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Dive into the research topics where Barry L. Marmer is active.

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Featured researches published by Barry L. Marmer.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Diffusion of MMPs on the surface of collagen fibrils: the mobile cell surface-collagen substratum interface.

Ivan E. Collier; Wesley R. Legant; Barry L. Marmer; Olga Y. Lubman; Saveez Saffarian; Tetsuro Wakatsuki; Elliot L. Elson; Gregory I. Goldberg

Remodeling of the extracellular matrix catalyzed by MMPs is central to morphogenetic phenomena during development and wound healing as well as in numerous pathologic conditions such as fibrosis and cancer. We have previously demonstrated that secreted MMP-2 is tethered to the cell surface and activated by MT1-MMP/TIMP-2-dependent mechanism. The resulting cell-surface collagenolytic complex (MT1-MMP)2/TIMP-2/MMP-2 can initiate (MT1-MMP) and complete (MMP-2) degradation of an underlying collagen fibril. The following question remained: What is the mechanism of substrate recognition involving the two structures of relatively restricted mobility, the cell surface enzymatic complex and a collagen fibril embedded in the ECM? Here we demonstrate that all the components of the complex are capable of processive movement on a surface of the collagen fibril. The mechanism of MT1-MMP movement is a biased diffusion with the bias component dependent on the proteolysis of its substrate, not adenosine triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis. It is similar to that of the MMP-1 Brownian ratchet we described earlier. In addition, both MMP-2 and MMP-9 as well as their respective complexes with TIMP-1 and -2 are capable of Brownian diffusion on the surface of native collagen fibrils without noticeable dissociation while the dimerization of MMP-9 renders the enzyme immobile. Most instructive is the finding that the inactivation of the enzymatic activity of MT1-MMP has a detectable negative effect on the cell force developed in miniaturized 3D tissue constructs. We propose that the collagenolytic complex (MT1-MMP)2/TIMP-2/MMP-2 represents a Mobile Cell Surface – Collagen Substratum Interface. The biological implications of MT1-MMP acting as a molecular ratchet tethered to the cell surface in complex with MMP-2 suggest a new mechanism for the role of spatially regulated peri-cellular proteolysis in cell-matrix interactions.


Current Biology | 2012

Single-Molecule Tracking of Collagenase on Native Type I Collagen Fibrils Reveals Degradation Mechanism

Susanta K. Sarkar; Barry L. Marmer; Gregory I. Goldberg; Keir C. Neuman

BACKGROUND Collagen, the most abundant human protein, is the principal component of the extracellular matrix and plays important roles in maintaining tissue and organ integrity. Highly resistant to proteolysis, fibrillar collagen is degraded by specific matrix metalloproteases (MMPs). Degradation of fibrillar collagen underlies processes including tissue remodeling, wound healing, and cancer metastasis. However, the mechanism of native collagen fibril degradation remains poorly understood. RESULTS Here we present the results of high-resolution tracking of individual MMPs degrading type I collagen fibrils. MMP1 exhibits cleavage-dependent biased and hindered diffusion but spends 90% ± 3% of the time in one of at least two distinct pause states. One class of exponentially distributed pauses (class I pauses) occurs randomly along the fibril, whereas a second class of pauses (class II pauses) exhibits multistep escape kinetics and occurs periodically at intervals of 1.3 ± 0.2 μm and 1.5 ± 0.2 μm along the fibril. After these class II pauses, MMP1 moved faster and farther in one direction along the fibril, indicative of biased motion associated with cleavage. Simulations indicate that 5% ± 2% of the class II pauses result in the initiation of processive collagen degradation, which continues for bursts of 15 ± 4 consecutive cleavage events. CONCLUSIONS These findings provide a mechanistic paradigm for type I collagen degradation by MMP1 and establish a general approach to investigate MMP-fibrillar collagen interactions. More generally, this work demonstrates the fundamental role of enzyme-substrate interactions including binding and motion in determining the activity of an enzyme on an extended substrate.


Biophysical Journal | 2001

Substrate recognition by gelatinase A: the C-terminal domain facilitates surface diffusion.

Ivan E. Collier; Saveez Saffarian; Barry L. Marmer; Elliot L. Elson; Greg Goldberg

An investigation of gelatinase A binding to gelatin produced results that are inconsistent with a traditional bimolecular Michaelis-Menten formalism but are effectively accounted for by a power law characteristic of fractal kinetics. The main reason for this inconsistency is that the bulk of the gelatinase A binding depends on its ability to diffuse laterally on the gelatin surface. Most interestingly, we show that the anomalous lateral diffusion and, consequently, the binding to gelatin is greatly facilitated by the C-terminal hemopexin-like domain of the enzyme whereas the specificity of binding resides with the fibronectin-like gelatin-binding domain.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Internal strain drives spontaneous periodic buckling in collagen and regulates remodeling

Andrew Dittmore; Jonathan Silver; Susanta K. Sarkar; Barry L. Marmer; Gregory I. Goldberg; Keir C. Neuman

