Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.13 (protein kinase C)
49,245 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effect of SPG on leukocytes has been studied in 20 patients with oral carcinoma and the actions have been analysed in vitro. SPG 1 mg/kg was administered intramuscularly twice weekly. Peripheral venous blood was collected before, and 1 week and 2 weeks after the initiation of SPG treatment. Both CD16+CD57- and CD16-CD57+ cell populations were significantly increased after treatment, but no T cell subset varied. While enhancement of lymphokine-activated killer activity could not be found, an increase in natural killer (NK) activity was observed in 15 of the subjects, and the mean NK level was significantly increased from an initial 34.7 +/- 18.7% to 46.4 +/- 16.5% after two weeks of injections. O2-production by polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL) was stimulated 6 h after SPG injection. When PMNL were treated in vitro with SPG 32 micrograms/ml, enhanced O2-generation was induced and protein kinase C (PKC) activity in a membrane fraction increased. SPG did not directly affect non-specific PMNL killing of K562 cells or antibody-dependent cell mediated cytotoxicity against Raji cells, but non-specific PMNL killing was enhanced by culture-conditioned medium from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) containing 10 micrograms/ml SPG. Interleukin-1 beta, -3, -4, -6, tumour necrosis factor-alpha, granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor and IFN-gamma levels in the conditioned medium were not increased compared with medium from PBMC not treated with SPG. No clear increase of these cytokines was found in serum from the SPG-treated patients. From the above results, enhancement of PMNL O2-generation by SPG seems to be a direct action of SPG, but the mechanism of elevation of the non-specific killing activity of PMNL and NK cells is not known. Perhaps other cytokines than those assayed have participated in increasing non-specific cytotoxicity.
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PMID:Immunoregulatory effects of sizofiran (SPG) on lymphocytes and polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 165 62

Two genes encode the CD16 low affinity IgG FcR. CD16-I (Fc gamma RIII-1) is expressed on PMN as a phosphatidylinositol-glycan anchored glycoprotein. CD16-II (Fc gamma RIII-2) is expressed on NK cells and macrophages as a transmembrane glycoprotein associated with CD3 zeta or Fc epsilon RI-gamma. NK cells spontaneously release soluble CD16-II from the cell surface and this is enhanced by activation with phorbol ester. In this study, we demonstrate that a metalloprotease is involved in the spontaneous and PMA-induced release of CD16-II from NK cells. 1,10-phenanthroline, an inhibitor of Zn(2+)-dependent metalloproteases, efficiently inhibits CD16-II release. 1,7-phenanthroline, an inactive analogue that doesn't chelate Zn2+ or other divalent metal cations, and inhibitors of serine proteases do not affect spontaneous or PMA-induced release of CD16-II. Murine P815 mastocytoma cells transfected with human CD16-II cDNA shed membrane CD16, and 1,10-phenanthroline inhibits this process. P815 transfectants expressing CD16-II molecules with truncated cytoplasmic domains also release soluble receptors, indicating that the cytoplasmic segment of CD16-II is not required for interaction with the protease or the cytoskeleton. By contrast, 1,10-phenanthroline does not inhibit PMA-induced release of CD16-I glycoprotein from PMN, indicating a different mechanism of release for this phosphatidylinositol-glycan anchored molecule. Prior studies have demonstrated that NK cells are activated via the inositol phosphate pathway after engagement of CD16-II by immune complexes or Ig-coated tumor cell targets. A membrane metalloprotease with substrate specificity for CD16-II that is activated by PKC stimulation may provide a mechanism for releasing the immune complex or target from the effector cells and halting signal transduction.
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PMID:Involvement of a metalloprotease in spontaneous and phorbol ester-induced release of natural killer cell-associated Fc gamma RIII (CD16-II). 183 41

We have characterized CD4-CD8- double-negative (DN) alpha beta TCR+ T cells from a patient with immunodeficiency, lymphocytosis, lymphadenopathy, and hepatosplenomegaly. The majority of peripheral blood lymphocytes were DN alpha beta TCR+ T cells as evaluated by FACS and biochemical analysis. The DN T cells showed the following phenotype: alpha beta TCR+, gamma delta TCR-, CD2+, CD3+, CD4-, CD5+, CD7-, CD8-, CD16-, CD25-, CD26-, CD28+, CD45RO-, CD45RA+, CD57+, and HLA-DR+. Both southern blot analysis of TCR genes and FACS analysis applying a panel of V beta and V alpha monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) indicated a polyclonal T-cell expansion. Thymic biopsy showed normal histology, whereas lymph node biopsy samples showed altered histological and immunohistological patterns with markedly expanded paracortical areas containing the DN T cells of the same phenotype as found in peripheral blood T cells. In functional studies, the DN T cells showed a profoundly reduced proliferative response upon stimulation with mitogens as well as MoAbs against the TCR/CD3 complex, CD2, and CD28, respectively. Addition of exogenous interleukin-2 (IL-2) only minimally augmented the proliferative response. In contrast, the addition of a combination of Ca2+ ionophore and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) restored the proliferative response of the DN T cells to almost normal levels. This observation strongly suggests that the protein kinase C activity of the DN T cells was intact, but that the normal mechanism for transmembrane signal transduction was impaired in these unusual DN T cells.
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PMID:Phenotypical and functional characterization of double-negative (CD4-CD8-) alpha beta T-cell receptor positive cells from an immunodeficient patient. 183 26

