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. 1987 Oct;84(19):6725–6729. doi: 10.1073/pnas.84.19.6725

Human skin fibroblast stromelysin: structure, glycosylation, substrate specificity, and differential expression in normal and tumorigenic cells.

S M Wilhelm 1, I E Collier 1, A Kronberger 1, A Z Eisen 1, B L Marmer 1, G A Grant 1, E A Bauer 1, G I Goldberg 1
PMCID: PMC299156  PMID: 3477804

Abstract

We have purified and determined the complete primary structure of human stromelysin, a secreted metalloprotease with a wide range of substrate specificities. Human stromelysin is synthesized in a preproenzyme form with a calculated size of 53,977 Da and a 17-amino acid long signal peptide. Prostromelysin is secreted in two forms, with apparent molecular masses on NaDodSO4/PAGE of 60 and 57 kDa. The minor 60-kDa polypeptide is a glycosylated form of the major 57-kDa protein containing N-linked complex oligosaccharides. Zymogen activation by trypsin results in the removal of 84 amino acids from the amino terminus of the enzyme generating a 45-kDa active enzyme species. Human stromelysin is capable of degrading proteoglycan, fibronectin, laminin, and type IV collagen but not interstitial type I collagen. The enzyme is not capable of activating purified human fibroblast procollagenase. Analysis of its primary structure shows that stromelysin is in all likelihood the human analog of rat transin, which is an oncogene transformation-induced protease. The pattern of enzyme expression in normal and tumorigenic cells revealed that human skin fibroblasts in vitro secrete stromelysin constitutively (1-2 micrograms per 10(6) cells per 24 hr). Human fetal lung fibroblasts transformed with simian virus 40, human bronchial epithelial cells transformed with the ras oncogene, fibrosarcoma cells (HT-1080), and a melanoma cell strain (A 2058), do not express this protease nor can the enzyme be induced in these cells by treatment with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. Our data indicate that the expression and the possible involvement of secreted metalloproteases in tumorigenesis result from a specific interaction between the transforming factor and the target cell, which may vary in different species.

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Selected References

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