Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.11.1.7 (peroxidase)
65,474 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vascular injury has been induced in rat lung and dermis after deposition of IgG immune complexes (BSA-anti-BSA complexes). By the use of antibodies to TNF-alpha and IL-1 and employment of the IL-1R antagonist, the requirements for these cytokines have been evaluated. In lung, both TNF-alpha and IL-1 were required for the full expression of injury. Protection was related to the dose of cytokine-blocking agent employed and was directly correlated with diminished tissue content of myeloperoxidase (MPO). In the dermis, IL-1 was required for the full expression of injury; blocking of IL-1 protected the tissue from injury in a manner that correlated with reduced MPO content. However, anti-TNF-alpha provided no protection against dermal vascular injury and failed to reduce MPO content. In contrast, the local injection of either TNF-alpha or IL-1 beta enhanced IgG immune complex-induced dermal vascular injury, proportional to the increased tissue content of MPO, indicating that the rat dermis is reactive to both cytokines. By the employment of immunohistochemical approaches, it was demonstrated that, after deposition of immune complexes, TNF-alpha and IL-1 were readily demonstrated in lung macrophages, whereas in the dermis IL-1, but not TNF-alpha, was present in a granular pattern within interstitial cells. The immunohistochemical data are consistent with the patterns of protective effects of anti-IL-1, IL-1R antagonist and anti-TNF-alpha in the two organs. As expected, blocking of TNF-alpha or IL-1 had no protective effects on acute lung injury produced by systemic C activation after i.v. infusion of the cobra venom factor. The data suggest fundamental differences in the requirements for cytokines in lung and dermal vascular injury after deposition of IgG immune complexes.
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PMID:Immune complex-induced lung and dermal vascular injury. Differing requirements for tumor necrosis factor-alpha and IL-1. 131 4

Cytokines such as interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) alter the activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) and hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axes in the rat. However, the brain sites at which IL-1 beta exerts these effects have not been well identified. The present study sought to identify some of these sites, using c-fos protein expression as an index of cellular activation. We also attempted to determine possible differences between the effects of peripheral and central injection of IL-1 beta on the activation of specific brain areas. Castrated male rats received intravenous (i.v.) or intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injections of IL-1 beta through a jugular catheter or a permanent cannula implanted in the right lateral ventricle, respectively. Blood samples were taken before, as well as 30 and 120 min after i.v. or i.c.v. IL-1 beta infusion in order to measure plasma ACTH and LH levels. Immediately thereafter, the rats were anesthetized with pentobarbital, then perfused. Their brains were removed and postfixed for one hour. Thirty-microns frozen sections were cut and approximately every fourth tissue section was processed for c-fos expression by an avidin-biotin-peroxidase method. Both i.v. (1 microgram) and i.c.v. (100 ng) injection of IL-1 beta significantly increased plasma ACTH levels, but only i.c.v. treatment measurably inhibited LH secretion. I.c.v. infusion of the cytokine markedly augmented c-fos expression in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and the arcuate nucleus (ARC) of the hypothalamus. A large amount of CRF cells in the PVN contained labelled c-fos protein (as measured by a double labelling technique), which indicates that CRF perikarya in this hypothalamic region are activated by the central administration of IL-1 beta. In contrast, i.v. injection of IL-1 beta did not significantly alter c-fos expression in the PVN or the ARC of the hypothalamus. These results suggest that the increased HPA axis activity which follows the peripheral IL-1 beta administration, a phenomenon previously shown to depend on endogenous CRF, does not require immediate activation of hypothalamic CRF perikarya. Thus our results indicate that the stimulatory effect of blood-born cytokine may be exerted at the level of nerve terminals in the median eminence. In contrast, i.c.v.-injected IL-1 beta appears to activate the HPA axis through a stimulation of CRF neurons within the parvocellular part of PVN.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Differential effects of central and peripheral injection of interleukin-1 beta on brain c-fos expression and neuroendocrine functions. 132 74