In this study we analyzed the ability of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from hemophilic patients (He) with negative or positive serology for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), to increase natural killer (NK) cytotoxicity upon stimulation with physiological and non physiological agents. Purified interleukin-2 (IL-2), the interferon (IFN)-inducer polyinosinic polycytidylic acid (PIC), recombinant alpha- and gamma-IFN and the protein kinase activator phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) were used as stimulatory agents. The NK functional response was correlated with the presence of PBMC bearing phenotypic markers of activated cells (IL-2 receptor, IL-2R) and of different NK cell maturation stages. Our results demonstrate that NK effector cells with slight lytic activity (Leu 7+ CD16-) predominated in HIV+ He patients. On the other hand the occurrence of IL-2R positive cells was similarly high in both HIV+ and HIV- individuals and was probably more related to chronic replacement treatment with Factor VIII or Factor IX concentrates than to HIV infection. The ability to respond to physiological NK regulators such as IL-2 and IFNs, or to the IFN-inducer PIC was impaired in HIV+ He, especially in HIV+ LAS individuals, suggesting that the inability of these cells to increase NK cell activity after appropriate induction was due to an intrinsic defect. Since phosphoinositide turnover and subsequent protein kinase C activation are thought to be part of the physiological mechanism of NK cytotoxicity, we studied the effect of PMA on PBMC from each group of patients. The ability to respond to PMA was lost only in PBMC from HIV+ LAS patients, indicating that impairment of the NK lytic mechanism progresses as the disease gets worse.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:HIV infection and natural killer cytotoxicity in hemophilic patients. 238 63

Hyperproliferation of keratinocytes (KCs) in psoriasis has been found to be associated with excessive activation of a phospholipase C (PLC)/protein kinase C (PKC) signal transduction system. The molecular species of PLCs which are activated in psoriasis have not been thoroughly investigated. It was envisaged that if glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-specific PLC was activated in the membrane of psoriatic epidermal cells, it would render these cells devoid of those proteins which are anchored to the cell membrane through their GPI moiety. In order to test this possibility, four GPI proteins (CD16, CD55, CD58, and CD59) were determined immunohistochemically in normal and psoriatic skin. In normal skin, CD55 and CD59 were strongly expressed on epithelium and vascular structures, whereas CD16 and CD58 were strongly expressed only on epithelium. The expression of all four GPI proteins was decreased in non-lesional psoriatic skin and virtually abolished in lesional psoriatic skin. A control transmembrane protein, CD46, was strongly expressed in normal and non-lesional psoriatic skin, and its expression was not significantly decreased in psoriatic lesions. The absence or reduction of GPI proteins was not seen in the lesions of several other inflammatory and proliferative diseases studied.
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PMID:Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored membrane proteins are constitutively down-regulated in psoriatic skin. 751 54

We have previously reported that CD7 expressed on resting human NK cells is a signal-transducing molecule, which upon ligation with mAb induces a rapid increase in cytoplasmic free calcium, secretion of IFN-gamma, and augmented NK activity against K562 targets. We now demonstrate that Ab-mediated clustering of CD7 molecules on NK cells results in enhanced phosphorylation on tyrosine residues of intracellular proteins of 60, 70, 80, 97, and 120 kDa. In the presence of genistein, a specific inhibitor of protein tyrosine kinase, the enhanced level of tyrosine phosphorylation was blocked, indicating that CD7 may induce signaling via activation of tyrosine kinases. Cross-linking of CD7 or CD16 molecules with primary and secondary Abs, as well as stimulation of NK cells with phorbol ester (PMA) or with calcium ionophore A23187 also induced beta 1 integrin-mediated adhesion of these cells to fibronectin (FN)-coated plastic surfaces. In contrast, cross-linking of CD2 expressed on the surface of NK cells had no significant effect on NK cell adhesion to FN. This adhesion was not associated with up-regulation of expression of alpha 4 beta 1 or alpha 5 beta 1 FN receptors on NK cells, but it required an intact cytoskeleton. The CD7-induced adhesion to FN was mediated by alpha 4 beta 1 and alpha 5 beta 1 integrins, as it was partially blocked by FN connective segment-1 peptide (EILDVPST), the alpha 4 beta 1-binding domain, as well as by RGD-containing peptides, the alpha 5 beta 1-binding domain, but not by EILEVPST or RGE control peptides. NK cell binding to FN was also partially inhibited by mAb to alpha 4, alpha 5, and beta 1 integrins. The mechanism by which cross-linking of CD7 or CD16 on NK cells induced adhesion to FN appeared to involve both protein tyrosine kinase and protein kinase C, because this adhesion was blocked in the presence of either genistein or a protein kinase C inhibitor, staurosporin. Our data demonstrate that signals transduced via triggering of either CD7 or CD16 molecules are involved in the regulation of the functional activity of beta 1 integrins on NK cells.
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PMID:Signaling via CD7 molecules on human NK cells. Induction of tyrosine phosphorylation and beta 1 integrin-mediated adhesion to fibronectin. 752 96

