| Literature DB >> 32357580 |
Helena Laronha1,2, Jorge Caldeira1,2.
Abstract
The extracellular matrix (ECM) is a macromolecules network, in which the most abundant molecule is collagen. This protein in triple helical conformation is highly resistant to proteinases degradation, the only enzymes capable of degrading the collagen are matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). This resistance and maintenance of collagen, and consequently of ECM, is involved in several biological processes and it must be strictly regulated by endogenous inhibitors (TIMPs). The deregulation of MMPs activity leads to development of numerous diseases. This review shows MMPs complexity.Entities:
Keywords: TIMP; collagen; matrix metalloproteinases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32357580 PMCID: PMC7290392 DOI: 10.3390/cells9051076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Schematic representation of the cell membrane.
Figure 2Synthesis of microfibril collagen. (a) In intracellular medium, the mRNA is transcripted by ribosome, forming the pre-peptide, which is then processed in endoplasmic reticulum, forming pro-collagen. (b) In extracellular medium, the pro-collagen is processed by collagen peptidase, forming tropocollagen. For microfibril collagen formation, the tropocollagen is processed by lysil oxidase.
Figure 3Collagen degradation. The enzyme with collagenolytic activity (collagenases) cleaves the triple helix at two fragments: 3/4 N-terminal and 1/4 C-terminal. Each chain (α1 and α2) has a specific cleavage sequence (# represents the cleavage site).
Figure 4Active site of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-1. The zinc catalytic is represented by grey ball and the three histidine residues are represented by sticks.
Examples of diseases caused by deregulation of MMPs.
| Pathologies | Diseases |
|---|---|
| Tissue destruction | Cancer invasion and metastasis |
| Arthritis | |
| Ulcers | |
| Periodontal diseases | |
| Brain degenerative diseases | |
| Fibroses | Liver cirrhosis |
| Fibrotic lung disease | |
| Otosclerosis | |
| Atherosclerosis | |
| Multiple sclerosis | |
| Weakening of matrix | Dilated cardiomyopathy |
| Aortic aneurysm | |
| Varicose veins |
Collagenases type [1,9,11,24,36].
| MMP | Name | Substrate | Production | Diseases | Other Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Collagenase-1; Interstitial or Fibroblast collagenase | Collagen type I, II, III, VII, VIII, X and XI, gelatin, entactin, tenascin, aggrecan, fibronectin, vitronectin, myelin basic protein, ovostatin, casein | Sensitive to oxidative stress. Cells: fibroblasts, keratinocytes, endothelial cells, macrophages, hepatocytes, chondrocytes, platelets and osteoblasts. | Rheumatoid arthritis, atherosclerosis, pulmonary emphysema, fibrosis, autoimmune disease, wound healing and cancer | Identified in 1962. |
| 8 | Collagenase-2; Neutrophil collagenase | Collagen type I, II and III, fibronectin, aggrecan and ovostatin. | Cells: chondrocytes, endothelial cells, activated macrophages and smooth muscle cells. | Rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, wound healing, periodontitis and cancer. | Identified in 1990 and it was discovered in cDNA library constructed from mRNA extracted from peripheral leukocytes of a patient with chronic granulocytic leukemia. MMP-8 is secreted by pro-MMP-8 form and it is activated by MMP-3 and -10 |
| 13 | Collagenase-3 | Collagen type I, II, III, IV, IX, X and XIV, tenascin C isoform, fibronectin, laminin, aggrecan core protein, gelatin, plasminogen, osteonectin, casein, fibrillin-1 and serine proteinases inhibitors | Connective tissue (cartilage and developing bone) Cells: epithelial and neuronal cells. | Osteoarthritis, lung diseases (lung injury, viral infection and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), liver fibroses, cancer and metastasis | MMP-13 have gelatinolytic activity. |
| 18 | Collagenase-4 | Collagen and gelatin | Organs: mammary glands, placenta, lung, pancreas, ovary, intestine, spleen, thymus, prostate, colon and heart | MMP-18 has not been directly linked to a specific pathological condition. | Identified in 1990s, in sequence similarity studies. Show closest identity with MMPs-1, -3, -10 and -11. |
Gelatinases type [1,8,9,11,12,17,24,36].
| MMP | Name | Substrate | Production | Diseases | Other Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | Gelatinase A | Collagen typeI, III, IV, V, VII and X, gelatin, some glycoprotein of ECM, fibronectin, laminin, aggrecan, elastin, tenascin, myelin basic protein and vitronectin | Cells: dermal fibroblasts, keratinocytes, endothelial cells, chondrocytes, osteoblasts, leukocytes, platelets and monocytes | Promotion and inhibition of inflammation, asthma, fibrosis, cardiovascular diseases and cancer | MMP-2 expression is constitutive and TNF-α and -β stimulate its production, but IFN-τ suppresses its production. |
| 9 | Gelatinase B | Collagen type IV, V, and XI, cytokines, elastin, aggrecan, decorin, laminin, entactin, myelin basic protein, casein, chemokines, IL-8 and IL-1β | Cells: neutrophils, macrophages, polymorphonuclear leucocytes, osteoblasts, epithelial cells, fibroblasts, dendritic cells, granulocytes, T-cells and keratinocytes. | Cardiovascular diseases, inflammation and esophageal cancer | Identified such as neutrophil in 1974. MMP-9 has a strongly O-glycosylated collagen type V insert |
Stromelysin types [1,8,9,11,12,17,18,21,24,36].