Human blood mononuclear cells from normal adults were collected after density-cut centrifugation and monocytes were then isolated by removal of lymphocytes using the techniques of E-rosetting and cell adhesion. The purified monocytes were further analysed by velocity sedimentation, and two distinct subpopulations with different cell sizes were obtained. The larger monocytes were 17.0 +/- 1.8 microns in diameter with a mean sedimentation rate (SR) of 7.0 +/- 0.6 mm/hr, while the smaller monocytes were 9.5 +/- 0.8 microns in size and 4.1 +/- 0.2 mm/hr in SR. The population ratio of larger:smaller cells was approximately 2:1 (66 +/- 2.8%:34 +/- 1.6%). Both cell populations exhibited a high positive rate (> 98%) in both the non-specific esterase and the peroxidase stain. However, the larger cells had much higher phagocytic activity than the smaller ones. Furthermore, the expression of monocyte-associated antigens was also different between these two subpopulations. Thus, while most of the larger monocytes (98%) could be recognized by monoclonal antibodies MY7 and OKM1, only some (35 and 61%, respectively) of the smaller monocytes could react with those antibodies. In addition, the larger monocytes secreted a significant amount of monokines including interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) and their production increased in proportion to the level of stimulation by bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), whereas the production of monokines by the smaller monocytes remained at low levels and did not respond to LPS stimulation. These results reveal the existence of phenotypic and functional heterogeneity in human blood monocytes.
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PMID:Heterogeneity of human blood monocyte: two subpopulations with different sizes, phenotypes and functions. 142 82

Intrapulmonary interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) participates in the pathogenesis of acute IgG immune-complex alveolitis through a mechanism involving neutrophil recruitment. We have examined the relationship between intrapulmonary IL-1 beta and locally produced platelet-activating factor (PAF) in the development of acute alveolitis. Instillation of IgG anti-bovine albumin into the lungs of rats, followed immediately by intravenous infusion of bovine serum albumin (BSA), resulted in acute neutrophil-mediated lung injury. Development of IgG immune-complex lung injury was accompanied by three- and five-fold increases in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid and whole lung PAF levels, respectively. Intratracheal administration of the PAF antagonists, WEB-2086 (Boehringer) or L-652,731 (Merck, Sharpe, and Dohme, Rahway, NJ), reduced pulmonary vascular leakage. Neutralization of intrapulmonary IL-1 activity with anti-IL-1 beta antibodies reduced pulmonary vascular permeability and whole lung PAF levels. Morphometric analysis and whole lung myeloperoxidase measurements revealed a differential effect between the PAF antagonists and anti-IL-1 beta with respect to pulmonary neutrophil recruitment. Intratracheal instillation of anti-IL-1 beta retarded net pulmonary neutrophil recruitment while the PAF antagonists retarded migration of neutrophils from the interstitial/vascular compartments into the alveolar compartment. Intratracheal instillation of anti-IL-1 beta plus L-652,731 resulted in reduction in lung vascular permeability and retarded net pulmonary neutrophil recruitment. No additive effect was observed. Stimulation of isolated mouse alveolar macrophages with recombinant murine IL-1 beta or IL-1 alpha resulted in rapid, dose-dependent, and cell concentration-dependent increases in PAF secretion. These data suggest that intrapulmonary IL-1 beta amplifies local PAF production and that IL-1 beta and PAF modulate different aspects of pulmonary neutrophil recruitment.
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PMID:Relationship between interleukin-1 beta and platelet-activating factor in the pathogenesis of acute immune complex alveolitis in the rat. 151 63

Northern blot analysis of mouse uterine RNA showed that IL-1 (alpha and beta), and TNF-alpha mRNA were abundant on day (D) 1 of pregnancy, reduced on D2, and remained basal throughout the remainder of the preimplantation period (D3 and D4). Elevated IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha mRNA levels on D1 were accompanied by increased levels of immunoreactive protein in uterine cytosol preparations as determined by ELISA. In situ hybridization detected IL-1 beta mRNA in cells located in the endometrial stroma and concentrated in subepithelial regions on D1. Immunocytochemical localization of IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha identified cells scattered throughout the endometrial stroma, but more concentrated in the subepithelial region on D1. On D3 and D4, cytokine-immunopositive cells decreased in number and became located predominantly at the endometrial-myometrial junction. Histochemical localization of peroxidase as a marker predominantly for eosinophils showed an abundance of these cells in the D1 uterus. The distribution of peroxidase-positive cells in the uterus followed the same temporal and spatial changes as cytokine-immunopositive cells during the preimplantation period. These data document the occurrence of an inflammatory response in the uterus on D1 of pregnancy, and demonstrate that as the preimplantation period progresses the distribution of inflammatory cells changes from the subepithelial region of the endometrial stroma to the periphery of the uterus at the endometrial-myometrial junction. Mechanisms regulating the uterine inflammatory response on D1 were investigated. Cytokine mRNA levels were not significantly elevated during the estrous cycle or after treatment of adult ovariectomized mice with estradiol-17 beta. In contrast, mating with vasectomized males resulted in an inflammatory response on D1 of pseudopregnancy similar to that on D1 of normal pregnancy, whereas mechanical stimulation of the uterine cervix failed to elicit such a response. These results strongly suggest a role for some factor(s) in the ejaculate, other than spermatozoa, in the initiation of a uterine inflammatory response after mating, but an effect of the act of mating cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Activation and distribution of inflammatory cells in the mouse uterus during the preimplantation period. 154 14