Phagocytosis of whole blood polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) was evaluated following periods of hypoxemia or hypoxemia/reoxygenation. Hypoxemia (O2 saturation 5-20%) significantly increased the percentage of PMN positive for phagocytosis. This effect required mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ stores and was accompanied by a significant increase in CD16, CD32w, and CD35 expression assayed using FITC-labeled Mabs. PMA (10 ng/ml) increased CD32w expression while protein kinase C inhibitors H-7 and staurosporine but not the protein kinase A inhibitor H-9 reversed the effect of hypoxemia on phagocytosis and receptor expression. Further, genistein (tyronsine kinase inhibition) reversed hypoxemia-induced increases in phagocytosis (ID50-50 microM). Reoxygenation (O2 saturation 97-99%) reduced the percentage of PMN positive for phagocytosis back to baseline values without affecting mean channel fluorescence. Reoxygenation reduced CD32w and CD16 expression with kinetics assays demonstrating concordance between reduced phagocytosis and CD32w and CD16 expression. Reoxygenation-induced decreases in CD32w and CD16 expression were prevented if whole blood PMN were incubated with either NaN3 (10 mM), dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) (10 mM), or taurine (15 mM) prior to reoxygenation. These results demonstrated that hypoxemia and hypoxemia/reoxygenation recruit and suppress distinct populations of whole blood PMN for phagocytosis. Intracellular kinase activation and Ca2+ mobilization are required for hypoxemia-induced increases in phagocytosis. Reoxygenation reduces whole blood PMN phagocytosis via an oxident-derived reduction of surface CD16 and CD32w expression.
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PMID:Regulation of whole blood polymorphonuclear leukocyte phagocytosis following hypoxemia and hypoxemia/reoxygenation. 774 22

Downregulation of functionally relevant surface molecules has been shown to be a powerful regulatory mechanism of Ag surface expression that seems to be of general significance in vivo. CD16-II (Fc gamma RIIIA alpha) is the transmembrane form of the low-affinity receptor for IgG which is expressed on monocytes and NK cells. Occupancy of CD16-II receptor on NK cells induces expression of activation antigens, synthesis of cytokines, and lysis of antibody-coated target cells. Furthermore, after activation the receptor is downregulated from the cell surface. This downregulation could play a physiological role in the NK activation process via CD16 by releasing the antibody-coated target cell and halting signal transduction. The participation of PKC and PTKs in the activation of NK cells via CD16 is clearly established. Thus, we have considered of interest to study the mechanism of CD16-II downregulation in NK cells and the role played by these kinases in the process. The results show that 1,10-phenantroline, a specific inhibitor of Zn(2+)-dependent metalloproteases, inhibits CD16 downregulation induced by CD16 crosslinking, thus suggesting that this process requires the activation of a Zn2+ dependent metalloprotease as it occurs in PMA mediated CD16 downregulation by shedding. Our results also demonstrate that CD16-II downregulation induced by CD16 crosslinking is independent of PKC and PTK activation. In contrast other NK cell activities induced by CD16 crosslinking, such as the induction of activation markers or the production of TNF-alpha, were dependent of PTK activation. The fact that PKC inhibitor staurosporine blocks PMA- but not CD16-induced downregulation suggests that CD16 downregulation can be achieved via two different pathways: one that is PKC dependent and one that is not. The characterization of the Zn(2+)-dependent metalloproteases and the analysis of the regulatory mechanisms involved in its activation will be of interest in order to clarify the physiological relevance of CD16-II release from NK cells as part of the NK activation process.
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PMID:Downregulation of Fc gamma receptor IIIA alpha (CD16-II) on natural killer cells induced by anti-CD16 mAb is independent of protein tyrosine kinases and protein kinase C. 808 66