| MMP | Name | Substrate | Production | Diseases | Other Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | Stromelysin-1 | Collagen type I, II, III, IV, V, X and IX, fibronectin, gelatin, laminin, aggrecan, vitronectin, entactin, tenascin, decorin, myelin basic protein, ovostatin, casein, osteonectin elastin and proteoglycans. | Cells: fibroblasts and platelets MMP-3 has been detected in the nucleus, and it may function as a trans-regulator of connective tissue growth factor. | Arthritis, osteoarthritis, asthma, aneurism, atherosclerosis, coronary artery diseases, periodontitis, wound healing, Alzheimer diseases and cancer. | Identified in 1985. MMP-3 is secreted as inactive enzyme and actives pro-MMP-1, pro-MMP-13 and gelatinases. MMP-3 retains protease capability regardless of metal center, but this replace leads to sensitivity changes for different substrates. MMP-3 has a unique deep active site that transverses the length of the enzyme. |
| 10 | Stromelysin-2 | Collagen type III, IV, V, IX and X, proteoglycans, gelatin, fibronectin, laminin, elastin, aggrecan, cassein and fibrilin-10 | Cells: keratinocytes, macrophages and epithelium | Wound healing, arthritis, fibrosis, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, peripheral arterial disease and cancer. | MMP-10 has 82% MMP-3 homologous sequence. MMP-10 is secreted as pro-MMP-10. Actives others pro-MMPs, such as pro-collagenases. MMP-10 plays a role in liver regeneration. |
| 11 | - | No protein of major relevance to ECM can be degraded by MMP-11 but it degrades laminin receptor and serine proteinases inhibitors, α1-proteinases and α1-antitrypsin inhibitors. | Cells: fibroblasts Organs: uterus, placenta and mammary glands | Would healing, progression of epithelial malignancies and cancer | Identified in 1990, in stromal cells surrounding invasive breast carcinoma.MMP-11 is activated intracellularly by furin, since it has a furin recognition sequence (RXRXKR) and secreted in active form. |
Matrilysin types [8,9,11,12,17,24,36].
| MMP | Name | Substrate | Production | Diseases | Other Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | - | Faz-ligand, pro-TNF-α, E-cadherin, syndecan-1, fibronectin, laminin, elastin, casein, gelatin type I, II, IV and V, collagen type I and IVm vitronectin, entactin, tenascin, aggrecan, myelin, and proteoglycans | Cells: epithelia cells, mammalian glands, liver, pancreas, prostate and skin | Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, cancer, metastasis and inflammatory processes. | MMP-7 was described such as putative uterine metalloprotease- 1 in 1988. MMP-7 acts intracellularly in the intestine to process procryptidins to bactericidal forms. |
| 26 | Matrilysin-2 or endometase | ( | Cancer cells of epithelial origin | Carcinomas of the lung, prostate and breast, angiogenesis and tumor progression. | MMP-26 contains a signal sequence for secretion and a prodomain with an unusual cysteine switch for latency preservation. Active pro-MMP-9. MMP-26 is negatively regulated by TIMP-2 and -4, with TIMP-4 being more potent inhibitor. |
Membrane-type metalloproteinases [1,8,9,11,12,17,24].
| MMP | Name | Substrate | Production | Diseases | Other Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 14 | MT1-MMP (Membrane-type) | Collagen type I, II and III; gelatin, fibronectin, laminin-1, vitronectin, cartilage proteoglycans, fibrilin-1, tenascin, entactin, aggrecan, α1-proteinase inhibitor and α2-macroglobulin. | Cells: fibroblasts, platelets and osteoblasts | Cancer | Identified in 1994. MMP-14 actives the MMP-2, -8 and -13 latent forms. MMP-14 activates pro-MMP-13 on the cell surface. |
| 15 | MT2-MMP (Membrane-type) | Laminin, fibronectin, entactin, aggrecan, gelatin, vibronectin and tenascin. | Organs: placenta, heart and brain | Cancer (glioblastoma, ovarian and breast carcinoma) | Identified in 1995. MMP-15 can active MMP-2 and -13 latent forms. |
| 16 | MT3-MMP (Membrane-type) | Gelatin, casein, collagen type III, laminin and fibronectin. | Organs: lungs, placenta, kidney, ovaries, intestine, prostate, spleen, heart and skeletal muscle Cells: cardiomyocytes progenitor cells | Tumor invasion | Identified in 1997. MMP-16 can activate MMP-2 and -9. |
| 17 | MT4-MMP (GPI-anchored) | Gelatin, fibrinogen and fibrin | Cells: leucocytes Organs: brain, colon, ovaries and testicles | Inflammatory processes, cancer and tumor progression. | In the mid-1990s, MMP-17 was cloned from a human breast carcinoma cDNA library. ADAMTS-4 activator. MMP-17 cannot active pro-MMP-2. |
| 24 | MT5-MMP (Membrane-type) | Fibronectin, gelatin and proteoglycans | Organs: brain, kidney, pancreas and lung | Brain tumor (astrocytomas and glioblastomas) and tumor progression and angiogenesis. | Identified in 1999 and cloned from a human brain cDNA library. MMP-24 can activate MMP-2 latent form. MMP-24 is neuro-specific and contribute to neuronal circuit formation and plasticity. It has a role in the development of dermal neuro-immune synapses. |
| 25 | MT6-MMP (GPI-anchored) | Collagen type IV, fibronectin, gelatin and proteoglycans. | Cells: leucocytes and cancer tissue Organs: testicles, kidney and skeletal muscle | Cancer | The stem region contains three cysteine residues which may contribute to dimerization by inter- and intramolecular disulfide bond. MMP-25 cannot degrade laminin-1. MMP-25 actives pro-MMP-2, but differently than the other MT-MMPS. |
Figure 5Schematic representation of the general structure of MMP.
