to a matrix of pairwise distances estimated using a JTT model. The analysis involved 70 amino acid sequences. All positions containing gaps and missing data were eliminated. Evolutionary analyses were conducted in MEGA6 [146]. The vertebrate ADAMTS genes are indicated by a number followed by a single letter code indicating the species: for example, 1 t represents 1_t ADAMTS1 from Xenopus tropicalis; 15 h is 15_h ADAMTS15 from Homo sapiens; 8 m is ADAMTS8 from Mus musculus. For Drosophila melanogaster (dro), Caenorhabditis elegans (cel) and Ciona intestinalis (cio), the annotation is species followed by the gene number; for example, cio 6 is cio_6 ADAMTS6 from Ciona
ADAMTS genes: their chromosomal positions, major tissue expression locations, expression-inducing factors, substrates, and associations with pathologies
| Gene | Location | Expression | Factors inducing or (repressing) expression | Substrates | Pathology associations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 21q21 | Ovary, bronchial epithelial cells, fetal lung, placenta, smooth muscle, uterus, adrenal cortex, adipocyte, ciliary ganglion, prostate, olfactory bulb, breast stromal fibroblasts and myoepithelial cells | Progesterone, Brg1, IL-1, S100A8, S100A9, TNFα | Aggrecan, versican, syndecan 4, TFPI-2, semaphorin 3C, nidogen-1, −2, desmocollin-3, dystroglycan, mac-2, gelatin (denatured collagen type I), amphiregulin, TGF-α, heparin-binding EGF | Cancer (both pro- and anti-tumorigenic/metastatic), anti-angiogenic |
|
| 5q35 | Adipocyte, skeletal muscle, superior cervical ganglion, uterus, placenta, heart, liver, lung, tongue, smooth muscle, breast stromal fibroblasts | Glucocorticoids (in monocytes), IL-6 | Fibrillar procollagens types I-III and V | Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type VIIc, dermatosparaxis (in sheep and cattle) |
|
| 4q21 | CD105+ endothelial cells, CD34+ cells, pineal gland, cartilage, bone, skeletal muscle, tendon, breast myoepithelial cells | Fibrillar procollagen type II, biglycan | ||
|
| 1q23 | Ovary, spinal cord, adrenal cortex, ciliary ganglion, trigeminal ganglion, brain, retina, pancreas (islets), fetal lung, breast myoepithelial cells | IL-1 + oncostatin M, TNFα, S100A8, S100A9, leptin, IL-6 | Aggrecan, versican, reelin, biglycan, brevican, matrilin-3, α2-macroglobulin, COMP | Arthritis |
| (HDAC inhibitors, pentosan polysulfate) | |||||
|
| 21q21 | Adipocyte, uterus, breast myoepithelial cells | IL-1, TNFα, S100A8, S100A9, leptin, IL-6 | Aggrecan, versican, reelin, biglycan, matrilin-4, brevican, α2-macroglobulin | Arthritis, cancer (anti-tumorigenic, anti-angiogenic) |
| (HDAC inhibitors) | |||||
|
| 5q12 | Superior cervical ganglion, trigeminal ganglion, appendix, heart, breast myoepithelial cells | TNFα, | - | |
|
| 5q24 | Trigeminal ganglion, adrenal cortex, liver, heart, skeletal muscle, intervertebral disc, breast stromal fibroblasts | PTHrP | COMP | Coronary artery disease (smooth muscle cell migration) |
| (miR-29a/b) | |||||
|
| 11q24 | Skeletal muscle, heart, liver, superior cervical ganglion, adrenal cortex, breast stromal fibroblasts and luminal epithelial cells | Aggrecan | ||
|
| 3p14 | Dorsal root ganglion, breast myoepithelial cells | TNFα, IL1 + oncostatin M, leptin | Aggrecan, versican | Cancer (anti-angiogenic) |
| (HDAC inhibitors) | |||||
|
| 19p13 | CD8+ T-cells, brain, uterus, breast stromal fibroblasts | Fibrillin-1 | Weill-Marchesani syndrome | |
|
| 5p13 | Liver, bone marrow, atrioventricular node, intervertebral disc, breast stromal fibroblasts and myoepithelial cells | COMP | Cancer (pro- and anti-tumorigenic) | |
|
| 9q34 | Liver, CD71+ early erythroid cells, lung, thyroid, breast myoepithelial cells | (IL-1) | vWF | Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura |
