Osteoclasts degrade bone matrix, which is mainly type I collagen and hydroxyapatite, in an acidic extracellular compartment. Thus we reasoned that osteoclasts must produce an acid collagenase. We purified this enzyme, a 31 kDa protein, from avian osteoclast lysates (in 100 mM acetate/1 mM CHAPS/1 mM dithiothreitol, pH 4.4), fractionated by (NH2)2SO4 precipitation, gelatin-affinity, cation exchange, and gel filtration. Fraction activity was measured using diazotized collagen or 3H-labelled cross-linked collagen (decalcified and trypsin-treated metabolically L-[4,5-3H]proline-labelled bone) as substrates. Iodoacetate, leupeptin, antipain, pepstatin and mercurials inhibited collagenolysis by the isolated proteinase; mercurial derivatives could not be re-activated by dithiothreitol. Collagen degradation was maximal at pH 4.4; purified proteinase reproduced the collagenolytic activity of cell lysates. The N-terminal amino acid sequence from the isolated protein and its CNBr degradation fragments showed sequence similarity to mammalian cathepsin Bs, and near-identity with avian liver cathepsin B. Peptide substrate specificity of the osteoclastic enzyme resembled those of mammalian cathepsin B and its avian liver counterpart, but degradation of low-molecular-mass substrates by the osteoclastic enzyme was slower, reflecting generally lower kcat. values. Further, kcat/Km varied less between arginine-containing substrates than for previously reported cathepsin Bs, indicating different substrate specificity of the osteoclast enzyme. Polyclonal antibody raised to a 25 kDa fragment of the enzyme recognized a single 31 kDa band in SDS/PAGE of osteoclast lysates blotted to poly(vinylidene difluoride), adsorbed collagenolytic activity of osteoclast lysates, and stained avian osteoclasts in tissue sections. Degenerate sense- and antisense-oligonucleotide primers, predicted from segments of primary amino acid sequence, amplified a 486 bp DNA fragment; this was cloned and sequenced. Of 162 amino acids encoded, 77% are identical with those of human cathepsin B; hybridization identified a 2.4 kb RNA in osteoclast lysates. We conclude that the major avian osteoclast collagenolytic enzyme is a cathepsin B, whose activity varies from other enzymes of its class.
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March 1993
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Research Article|
March 15 1993
Extracellular-matrix degradation at acid pH. Avian osteoclast acid collagenase isolation and characterization
H C Blair;
H C Blair
*Department of Veterans' Affairs Medical Center, Birmingham, AL 35294 and Department of Pathology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294, U.S.A.
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S L Teitelbaum;
S L Teitelbaum
†Department of Pathology, Jewish Hospital at Washington University Medical Center, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.
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L E Grosso;
L E Grosso
†Department of Pathology, Jewish Hospital at Washington University Medical Center, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.
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D L Lacey;
D L Lacey
†Department of Pathology, Jewish Hospital at Washington University Medical Center, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.
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H L Tan;
H L Tan
†Department of Pathology, Jewish Hospital at Washington University Medical Center, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.
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D W McCourt;
D W McCourt
‡Howard Hughes Medical Institute, St. Louis, MO, U.S.A.
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J J Jeffrey
J J Jeffrey
§Department of Medicine, Albany Medical College, Albany, NY, U.S.A.
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Biochem J (1993) 290 (3): 873–884.
Citation
H C Blair, S L Teitelbaum, L E Grosso, D L Lacey, H L Tan, D W McCourt, J J Jeffrey; Extracellular-matrix degradation at acid pH. Avian osteoclast acid collagenase isolation and characterization. Biochem J 15 March 1993; 290 (3): 873–884. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/bj2900873
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