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The metzincins--topological and sequential relations between the astacins, adamalysins, serralysins, and matrixins (collagenases) define a superfamily of zinc-peptidases.

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TLDR
The corresponding four distinct families of zinc peptidases, the astacins, the matrix metalloproteinases (matrixins, collagenases), the adamalysins/reprolysins (snake venom proteinases/reproductive tract proteins), and the serralysins appear to have originated by divergent evolution from a common ancestor and form a superfamily of proteolytic enzymes for which the designation “metzincins” has been proposed.
Abstract
The three-dimensional structures of the zinc endopeptidases human neutrophil collagenase, adamalysin II from rattle snake venom, alkaline proteinase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and astacin from crayfish are topologically similar, with respect to a five-stranded beta-sheet and three alpha-helices arranged in typical sequential order. The four proteins exhibit the characteristic consensus motif HEXXHXXGXXH, whose three histidine residues are involved in binding of the catalytically essential zinc ion. Moreover, they all share a conserved methionine residue beneath the active site metal as part of a superimposable "Met-turn." This structural relationship is supported by a sequence alignment performed on the basis of topological equivalence showing faint but distinct sequential similarity. The alkaline proteinase is about equally distant (26% sequence identity) to both human neutrophil collagenase and astacin and a little further away from adamalysin II (17% identity). The pairs astacin/adamalysin II, astacin/human neutrophil collagenase, and adamalysin II/human neutrophil collagenase exhibit sequence identities of 16%, 14%, and 13%, respectively. Therefore, the corresponding four distinct families of zinc peptidases, the astacins, the matrix metalloproteinases (matrixins, collagenases), the adamalysins/reprolysins (snake venom proteinases/reproductive tract proteins), and the serralysins (large bacterial proteases from Serratia, Erwinia, and Pseudomonas) appear to have originated by divergent evolution from a common ancestor and form a superfamily of proteolytic enzymes for which the designation "metzincins" has been proposed. There is also a faint but significant structural relationship of the metzincins to the thermolysin-like enzymes, which share the truncated zinc-binding motif HEXXH and, moreover, similar topologies in their N-terminal domains.

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How Matrix Metalloproteinases Regulate Cell Behavior

TL;DR: Recent advances shed light on how the structure and function of the MMPs are related and on how their transcription, secretion, activation, inhibition, localization, and clearance are controlled.
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ECM and cell surface proteolysis: regulating cellular ecology.

TL;DR: Understanding the mechanisms by which pericellular proteinases are regulated and activated, the nature of their molecular targets, and how adhesion and proteolysis are integrated will provide exciting avenues for investigation over the next few years.
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Purification and properties of a neurotensin-degrading endopeptidase from pig brain.

TL;DR: These studies confirm that NT endopeptidase is distinct from endopePTidase-24.15 and show that the former is a soluble enzyme, not an integral membrane protein, that it is not peptide-specific and that it might be more appropriately named.
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Expression of meprin subunit precursors. Membrane anchoring through the beta subunit and mechanism of zymogen activation

TL;DR: The biosynthesis of the membrane-bound metalloendopeptidase meprin was studied after the introduction of cDNAs encoding the rat mePRin alpha and beta subunits into human 293 cells, and it was found that the alpha subunit is associated with the membrane via disulfide bond(s) to the beta subunit.
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Substrate specificity of beta-collagenase from Clostridium histolyticum.

TL;DR: The substrate specificity of beta-collagenase from Clostridium histolyticum is investigated by measuring the rate of hydrolysis of more than 50 tri-, tetra-, penta-, and hexapeptides covering the P3 to P3' subsites of the substrate.
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