Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The gp120 envelope glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) interacts with the CXCR4 chemokine receptor, but it is not known whether gp120 activates CXCR4-mediated signaling cascades in the same manner as its natural ligand, SDF1alpha. We assessed the effects of wild-type gp120 and a mutant gp120 that interacts with CXCR4 but not
CD4
on
CD4
(-)/CXCR4(+) cells and
CD4
(+)/CXCR4(+) cells, respectively. Under both experimental conditions, the interaction of CXCR4 and gp120 resulted in their
CD4
-independent cointernalization. Both molecules were translocated into early endosomes, whereas neither protein could be detected in late endosomes. Binding of gp120 to CXCR4 resulted in a
CD4
-independent phosphorylation of Pyk2 and an induction of chemotactic activity, demonstrating that this interaction has functional consequences. Interestingly, however, whereas SDF1alpha activated the
ERK
/MAP kinase pathway, this cascade was not induced by gp120. Together, these results suggest that the pathology of HIV-1 infection may be modulated by the distinct signal transduction pathway mediated by gp120 upon its interaction with CXCR4.
...
PMID:A CD4-independent interaction of human immunodeficiency virus-1 gp120 with CXCR4 induces their cointernalization, cell signaling, and T-cell chemotaxis. 1019 22
T-cell lymphoma in patients infected with HIV is much less common than B-cell lymphoma. We describe two cases of HIV-associated extranodal lymphoma that showed Toutonlike tumor giant cells and mononuclear large lymphoma cells. Both cell types expressed T-cell-associated antigens, including CD3, CD5, CD43, and CD45RO, and were
CD4
- and CD30-positive and negative for all B-lineage-associated antigens. Both cases showed T-cell receptor gamma chain gene rearrangements using the polymerase chain reaction and were negative for the Epstein-Barr virus by in situ hybridization. Despite the expression of CD30 by the multinucleated cells, both cases were negative for ALK1 by immunohistochemistry and failed to show evidence of the nucleophosmin-
anaplastic lymphoma kinase
fusion product characteristic of t(2;5) using the reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Although rare,
CD4
-positive, T-cell lymphoma with Toutonlike giant cells may be a distinct type of HIV-associated malignant lymphoma.
...
PMID:Peripheral T-cell lymphoma with Toutonlike tumor giant cells associated with HIV infection: report of two cases. 1032 82
The ability of HIV to match levels of viral mRNA to the activation state of the host cell may play a role in its ability to persist as well as to replicate. This linkage depends on the function of the viral transcriptional regulatory protein, Tat, which increases the efficiency of RNA elongation (transcriptional processivity) in response to cellular activation. To quantify levels of Tat function in vivo, a quantitative competitive RT-PCR assay was developed that reflects levels of TAR leader fragments (nonprocessive transcripts) and viral mRNA (processive transcripts), indicating low or high levels of Tat function, respectively. The abundance of these RNA species was measured in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of 22 HIV-1-positive individuals (
CD4
(+) T cell counts 63-934/mm3) and in established cell line models of HIV constitutive replication (H9IIIB) and reversible latency (U1 and
ACH
-2). In PBMC, the level of total viral transcripts ranged over four orders of magnitude; however, nonprocessive transcription predominated: 70% of PBMC samples had a ratio of processive to total transcripts of <0.3 and none of the samples had 100% processivity. The cell line studies revealed that, even in activated H9IIIB cells, nonprocessive transcription dominates and that latently infected cells can have different transcriptional responses to activation. This is the first study that enumerates degrees of transcriptional processivity in the circulating mononuclear cell compartment and the results suggest that limitation of Tat function may be a common phenotype throughout the course of the disease.
...