A quantitative immunocytochemical method is described for measuring intracellular thyroglobulin in human thyrocytes grown in monolayer, based on the imidazole-enhanced 3,3'-diaminobenzidine/peroxidase reaction. The influence of ten different fixatives on the content of thyroglobulin immobilized on nitrocellulose filters and in single cells and the influence of thyrotropin and interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) on the amount of intracellular thyroglobulin were evaluated. The most suitable fixatives for single cells were 2% carbodiimide, Lison's 'Gendre fluid' and 2 or 4% paraformaldehyde, whereas Bouin, Carnoy A and B, formalin-calcium and Lillie's formaldehyde-acetic acid-alcohol fixative all resulted in reduction of intracellular thyroglobulin. Two per cent glutaraldehyde caused a considerable reduction (p less than 0.0001). Nitrocellulose filters were not suitable for evaluation of the fixatives, since the results did not correspond to those obtained with single cells. Thyrotropin (1 U/l) increased intracellular thyroglobulin, whereas addition of interleukin-1 beta to the culture medium for three days caused a dose-dependent reduction with a plateau level at 2 x 10(-6) gl-1 (10(4) U/l) of interleukin-1 beta. It is concluded that changes in intracellular thyroglobulin concentration caused by either thyrotropin or IL-1 beta can be quantified under experimental circumstances where samples for measurements of thyroglobulin-mRNA or extracellular thyroglobulin are difficult or impossible to obtain.
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PMID:Quantitative cytochemical demonstration of intracellular thyroglobulin in cultured human thyrocytes. Effects of fixatives, TSH and interleukin-1 beta. 178 67

Recombinant human Interleukin-1 (rhIL-1) beta was found to enhance stimulus-induced granule exocytosis from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs). PMNs were incubated with rhIL-1 beta and then stimulated with either heat-aggregated IgG (Hagg) or N-formyl-methionyl leucylphenylalanine (FMLP). The release of the azurophil enzyme myeloperoxidase (MPO) was measured. Low concentrations of stimuli (10 micrograms/ml Hagg, 2.5 X 10(-9) M FMLP) did not stimulate degranulation in the absence of rhIL-1 beta. However, such concentrations elicited marked degranulation from PMNs preincubated with rhIL-1 beta (0.2-100 ng/ml). The enhancement of degranulation was dependent on the concentration of rhIL-1 beta employed and on the period of incubation. In other experiments, the effect of rhIL-1 beta on the PMN oxidative response was determined. rhIL-1 beta did not directly stimulate the production of superoxide anions or enhance the oxidative response to Hagg or FMLP. It is suggested that in rheumatoid joints, IL-1 beta may potentiate PMN degranulation, but not their oxidative response.
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PMID:Recombinant human interleukin-1 beta primes human polymorphonuclear leukocytes for stimulus-induced myeloperoxidase release. 215 24