|
| 10q22 | Thalamus, bone marrow, fetal thyroid, adipocyte, cerebellum, bone, skin, fibroblasts, breast myoepithelial and luminal epithelial cells | Fibrillar procollagen type I (pNα1 and pNα2 chains) | ||
|
| 11q24 | Colon, brain, heart, uterus, musculoskeletal system, breast myoepithelial cells | Aggrecan, versican | Cancer (anti-tumorigenic/metastatic, anti-angiogenic) | |
|
| 5p15 | Breast myoepithelial cells | Follicle stimulating hormone; forskolin (cAMP); | - | Hypertension |
| Transcription factors: Wilm’s tumor-1; Egr-1, Sp1 | |||||
|
| 15q26 | Breast myoepithelial cells | - | Weill-Marchesani-like syndrome | |
|
| 16q23 | Ciliary ganglion, heart, skin, brain, breast myoepithelial cells | - | ||
|
| 5q23 | Dorsal root ganglion, breast myoepithelial cells | - | ||
|
| 2q12 | Brain, appendix, heart, liver, skeletal muscle, pituitary, trigeminal ganglion, breast myoepithelial cells | Versican |
ADAMTS knockout and mutant mouse phenotypes
| Gene | Phenotype of gene knockout or mutant mice | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|
|
| Growth retardation, adipose tissue malformation | [ |
| Impaired fertility with defective ovulation | [153] | |
| Severe kidney abnormalities: enlarged renal calices with fibrosis leading to obstruction of uteropelvic junction; abnormal adrenal medullary architecture with no formation of capillaries | [ | |
| [150] | ||
| Defective follicular development during ovulation, delay in development of ovarian lymphatic vessels | [ | |
| Impaired skin wound healing; effects on keratinocyte and fibroblast migration | [ | |
| No defects in aggrecan turnover | [ | |
| Reduced tumorigenesis and metastasis in PyMT mammary cancer, with increased apoptosis | [ | |
| Defective myocardial morphogenesis | [ | |
| Selective decline in synaptic protein levels in frontal cortex of female | [ | |
|
| Fragile skin at 1–2 months postnatal; male sterility | [ |
| Widespread defects in procollagen III processing; abnormal lungs | [ | |
| Reduced extent and stability of carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatic fibrosis | [ | |
|
| No phenotype unchallenged | [ |
| Perinatal lethality, exacerbation of renal phenotype in | [ | |
|
| No phenotype unchallenged. Protection in surgery-induced osteoarthritis and antigen-induced arthritis models | [ |
| [ | ||
|
| [ | |
| Blockade of fibrosis and accumulation of aggrecan in joints in the DMM and TTR models of osteoarthritis | [ | |
| [ | ||
| Reduced changes in subchondral bone in DMM model of osteoarthritis | [152] | |
| Altered biomechanical properties of tendon | [ | |
| Cardiac valve defects resembling myxomatous valve disease; rescued in versican ( | [147] | |
| Partial reduction of interdigital web regression | [151] | |
| Impaired dermal repair in excisional skin wound healing; aggrecan accumulation, altered | [ | |
| Dermal fibroblasts have myofibroblastic phenotype showing increased contractility in three-dimensional collagen gels, rescued in versican ( | ||
|
| Embryonic lethal at E7.5 days post coitum | [ |
| Partial reduction of interdigital web regression, enhanced in | [ | |
| Abnormal cardiac development in | [ | |
|
| No phenotype unchallenged; Elevated tumor growth and angiogenesis | [ |
| Exacerbated inflammation and airway dysfunction in allergen-induced airways disease | [149] | |
| More severe inflammation and delayed recovery following colitis, endotoxic sepsis and pancreatitis induction | [ | |
|
| Little phenotype unchallenged; loss of ADAMTS13 is pro-thrombotic but insufficient to generate thrombotic thromboscytopenic purpura | [ |
|
| Mutations in | [ |
| Partial reduction of interdigital web regression, enhanced in | [ | |
|
| [ |