PMID:Limitation of Tat-associated transcriptional processivity in HIV-infected PBMC. 1032 50
The pathogenesis of the decline of
CD4
lymphocyte counts accompanying the typical course of HIV-1 infection is not completely defined and might be related to a differential susceptibility of naive and memory cells to HIV-1 exposure. Here, we examined the effects induced by heat-inactivated HIV-1 virions on these lymphocyte populations. Exposure of CD45RA naive T cells to inactivated viral particles induced a marked decrease of both mitogenic responses and activation-induced apoptosis. Conversely, the growth of CD45RO cells was less severely restrained. Analysis of intracellular levels of cell cycle regulatory proteins revealed an arrest at the G1/S restriction point of the naive but not memory subset. This effect was associated with alterations in phosphotyrosine profile and with a marked decrease of
ERK
and NJK kinase activation. Finally, up-regulation of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) activity induced by mitogens was not affected by virus. Altogether, these findings show that interaction of HIV-1 with the T cell surface is sufficient to inhibit the proliferative response of the CD4CD45RA subset by disturbing proximal TCR signaling. This mechanism would affect renewal of naive lymphocytes, contributing in such a way to the impairment of T cell turnover during the course of HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:Effects of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 on CD4 lymphocyte subset activation. 1038 50
The effect of CD3-
CD4
coligation on CD3-mediated activation of normal mouse
CD4
(+) T lymphocytes has been analyzed in the absence of exogenous lymphokines. If anti-CD3 and anti-
CD4
antibodies are adsorbed to culture wells by means of previously adsorbed anti-Ig antibodies (indirect binding), CD3-
CD4
coligation inhibits activation measured as cell proliferation or as secretion of IL-2, IL-4, and IFN-gamma. Addition of IL-2, anti-CD28 antibodies, or phorbol esters, but not IL-1, IL-4, or ionomycin, blocked
CD4
-mediated inhibition and restored the response to levels equal or higher than those of cultures activated by anti-CD3 alone. In contrast, CD3-
CD4
coligation by antibodies directly adsorbed to culture wells potentiated anti-CD3-induced activation, either in the absence or in the presence of exogenous costimuli. Similar results were observed when
CD4
(+) T cells of naive phenotype (CD44(low), CD45RB(high)) were used in the experiments. The analysis of early tyrosine phosphorylation in
CD4
(+) T cells shows that phosphorylation of many cell substrates is clearly enhanced upon CD3-
CD4
coligation using indirectly or directly bound antibodies, yet certain substrates are mainly phosphorylated under inhibitory conditions. Although CD28 ligation does not produce any clear change in the tyrosine phosphorylation pattern in lysates from cells activated by indirectly bound anti-CD3 plus anti-
CD4
antibodies, the analysis of active forms of the MAP kinase
ERK
suggests that downstream signaling pathways involved in IL-2 gene activation can be differentially activated depending on the direct or indirect CD3-
CD4
adsorption and CD28 ligation.
...
PMID:Antibody-induced CD3-CD4 coligation inhibits TCR/CD3 activation in the absence of costimulatory signals in normal mouse CD4(+) T lymphocytes. 1044 9
The role of platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) in the development of obliterative bronchiolitis (OB) as a manifestation of chronic rejection was investigated in the heterotopic rat tracheal allograft model. An increase in intragraft PDGF-Ralpha and -Rbeta mRNA expression, and in PDGF-AA and -Ralpha immunoreactivity, was demonstrated during the progressive loss of respiratory epithelium and airway occlusion in nontreated allografts compared with syngeneic grafts. Treatment with CGP 53716, a protein-tyrosine kinase inhibitor selective for PDGF receptor, alone and in combination with suboptimal doses of cyclosporin A, significantly reduced myofibroproliferation and the degree of OB by more than 50%. CGP 53716 did not affect airway wall inflammatory cell proliferation, the number of graft-infiltrating
CD4
(+) or CD8(+) T cells, ED3(+) macrophages, or the level of immune activation determined as IL-2R and MHC class II expression. This study suggests a regulatory role for PDGF, especially for PDGF-AA and -Ralpha, in the development of obliterative bronchiolitis in this model, and demonstrates that inhibition of PDGF
receptor protein-tyrosine kinase
activation prevents these obliterative changes. Thus,
receptor protein-tyrosine kinase
inhibitors may provide a novel therapeutic strategy for the prevention of chronic rejection.
...
PMID:Role of platelet-derived growth factor in obliterative bronchiolitis (chronic rejection) in the rat. 1050 25
We studied 21 HIV-associated lymphomas with cutaneous presentation to determine whether they showed features of primary cutaneous lymphoma arising fortuitously or whether they represented the cutaneous involvement of AIDS systemic lymphoma. Besides rare mycosis fungoides (n = 3), which shared typical clinicopathologic lesions, nonepidermotropic large-cell lymphomas (n = 18) were predominant. They frequently presented as a solitary nodule or tumor. Seven of the eight large T-cell lymphomas had a CD30-positive (CD30+) phenotype but did not express
ALK
protein. Overexpression of p53 protein was observed in six cases. Although EBV-EBER transcripts were detected in two of them, LMP1 protein was absent. Except for their original prevalence, the features of these T-cell CD30+ cutaneous lymphomas were the same as in immunocompetent patients. The 10 B-cell cutaneous lymphoma were immunoblastic or centroblastic lymphomas, with a differential expression of BCL-6 and Syndecan. Four of them expressed CD30, EBER-EBV transcripts, and LMP1 and p53 proteins. This B-cell CD30+ EBV+ phenotype contrasts with cutaneous lymphoma in immunocompetent patients. Human herpesvirus 8 was not involved in lymphomagenesis since its sequences were detected in a single patient with Kaposi's sarcoma and Castleman's disease. These lymphomas occurred in severely immunocompromised patients with a low
CD4
count. Death was due to immunodepression rather than to lymphoma spread, suggesting avoiding aggressive immunosuppressive treatment in such patients.
...
PMID:The Spectrum of Cutaneous Lymphomas in HIV infection: a study of 21 cases. 1052 21
Human immunodeficiency virus Nef plays an important role in AIDS pathogenesis. In addition to the well known down-regulation of cell surface receptors (
CD4
, MHCI), Nef is able to alter cellular signaling. Of particular interest for this study is the ability of Nef to bind with a very high affinity to SH3 domains of myelomonocyte-specific protein-tyrosine kinases of the Src family (Src-like
PTK
). We have therefore investigated Ca(2+) signaling in HL60 cells retrovirally transduced with wild type Nef or with a Nef mutant deficient in the SH3-interacting proline-rich motif (Nef((PXXP)4(-))). In differentiated HL60 cells, Nef markedly altered cellular Ca(2+) signaling; the amount of intracellularly stored Ca(2+) was increased, and as a consequence, store-operated Ca(2+)-influx was decreased. This effect was not observed in undifferentiated HL60 cells or in CEM T-lymphocytes and correlated with the differentiation-induced up-regulation of Src-like
PTK
. The Nef effect on Ca(2+) signaling depended entirely on the integrity of its PXXP motif. The Src-like
PTK
p56/59(hck) co-immunoprecipitated with both Nef and with the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor, providing a possible mechanistic link between the viral protein and intracellular Ca(2+) stores of the host cell. Collectively, our results demonstrate that the human immunodeficiency virus 1 Nef protein manipulates intracellular Ca(2+) stores through SH3-mediated interactions in myelomonocytic cells.
...
PMID:The HIV Nef protein alters Ca(2+) signaling in myelomonocytic cells through SH3-mediated protein-protein interactions. 1057 46
CD34(+) cells are nonpermissive to infection by HIV strains X4 and R5, despite the fact that many CD34(+) cells express high levels of the viral receptor protein
CD4
and the coreceptor CXCR4 on their surface. In these cells, the co-receptor CCR5 protein, which, like CXCR4, is a chemokine receptor, is detected mainly intracellularly. We hypothesized that CD34(+) cells secrete CCR5-binding chemokines and that these factors interfere with HIV R5 interactions with these cells, possibly by binding CCR5 or by inducing its internalization. We found that human CD34(+) cells and CD34(+)
KIT
(+) cells, which are enriched in myeloid progenitor cells, expressed and secreted the CCR5 ligands RANTES, MIP-1alpha, and MIP-1beta and that IFN-gamma stimulated expression of these chemokines. In contrast, SDF-1, a CXCR4 ligand, was not detectable in the CD34(+)
KIT
(+) cells, even by RT-PCR. Conditioned media from CD34(+) cell culture significantly protected the T lymphocyte cell line PB-1 from infection by R5 but not X4 strains of HIV. Interestingly, the secretion of endogenous chemokines decreased with the maturation of CD34(+) cells, although ex vivo, expanded megakaryoblasts still secreted a significant amount of RANTES. Synthesis of CCR5-binding chemokines by human CD34(+) cells and megakaryoblasts therefore largely determines the susceptibility of these cells to infection by R5 HIV strains. We postulate that therapeutic agents that induce the endogenous synthesis of chemokines in human hematopoietic cells may protect these cells from HIV infection.
...
PMID:Bone marrow CD34(+) cells and megakaryoblasts secrete beta-chemokines that block infection of hematopoietic cells by M-tropic R5 HIV. 1060 28
The c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) can be activated in T-cells either by the combination of TCR and CD28 costimulation or by a variety of stress-related stimuli including UV light, H(2)O(2), and hyperosmolar sorbitol solutions. In T-lymphocytes, TCR/CD28 stimulation of JNK leads to induction of new gene expression via c-Jun, ATF-2, and
Elk
-1. Phosphorylation of c-Jun in
CD4
(+) T-cells stimulated by CD3/
CD4
/CD28 cross-linking declines with age, due to diminished activation of JNK. Here we show that the age-related decline in TCR/CD28 activation of JNK reflects two effects of age: the accumulation of memory cells (in which JNK stimulation is poor regardless of donor age) and age-dependent declines in JNK activation within the naive subset. Cyclosporin A inhibits induction of JNK function by TCR/CD28, PMA/ionomycin, ceramide, or H(2)O(2), but not induction by UV light or hyperosmolar sorbitol. Although aging impairs JNK induction by UV light, it has no effect on JNK activation by ceramide, H(2)O(2), or sorbitol. The data as a whole indicate that there are at least four pathways that activate JNK in
CD4
(+) T-cells, of which two are age-sensitive and two others unaffected by aging. Two of the pathways (UV and hyperosmolar sorbitol) are insensitive to cyclosporin inhibition. Finally, we show that the alterations in JNK function are not due to changes in the expression of MKK4, an upstream activator of JNK, and that another JNK kinase, MKK7, is not expressed in splenic T-cells.
...
PMID:Age-sensitive and -insensitive pathways leading to JNK activation in mouse CD4(+) T-cells. 1060 25
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>