The effect of mitogens and/or recombinant B-cell growth factors (M/GFs) on the in vitro growth of hairy cells was examined. Tumor cells were isolated from the spleens of four patients with hairy cell leukemia (HCL) by Ficoll-Hypaque sedimentation and E-rosetting. Enrichment for tumor cells was confirmed with intracytoplasmic immunoglobulin (Ig) staining, tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) staining, and staining using monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) directed at B, T, myeloid, and monocytoid antigens (Ags) in indirect immunofluorescence assays. Tumor cells were B1(CD20)+ B2(CD21)- B4(CD19)+ IL-2R(CD25)+ PCA-1 +/- TRAP+. HCLs neither synthesized DNA nor secreted Ig in response to culture with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha), IL-1 beta, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, or IL-6. However, a proliferative response (stimulation index greater than or equal to 3.0) without Ig secretion was triggered in HCLs by mitogens or combinations of GFs. Specifically, DNA synthesis was induced at 3 days in three of four HCL samples cultured with Staphylococcus aureus Cowan A (SAC) or the combination of phorbol ester (TPA) and the calcium ionophore A 23187 (Ca2+); DNA synthesis was triggered later (day 7) by tumor necrosis factor (TNF) or by IL-4 and IL-5. In contrast, the fourth patient, a nonresponder to SAC or TPA/Ca2+, demonstrated increased DNA synthesis at day 3 when cocultured with IL-4 and IL-5. Both autoradiography and staining with antibromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) MoAb conjugated to fluorescein confirmed DNA synthesis by only a minority (5% to 23%) of tumor cells within each patient. Dual staining confirmed that responsive cells were both BrdU+ and TRAP+. DNA synthesis induced by TPA/Ca2+ was blocked specifically by anti-IL-6 Ab; in contrast, the HCL proliferative response to SAC, TNF, or IL-4 and IL-5 was not inhibited by anti-IL-6 Ab. alpha-Interferon inhibited the response to TPA/Ca2+, TNF, or IL-4 and IL-5 without any effect on response to SAC. Finally, peroxidase-antiperoxidase staining demonstrated that HCLs are induced by TPA/Ca2+, but not by SAC, to produce intracytoplasmic IL-6. These data demonstrate IL-4, IL-5, and IL-6 mediated DNA synthesis by HCLs in vitro and suggest a possible in vivo role for these growth factors in the pathophysiology of HCL.
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PMID:Response patterns of hairy cell leukemia to B-cell mitogens and growth factors. 224 29

Two separate convenient sandwich enzyme immunoassay methods were developed for measuring the production of the monokines interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) and interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Polyclonal antisera raised against the recombinant proteins and selected on the basis of their ability to neutralize IL-1-induced IL-2 secretion were used for coating microtiter plates or preparing peroxidase-Fab' conjugates. Both techniques were able to accurately and specifically detect monokines from various sources in the sub-picomolar range and were not influenced by compounds currently used for cell activation. A high molecular weight form of IL-1 beta was demonstrated under certain conditions and the two enzyme immunoassays were successfully applied to the detection of IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta present in cell supernatants following stimulation with mitogenic or chemical agents.
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PMID:Detection of human IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta at the subpicomolar level by colorimetric sandwich enzyme immunoassay. 246 May 62

Using three different monoclonal antibodies (McAb no. 374, no. 964 and no. 1190) to human interleukin-1 alpha (rHu-IL-1 alpha), we have established two sandwich enzyme immunoassays (EIA) to differentiate rHu-IL-1 alpha and its deamidated derivative (rHu-Asp36-IL-1 alpha) where the asparagine at position 36 (counting from the N-terminus) of rHu-IL-1 alpha is converted to Asp. The McAb no. 1190 reacts specifically with rHu-IL-alpha and not with the rHu-Asp36-IL-1 alpha whereas both no. 374 and no. 964 can react with the two different forms of rHu-IL-1 alpha. The first EIA (S-EIA I) which uses the McAb no. 964 labelled with horse-radish peroxidase and the McAb no. 1190 fixed to the microtiter plate, only measure rHu-IL-1 alpha. The second EIA (S-EIA II) which uses enzyme labelled no. 964 and no. 374 fixed to the plate, can detect both rHu-IL-1 alpha and rHu-Asp36-IL-1 alpha and this assay of total rHu-IL-1 alpha is comparable to a competitive EIA using an enzyme-labelled rHu-IL-1 alpha and an anti-rHu-IL-1 alpha polyclonal antibody. Thus, the level of rHu-Asp36-IL-1 alpha in the samples containing the two IL-1 alpha s can be calculated by subtracting the level measured by S-EIA I from that measured by S-EIA II. The two EIA systems with an assay range of 1.5-100 ng/ml do not recognize IL-1 beta, IL-2, rHu-TNF alpha, IFN-alpha and IFN-gamma of human origin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Differential determination of recombinant human interleukin-1 alpha and its deamidated derivative by two sandwich enzyme immunoassays using monoclonal antibodies. Comparison with a polyclonal antibody-based competitive enzyme immunoassay. 265 27


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