Domain and presence in MMPs.
| Domain | Presence |
|---|---|
| Signal Peptide | All MMPs |
| Pro-domain | All MMPs |
| Catalytic | All MMPs |
| Hemopexin-like | All MMPs, except in MMP-7, -23, and -26 |
| Fibronectin | Only MMP-2 and -9 |
| Vitronectin insert | Only MMP-21 |
| Type I transmembrane | Only MMP-14, -15, -16, and -24 |
| Cytoplasmic | Only MMP-14, -15, -16, and -24 |
| GPI anchor | Only MMP-17 and -25 |
| Cysteine Array Region | Only MMP-23 |
| IgG-like domain | Only MMP-23 |
Figure 6MMP-2 with pro-domain. (a) Surface of MMP-2, where the pro-domain is represented in orange. (b) Three-dimensional structure of MMP-2, where “bait-region” and “cysteine switch” are represented in blue.
Figure 7MMP-1 catalytic domain.
Figure 8MMP-1 catalytic domain, hemopexin-like domain and linker.
Figure 9(a) MMP-1 hemopexin-like domain, composed to 4 β-propeller (4 β- sheets and 1 α-helix). (b) Surface of pro-MMP-2-TIMP-2 complex (pro-domain, catalytic domain and hemopexin-like domain are represented in green; TIMP-2 is represented in blue).
Figure 10Schematic representation of different subgroups of S1′ pocket.
Figure 11Schematic representation of MMP activation.
Figure 12Catalytic mechanism.
Other MMPs [9,12,17,21,24,36,37].
| MMP | Name | Substrate | Production | Diseases | Other Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 | Macrophage metalloelastase | Gelatin type I, elastin, fibronectin, laminin, vitronectin, proteoglycans, elastin, collagen type I, IV and V, entactin, osteonectin, aggrecan, myelin, fibrinogen and α1-antitripsin | Cells: chondrocytes, macrophages and other stromal cells, osteoblasts. Organs: placenta | Chronic pulmonary disease, atherosclerosis, emphysema and lung cancer. | MMP-12 may affect the blood-brain barrier after cerebral ischemia. |
| 19 | RASI-1 or stromelysin-4 | Collagen type I and IV, laminin and nidogen, tenascin-C isoform, entactin, aggrecan, fibronectin and gelatin type I, in vitro | Cells: leucocytes Organs: colon, intestine, ovary, testis, prostate, thymus, spleen, pancreas, kidney, skeletal muscle, liver, lung, placenta, brain and heart | Wound healing and arthritic disease. | The MMP-19 can activate pro-MMP-9, but cannot activate other latent forms (MMP-1, -2, -3, -13 and -14, in vitro) |
| 20 | Enamelysin | Ameloblasts, aggrecan, odontoblasts and amelogenin | Organs: dental tissue (enamel) | Tooth development | MMP-20 is a tooth-specific MMP expressed in newly formed tooth enamel. MMP-20 contains a very basic hinge region compared to the hinge region of stromelysins (hydrophobic) or MMP-19 (acidic) |
| 21 | Xenopus-MMP | - | Cells: leucocytes, macrophages, fibroblasts, basal and squamous cell Organs: ovary, kidney, lung, placenta, intestine, neuroectoderm, skin and brain. | Embryogenesis, pancreatic cancer and tumor progression | - |
| 22 | Chicken-MMP | - | - | - | MMP-22 catalytic domain is closely related to stromelysin-3. |
| 23 | Cysteine array (CA)-MMP | Gelatin | Organs: ovary, testicles and prostate | - | MMP-23 lacks a signal sequence, it has a short pro-domain and the |
| 27 | - | Gelatin | Cells: B-lymphocytes Organs: testicles, intestine, lung and skin. | Ovarian or peritoneal endometriotic lesions, breast cancer development and tumor progression. | MMP-27 is classified as stromelysin and holds 51.6% structural homology with MMP-10. |
| 28 | Epilysin | Casein | Cells: basal keratinocytes Organs: epidermis. High levels- testis. Low levels-lungs heart, intestine, colon, placenta and brain. | Tissue homeostasis and repair, osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis. | - |