The in vitro activity of ADAM‐10 is inhibited by TIMP‐1 and TIMP‐3

Augustin Amour(University of East Anglia), Christopher G. Knight(University of Cambridge), Ailsa Webster, Patrick M. Slocombe, Paul E. Stephens, Vera Knäuper(University of East Anglia), Andrew Docherty, Gillian Murphy(University of East Anglia)
FEBS Letters
May 12, 2000
Cited by 401

Abstract

A recombinant soluble form of the catalytic domain of human ADAM-10 was expressed as an Fc fusion protein from myeloma cells. The ADAM-10 was catalytically active, cleaving myelin basic protein and peptides based on the previously described 'metallosheddase' cleavage sites of tumour necrosis factor alpha, CD40 ligand and amyloid precursor protein. The myelin basic protein degradation assay was used to demonstrate that hydroxamate inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) were also inhibitors of ADAM-10. The natural MMP inhibitors, TIMP-2 and TIMP-4 were unable to inhibit ADAM-10, but TIMP-1 and TIMP-3 were inhibitory. Using a quenched fluorescent substrate assay and ADAM-10 we obtained approximate apparent inhibition constants of 0.1 nM (TIMP-1) and 0.9 nM (TIMP-3). The TIMP-1 inhibition of ADAM-10 could therefore prove useful in distinguishing its activity from that of TACE, which is only inhibited by TIMP-3, in cell based assays.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis