Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (ERK)
95,504 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cytokines may have clinical utility as therapeutic agents for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection and as an adjuvant for vaccines. The effect of interleukin-12 (IL-12) and IL-15 on in vitro HIV-1 replication was investigated. IL-12 and IL-15 at doses up to 10 ng/ml had little effect on basal HIV-1 p24 antigen production by chronically HIV-infected T (ACH-2) and monocytic (U1) cell lines. For ACH-2 cells stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA; 50 ng/ml), IL-12 and IL-15 significantly increased p24 antigen production by 20 and 30%, respectively (n = 6). In contrast, IL-12 and IL-15 (10 ng/ml) treatment of PMA-stimulated U1 cells decreased p24 antigen production by 16 and 15%, respectively (n = 6). We next studied the effect of IL-12 and IL-15 on HIV-infected peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). In 10 HIV-seropositive patients' PBMCs cocultured with mitogen-activated HIV-seronegative donor cells, two patterns of p24 antigen production were observed in response to IL-2: low (p24 antigen production < 10(3) pg/ml; n = 8) and high (p24 antigen production > 10(3) pg/ml; n = 2) response. For the low-response pattern, IL-12 and IL-15 increased viral replication by 97-fold and 100-fold, respectively (P = 0.05 and 0.004, respectively). For the high-response pattern, both IL-12 and IL-15 suppressed HIV replication. The effect of IL-2, IL-12, and IL-15 on acute in vitro infection by HIV-1JRCSF was also examined. IL-12 did not increase p24 antigen production above basal levels while IL-2 and IL-15 significantly enhanced p24 antigen production (by approximately 2-fold). In conclusion, IL-12 and IL-15 may have differential effects on latent and acute HIV infection, and their ability to enhance HIV production may depend on cell activation. Thus, the use of these cytokines may be dictated by the clinical state of the patient.
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PMID:Differential effects of interleukin-12, interleukin-15, and interleukin-2 on human immunodeficiency virus type 1 replication in vitro. 887 33

Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 16 children with atopic disease (range of IgE levels: 33 - 2892 kU/l) and 12 age matched controls were stimulated either with mAbs specific for CD3, CD2, CD3 plus CD28, CD2 plus CD28, with Tetanus Toxoid, SEA, or PHA plus PMA and their cell proliferation was determined. In addition, their cytokine production (IL2, IL4, IL10, IFN gamma) following selected stimuli was measured. We found that the cells from atopics proliferated significantly better in response to CD2 stimulation than control cells, with no difference in response to CD3 or SEA stimulation. Furthermore, cells from atopics produced significantly higher amounts of IL4 than cells from controls, a difference most pronounced following CD2 plus CD28 stimulation. No differential production was found for IL10 and IFN gamma. We conclude that in atopic children with moderately elevated IgE a hyperreactivity of the CD2 pathway of stimulation and a clear elevation of IL4 but not of IL10 or IFN gamma production can be demonstrated.
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PMID:Enhanced production of IL4 but not of IFN gamma and IL 10 by peripheral blood mononuclear cells from atopic children in response to CD2 plus CD28 stimulation. 890 57

The purpose of this investigation was to pharmacologically probe the signaling pathways thought to be involved in protein kinase C (PKC)-stimulated superoxide anion (O2-) generation in all-trans retinoic acid-treated human promyelocytic HL-60 cell line (HL-60), targeting PKC, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), MAPK kinase (MEK), protein serine-threonine phosphatase(s) (PSP), protein tyrosine kinase(s) (PTK) and phosphatase(s) (PTP), secretory phospholipase A2, cyclooxygenase (CO) and 5-lipoxygenase with selected inhibitors. The following agents inhibited phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate-stimulated O2- generation significantly in the all-trans retinoic acid-treated HL-60 cells (expressed as percentage of control, P < .05): 1) PKC inhibitors: staurosporine (100 nM, 3 +/- 1%); Ro 31-8220 (1 microM, 3 +/- 2%); sphingosine (100 microM, 15 +/- 7%); 2) PSP 1 and 2a inhibitors, okadaic acid (10 microM, 35 +/- 1%); calyculin A (10 microM, 73 +/- 1%); 3) MAPK inhibitor: SB-203580 (100 microM, 62 +/- 1%); 4) PTP inhibitors: phenylarsine oxide (1 microM, 12 +/- 9%); diamide (1 mM, 21 +/- 11%); and 5) secretory phospholipase A2 inhibitors: manoalide (1 microM, 24 +/- 10%); scalaradial (1 microM, 11 +/- 4%). Exogenously added arachidonic acid-stimulated O2- generation in a time- and dose-dependent manner. The following inhibitors enhanced or did not significantly affect phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate-stimulated O2- generation (expressed as percentage of control): 1) PTK inhibitors: genistein (100 microM, 69 +/- 12%); CGP 53716 (100 microM, 67 +/- 10%); herbimycin A (10 microM, 67.4 +/- 1%); 2) PSP 2b inhibitors: cyclosporin A (30 microM, 71 +/- 5%); FK506 (30 microM, 88 +/- 7%); 3) CO inhibitor: indomethacin (100 microM, 111 +/- 12%); 4) 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor: WY 50,295 (100 microM, 140 +/- 23%); 5) MEK inhibitor: PD98059 (100 microM, 94 +/- 6.7%); and 6) the PTP inhibitor: orthovanadate (100 microM, 131 +/- 25%). Our pharmacological study suggests that, in neutrophil-like HL-60 cells, the signaling pathways leading to PMA-stimulated O2- generation appear to involve PKC, MAPK, phospholipase A2, arachidonic acid, PSP 1 and 2a and PTP. Furthermore, PTK, MEK, CO, 5-lipoxygenase and PSP 2b do not appear to participate in the modulation of PKC-stimulated O2- generation.
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PMID:Pharmacological targeting of signaling pathways in protein kinase C-stimulated superoxide generation in neutrophil-like HL-60 cells: effect of phorbol ester, arachidonic acid and inhibitors of kinase(s), phosphatase(s) and phospholipase A2. 893 Jan 66

Pertussis toxin-insensitive GTP-binding protein was observed to be involved in prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha)-induced phosphoinositide metabolism in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells transfected with PGF2 alpha receptor cDNA (CHO-PGF2 alpha R cells) (Ito, S. et al. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 200: 756,1994). In the present study, we investigated PGF2 alpha-induced PLD activation in CHO-PGF2 alpha R cells. PLD activation was examined by measuring the production of [3H]phosphatidylbutanol ([3H]PBut), a specific product of the PLD-catalyzed transphosphatidylation reaction. PGF2 alpha-induced [3H]PBut formation was concentration-dependent with the maximal level obtained at 1 microM PGF2 alpha. The maximal [3H]PBut formation was observed at 2 min after addition of PGF2 alpha. Depletion of extracellular Ca2+ with EGTA suppressed PGF2 alpha-induced PLD activation by 50%. PKC inhibitors Ro31-8425 and calphostin C inhibited PGF2 alpha-induced [3H]PBut formation by 50%. PTK inhibitors genistein and herbimycin A failed to inhibit PGF2 alpha-induced PLD activation. A combination of maximal effective concentrations of PGF2 alpha (1 microM) and PMA (100 nM) enhanced PLD activation in an additive manner. Pretreatment of the cells with PMA for 2 h down-regulated PKC alpha and decreased PGF2 alpha-induced PLD activation. These results suggest that PLD activation by PGF2 alpha is mediated by both PKC-dependent and -independent pathways and that PKC alpha is involved in the former pathway.
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PMID:PLD activation in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells transfected with PGF2 alpha receptor cDNA. 893 84

Neutral sphingomyelinase (SMase) can be activated by extracellular signals to produce ceramide, which may affect mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activities. Neutral SMase activity was assessed in membranes from Jurkat, a human T-cell line, and EL4, a murine T-cell line. Ara-C activated SMase with 10 minutes in both Jurkat and EL4 cells, while phorbol ester (PMA) had no effect. PMA, but not Ara-C or ceramides, activated ERK MAPKS, in Jurkat and EL4. PMA acted synergistically with ionomycin to activate JNK MAPKs in Jurkat and EL4 within 10 minutes. Ara-C activated JNKs only after prolonged incubation (90-120 minutes). Thus, ceramide is not a positive signal for ERK activation in T-cell lines. The effects of Ara-C on JNK activity may be mediated through secondary response pathways.
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PMID:Effects of Ara-C on neutral sphingomyelinase and mitogen- and stress-activated protein kinases in T-lymphocyte cell lines. 895 29

The activation of transcriptional factor c-Fos/c-Jun AP-1 is essential for normal T cell responsiveness and is often impaired in T cells during aging. In the present study, we investigated whether aberrancies in the regulation of c-fos/c-jun at the mRNA or protein level might underlie the age-associated impairments of AP-1 in human T cells. Whereas T cells from young subjects stimulated with cross-linked anti-CD3epsilon mAb OKT3 plus PMA or with the lectin PHA plus PMA demonstrated considerable increases in c-Fos protein expression, the expression of c-Fos but not c-Jun was markedly reduced in stimulated T cells from certain elderly subjects. In addition, RNase protection assays revealed that anti-CD3/PMA-stimulated T cells from a substantial proportion of elderly subjects exhibited decreased levels of c-fos and/or c-jun mRNA compared to T cells from young subjects. Using electrophoretic mobility shift assays, the levels of nuclear regulatory proteins recognizing the AP-1 consensus TRE motif, the proximal c-jun TRE-like promoter element, and the c-fos serum response element (SRE) were determined in resting and stimulated T cells. Although the stimulation of T cells from young subjects resulted in coordinated increases of nuclear protein complexes binding the AP-1 TRE, c-jun TRE, and c-fos SRE DNA sequence motifs, age-related reductions in the activation of AP-1 were accompanied by decreased levels of c-jun TRE and c-fos SRE binding complexes. Furthermore, the nuclear protein complexes binding the SRE motif induced in activated T cells of young and elderly subjects contained serum response factor and Elk-1 pointing toward age-related defects in the activation of transcriptional regulatory proteins distinct from c-jun/AP-1. These results suggest that underlying aberrancies in the induction of c-fos/c-jun as well as their nuclear regulatory proteins may contribute to the age-related impairments of AP-1 activation in human T cells.
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PMID:Impaired induction of c-fos/c-jun genes and of transcriptional regulatory proteins binding distinct c-fos/c-jun promoter elements in activated human T cells during aging. 901 87

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF)/scatter factor (SF) is the ligand for a tyrosine kinase cell surface receptor encoded by the MET protooncogene (c-MET). HGF/SF can induce proliferation and motility in epithelial cells and promotes invasion of carcinoma cells and NIH3T3 fibroblasts transfected with both HGF/SF and c-MET genes. Our results show that HGF/ SF and c-MET also play a role in adhesion and invasion of human lymphoma cells. c-MET mRNA is expressed in hemopoietic cells, such as hemopoietic progenitor cells (CD34+ cells) in bone marrow (BM) and mobilized peripheral blood, immature B cells in cord blood and BM, and germinal center B-centroblasts. In normal peripheral blood B cells, which are c-MET-, c-MET expression was induced by PMA, ConA, HGF/ SF, and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. Using immunohistochemistry, we detected c-MET on the cell surface of large activated centroblasts in lymph nodes from patients with B-non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and Hodgkin's disease. In the latter group, c-MET expression correlated well with the presence of EBV. Because HGF/SF and c-MET promote metastasis of carcinoma cells, we studied the effects of c-MET stimulation by HGF/SF of B-lymphoma cells on properties relevant for metastasis, ie, adhesion, migration, and invasion. HGF/SF stimulated adhesion of the c-MET+ B-cell lines to the extracellular matrix molecules fibronectin (FN) and collagen (CN) in a dose dependent manner. However, adhesion to laminin was not affected by HGF/SF. Adhesion to FN was mediated by beta 1-integrins alpha 4 beta 1 (VLA4) and alpha 5 beta 1 (VLA5) since blocking antibodies against beta 1- (CD29), alpha 4-(CD49d), or alpha 5- (CD49e) integrin subunits, completely reversed the effect of HGF/SF. Furthermore, HGF/SF induced adhesion was abrogated by addition of genistein, which blocks protein tyrosine kinases, including c-MET. Addition of HGF/SF resulted in a sixfold increase in migration of c-MET B-lymphoma cells through Matrigel, compared to medium alone. In rat fibroblast cultures, HGF/SF doubled the number of c-MET+ B-lymphoma cells that invaded the fibroblast monolayer. In these adhesion, migration and invasion assays HGF/SF had no effect on c-MET- cell lines. In conclusion, c-MET is expressed or can be induced on immature, activated, and certain malignant B cells. HGF/SF increased adhesion of c-MET+ B-lymphoma cells to FN and CN, mediated via beta 1-integrins alpha 4 beta 1 and alpha 5 beta 1, and furthermore promoted migration and invasion.
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PMID:Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor promotes adhesion of lymphoma cells to extracellular matrix molecules via alpha 4 beta 1 and alpha 5 beta 1 integrins. 902 31

Ascorbic acid (ascorbate or vitamin C) has been shown to suppress the induction of HIV in latently infected T lymphocytic cells following stimulation with a tumor promoter (PMA) and inflammatory cytokine (TNF-alpha). To assess whether this inhibition was mediated via modulation of the cellular transcription factor, NF-kappa B, we carried out gel shift analysis on nuclear extracts prepared under different conditions of cell stimulation in the presence or absence of ascorbate, N-acetylcysteine (NAC), or zidovudine (AZT). Pretreatment of ACH-2 T cells by NAC followed by stimulation with PMA, TNF-alpha, or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) resulted in strong suppression of NF-kappa B activation. In contrast, neither ascorbate nor AZT affected NF-kappa B activity under all three induction conditions in the ACH-2 cell line. Ascorbate and AZT also had no effect on NF-kappa B activation following TNF-alpha- or PMA-induced stimulation of U1 promonocytic cells. These results suggest that the molecular mechanism of HIV inhibition by ascorbate is not mediated via NF-kappa B inhibition, unlike that seen with other antioxidants.
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PMID:NF-kappa B-independent suppression of HIV expression by ascorbic acid. 911 10

Homology searches in the Expressed Sequence Tag Database were performed using SPYGQ-rich regions as query sequences to find genes encoding protein regions similar to the N-terminal parts of the sarcoma-associated EWS and FUS proteins. Clone 22911 (T74973), encoding a SPYGQ-rich region in its 5' end, and several other clones that overlapped 22911 were selected. The combined data made it possible to assemble a full-length cDNA sequence. This cDNA sequence is 1677 bp, containing an initiation codon ATG, an open reading frame of 400 amino acids, a poly(A) signal, and a poly(A) tail. We found 100% identity between the 5' part of the consensus sequence and the 598-bp-long sequence named TFG. The TFG sequence is fused to the 3' end of NTRK1, generating the TRK-T3 fusion transcript found in papillary thyroid carcinoma. The cDNA therefore represents the full-length transcript of the TFG gene. TFG was localized to 3q11-q12 by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The 3' and the 5' ends of the TFG cDNA probe hybridized to a 2.2-kb band on Northern blot filters in all tissues examined.
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PMID:Characterization and chromosomal mapping of the human TFG gene involved in thyroid carcinoma. 916 29

The immunodeficiency present in patients with lepromatous leprosy is characterized by the limited proliferation of T lymphocytes, and is explained in part by the impaired synthesis of interleukin-2 (IL-2). Diacylglycerol (DAG) and calcium produce the activation of PKC, ERK and JNK kinases, implying a normal IL-2 response. Phorbol esters, such as PMA, can substitute for DAG and are mitogenic to human T and B cells activating several cytokine-encoding genes. Ionophore A23187 increases calcium permeability across the cellular membrane to the cytosol of lymphoid cells and is considered a co-mitogen of T lymphocytes. Here we report that: 1) PHA-activated T lymphocytes from LL patients can be separated in vitro into two groups: a) responders (R) with a stimulation index (SI) of > 10 and (b) nonresponders (NR) with a SI of < 10. 2) The proliferative responses of cells from LL(R), LL(NR) and normal subjects were measured after being stimulated with: I, PHA, PMA, PMA + I PHA + PMA and PHA + PMA + ionophore (PPI). The most important result occurs in LL(NR) patients whose cells did not respond to PHA stimulation but increased to normal levels of proliferation when they were stimulated with PMA. Furthermore, the three groups, (NR, R and normals) strongly increased their responses when they were incubated with PPi. 3) Finally, Il-2 concentrations in the supernatants of cultures of T lymphocytes from LL(NR), LL(R) and controls were relatively low when they were incubated with PHA or PMA, but the addition of ionophore to PMA and the combination of PHA + PMA strongly increased the production of IL-2 in all of them, reaching the optimum IL-2 concentration when PPI is used. It can be concluded that the use of PMA, analogous to DAG, and ionophore A23187 (calcium increaser) in cultures of mitogen-activated T lymphocytes from LL patients induced the expression of the IL-2 gene, thus correcting the inadequate proliferation of T cells from LL patients.
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PMID:Effect of phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and ionophore A23187 on interleukin-2 levels and proliferation of activated T lymphocytes from patients with lepromatous leprosy. 920 56


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