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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/3525

Title: Production of Collagenase and Tissue Inhibitor of Matelloproteinases by Fibroblasts Derived From Normal and Fibrotic Human Lungs
Authors: Selman, M
Montano, M
Stricklin, G
Raghu, G
Ramirez, R
Ramos, C
Pardo-Cemo, Annie
Issue Date: 1992
Abstract: Several experiments have demonstrated low collagenolytic activity during the development of pulmonary fibrosis. In order to determine if fibroblasts play a role in this alteration, procollagenase and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases (TIMP) were quantified in fibroblasts derived from 12 human lung specimens (normal = 6, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis [IPF] = 6). Under basal conditions, three cell strains from normal and three from fibrotic lung specimens did not synthesize collagenase and a similar number of normal and IPF-derived fibroblast strains produced the enzyme. However, the rate of enzyme synthesis among normal and fibrotic collagenase producing fibroblasts exhibited significant differences. Thus, whereas normal fibroblasts produced more than 300 ng/ml, fibrotic lung fibroblasts secreted approximately half of this amount (115+/-67 ng/ml). Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) enhanced collagenase production in all of the 12 lung fibroblast lines tested. In four IPF fibroblasts, PMA increased collagenase secretion close to those of normal stimulated lung fibroblasts
however, a lower induction was observed in cell strains from two fibrotic lung specimens. There was a wide variation in TIMP production both in normal and fibrotic lung fibroblasts, and no statistically significant difference was observed. Under basal conditions, TIMP levels ranged from 329 to 16,911 ng/ml in normal lung cells, and from 377 to 17,557 in fibrotic lung fibroblasts. PMA induced a several-fold increase in all cell lines. These results suggest that there are subpopulations of lung fibroblasts with different potential to produce collagenase and TIMP in vitro, and that the predominance of low collagenase-producing subsets may contribute to the development of fibrosis.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/3525
ISSN: 123692
Appears in Collections:Departamento de Biología Celular

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