Publication: The Gene Structure of Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinases (TIMP)-3 and Its Inhibitory Activities Define the Distinct TIMP Gene Family
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Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (TIMPs) play a critical role in extracellular matrix homeostasis. We have previously cloned human and mouse TIMP-3 cDNAs and mapped their chromosomal loci (Apte, S. S., Mattei, M-G., and Olsen, B. R.(1994) Genomics 19, 86-90; Apte, S. S., Hayashi, K., Seldin, M. F., Mattei, M-G., Hayashi, M., and Olsen, B. R.(1994) Dev. Dynam. 200, 177-197); the identification of TIMP3 mutations in Sorsby's fundus dystrophy has underscored the functional importance of TIMP-3. We now report that TIMP-3 is encoded by five exons spanning over 30 kilobase pairs of mouse genomic DNA. In the attribution of protein domains to specific exons, as well as exon structures, the Timp-3 and Timp-1 genes are similar, confirming the common evolutionary origin of the TIMPs and defining a distinct gene family. We have expressed human and mouse TIMP-3 in mouse NSO myeloma cells. In each case, an N-glycosylated 27-kDa protein was generated, that, like TIMP-1 and TIMP-2, inhibited collagenase-1, stromelysin-1, and gelatinases A and B. TIMP-3 and TIMP-1 inhibition were quantitatively similar, implying that all TIMPs are equally efficient in MMP inhibition. Instead, differential regulation of the TIMP genes or divergent C-terminal protein sequences may underlie distinct biological functions for each TIMP.