Human peripheral blood natural killer (NK) cells (CD56+, CD16+, CD3 epsilon- lymphocytes) express CD69 after their stimulation by interleukin-2 (IL-2) or interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha). This activation antigen represents a triggering surface molecule in NK cell clones as its stimulation triggers the cytolytic machinery of these cells. However, the mechanisms regulating the expression of CD69 in NK cells are unknown despite the functional relevance of CD69 in NK cell activation. Thus, we have analyzed the role of protein kinase C (PKC) and protein tyrosine kinases (PTK) in the expression of CD69 on purified NK cells activated by IL-2, IFN-alpha, anti Fc gamma RIII (CD16) monoclonal antibodies or by K562 target cells. We found that CD69 is induced on NK cells not only by IL-2 and IFN-alpha but also by activation of the CD16 pathway, the interaction with NK target cells and the direct activation of PKC by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), indicating that CD69 induction is associated to different NK activation pathways. The treatment with the PKC inhibitor staurosporine abolished the induction of CD69 induced by PMA or K562. However, it did not significantly affect CD69 induction by IL-2, IFN-alpha or CD16 cross-linking. This demonstrates that whereas PKC can play a central role in the regulation of CD69 expression in some instances (response to K562 cells or PMA), it does not participate in others (response to IL-2, IFN-alpha or anti CD16 monoclonal antibodies). On the other hand genistein, a competitive inhibitor of PTK enzymes, blocked the expression of CD69 induced by activation of NK cells via IL-2 or IFN-alpha receptors, CD16 and K562 receptor(s), indicating that stimulation of PTK is a common step in the signal transduction events leading to the induction of CD69 antigens after the activation of NK cells via these receptors.
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PMID:Regulation of CD69 expression on human natural killer cells: differential involvement of protein kinase C and protein tyrosine kinases. 847

A monoclonal immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) antibody (mAb), designated mNI-11, was produced by immunizing mice with the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-stimulated monocyte-like cell line U937. The reactivity of mNI-11 was tested by the indirect immunofluorescence method. The antigen defined by mNI-11 was found to be expressed on U937 cells, LPS-stimulated U937 cells, normal CD14+ cells (monocytes/macrophages), and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). Expression of the antigen defined by mNI-11 on HUVECs slightly increased in response to exposure to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). When the reactivity of mNI-11 and mAbs binding human differentiation antigens such as CD11a, CD11b, CD11c, CD14, CD16, CD18, CD23, CD28, CD29, CD31, CD43, CD44, CD45RA, CD49d, CD50, CD54, CD58, CD80, CD102, CD106, HLA-class I, or HLA-class II antigen was compared, no mNI-11 reactivity resembling that of these mAbs was found. mNI-11 markedly induced homotypic cell aggregation of U937 cells when they were stimulated with LPS. The mNI-11-induced aggregation of LPS-stimulated U937 cells, referred to as LPS-U937 cells, required neither Fc receptor engagement nor cross-linking of the antigen defined by mNI-11 because aggregation was induced by both F(ab')2 fragments and monovalent F(ab') fragments of mNI-11. The mNI-11-induced aggregation was blocked by the addition of ethylenediaminetetraacetate, and also when incubated at 4 degrees C. mAbs to CD11a/CD18 (lymphocyte-function associated antigen-1; LFA-1) and CD54 (intercellular adhesion molecule-1; ICAM-1) completely blocked the LPS-U937 cell aggregation induced by mNI-11. The LPS-U937 cell aggregation induced by mNI-11 was partially but not completely blocked by the protein kinase C inhibitors sphingosine and H-7, and was completely blocked by the protein-tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein. Interestingly, mNI-11 markedly promoted LPS-U937 cell adhesion to HUVECs. The mNI-11-induced LPS-U937 cell adhesion to HUVECs was not reduced in the presence of LFA-1 (CD11a/CD18) or ICAM-1 (CD54) mAbs. On the other hand, LPS-U937 cells, whether treated with mNI-11 or not, sufficiently adhered to the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin, but not to laminin or collagen type I. However, mNI-11 did not markedly promote LPS-U937 cell adhesion to fibronectin. Adhesion of LPS-U937 cells treated with mNI-11 to fibronectin was completely blocked by CD29 (beta chain of very late antigens) mAb. The surface antigen recognized by mNI-11 had a molecular size of approximately 97 kDa under non-reducing conditions and approximately 117 kDa under reducing conditions, as determined by immunoblotting analysis. We found that mNI-11 recognizes an adhesion-associated molecule distinct from any previously reported in terms of its pattern of cellular distribution and molecular weight, and also found that mNI-11 has activity which induces cell adhesion/aggregation of U937 cells when stimulated with LPS.
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PMID:Development and characterization of a novel monoclonal antibody (mNI-11) that induces cell adhesion of the LPS-stimulated human monocyte-like cell line U937. 865 55


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