Purification and characterization of a gelatinase produced by fibroblasts from human gingiva.
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An endopeptidase which digests denatured collagen to small, dialysable fragments was purified 2675-fold from medium that had been conditioned by the culture of fibroblasts grown from explants of human gingiva. This enzyme was inhibited by chelating agents, but not by phenylmethylsulphonyl fluoride nor by N-ethylmaleimide, and is therefore probably a metalloproteinase. It showed no demonstrable activity against native collagen or ovalbumin, while alpha-casein was digested slowly, if at all. It therefore belongs to the group of enzymes which have been called tissue gelatinases. This gelatinase was secreted in a latent form or forms and could be activated by proteolysis with trypsin. The active enzyme had an apparent molecular weight of 69 000 (gel chromatography) or 72 000 (gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulphate) and an apparent isoelectric point of 4.15.
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