Significance Collagen fibrils resemble nanoscale cables that self-assemble and constitute the most prevalent protein structure in the body. Our experiments reveal unanticipated defects that form along collagen fibrils. These defects are the initiation sites of collagenase activity and represent a strain-sensitive mechanism for regulating tissue remodeling. The emergence of defects, their spatial periodicity, and fluctuations are quantitatively accounted for with a buckling model in which defects spontaneously form, repulsively interact, and self-heal. Fibrillar collagen, an essential structural component of the extracellular matrix, is remarkably resistant to proteolysis, requiring specialized matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) to initiate its remodeling. In the context of native fibrils, remodeling is poorly understood; MMPs have limited access to cleavage sites and are inhibited by tension on the fibril. Here, single-molecule recordings of fluorescently labeled MMPs reveal cleavage-vulnerable binding regions arrayed periodically at ∼1-µm intervals along collagen fibrils. Binding regions remain periodic even as they migrate on the fibril, indicating a collective process of thermally activated and self-healing defect formation. An internal strain relief model involving reversible structural rearrangements quantitatively reproduces the observed spatial patterning and fluctuations of defects and provides a mechanism for tension-dependent stabilization of fibrillar collagen. This work identifies internal–strain-driven defects that may have general and widespread regulatory functions in self-assembled biological filaments.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2014

Delayed skin wound repair in proline-rich protein tyrosine kinase 2 knockout mice

Aaron C. Koppel; Alexi Kiss; Anna Hindes; Carole J. Burns; Barry L. Marmer; Gregory I. Goldberg; Miroslav Blumenberg; Tatiana Efimova

Proline-rich protein tyrosine kinase 2 (Pyk2) is a member of the focal adhesion kinase family. We used Pyk2 knockout (Pyk2-KO) mice to study the role of Pyk2 in cutaneous wound repair. We report that the rate of wound closure was delayed in Pyk2-KO compared with control mice. To examine whether impaired wound healing of Pyk2-KO mice was caused by a keratinocyte cell-autonomous defect, the capacities of primary keratinocytes from Pyk2-KO and wild-type (WT) littermates to heal scratch wounds in vitro were compared. The rate of scratch wound repair was decreased in Pyk2-KO keratinocytes compared with WT cells. Moreover, cultured human epidermal keratinocytes overexpressing the dominant-negative mutant of Pyk2 failed to heal scratch wounds. Conversely, stimulation of Pyk2-dependent signaling via WT Pyk2 overexpression induced accelerated scratch wound closure and was associated with increased expression of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-1, MMP-9, and MMP-10. The Pyk2-stimulated increase in the rate of scratch wound repair was abolished by coexpression of the dominant-negative mutant of PKCδ and by GM-6001, a broad-spectrum inhibitor of MMP activity. These results suggest that Pyk2 is essential for skin wound reepithelialization in vivo and in vitro and that it regulates epidermal keratinocyte migration via a pathway that requires PKCδ and MMP functions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1995

Mechanism Of Cell Surface Activation Of 72-kDa Type IV Collagenase ISOLATION OF THE ACTIVATED FORM OF THE MEMBRANE METALLOPROTEASE

Alex Y. Strongin; Ivan E. Collier; Gregory A. Bannikov; Barry L. Marmer; Gregory A. Grant; Gregory I. Goldberg


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1989

SV40-transformed human lung fibroblasts secrete a 92-kDa type IV collagenase which is identical to that secreted by normal human macrophages.

S M Wilhelm; Ivan E. Collier; Barry L. Marmer; Arthur Z. Eisen; Gregory A. Grant; Gregory I. Goldberg


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1988

H-ras oncogene-transformed human bronchial epithelial cells (TBE-1) secrete a single metalloprotease capable of degrading basement membrane collagen.

Ivan E. Collier; S M Wilhelm; Arthur Z. Eisen; Barry L. Marmer; Gregory A. Grant; J L Seltzer; A Kronberger; C S He; E A Bauer; Gregory I. Goldberg


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1992

Interaction of 92-kDa type IV collagenase with the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases prevents dimerization, complex formation with interstitial collagenase, and activation of the proenzyme with stromelysin.

Gregory I. Goldberg; Alex Y. Strongin; Ivan E. Collier; L T Genrich; Barry L. Marmer


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1993

Plasma membrane-dependent activation of the 72-kDa type IV collagenase is prevented by complex formation with TIMP-2.

Alex Y. Strongin; Barry L. Marmer; Gregory A. Grant; Gregory I. Goldberg

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Gregory I. Goldberg

Washington University in St. Louis

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Ivan E. Collier

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gregory A. Grant

Washington University in St. Louis

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Arthur Z. Eisen

Washington University in St. Louis

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Keir C. Neuman

National Institutes of Health

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Elliot L. Elson

Washington University in St. Louis

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Susanta K. Sarkar

National Institutes of Health

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Andrew Dittmore

National Institutes of Health

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Gregory A. Bannikov

Washington University in St. Louis

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