Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (reverse transcriptase)
31,746 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have investigated the fate of different neurotrophin-responsive subpopulations of dorsal root ganglion neurons in dystonia musculorum (dt) mice. These mice have a null mutation in the cytoskeletal linker protein, dystonin. Dystonin is expressed by all sensory neurons and cross links actin filaments, intermediate filaments, and microtubules. The dt mice undergo massive sensory neurodegeneration postnatally and die at around 4 weeks of age. We assessed the surviving and degenerating neuronal populations by comparing the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons and central and peripheral projections in dt mice and wildtype mice. Large, neurofilament-H-positive neurons, many of which are muscle afferents and are neurotrophin-3 (NT-3)-responsive, were severely decreased in number in dt DRGs. The loss of muscle afferents was correlated with a degeneration of muscle spindles in skeletal muscle. Nerve growth factor (NGF)-responsive populations, which were visualized using calcitonin gene-related peptide and p75, appeared qualitatively normal in the lumbar spinal cord, DRG, and hindlimb skin. In contrast, glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF)-responsive populations, which were visualized using the isolectin B-4 and thiamine monophosphatase, were severely diminished in the lumbar spinal cord, DRG, and hindlimb skin. Analysis of NT-3, NGF, and GDNF mRNA levels using semiquantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction revealed normal trophin synthesis in the peripheral targets of dt mice, arguing against decreased trophic synthesis as a possible cause of neuronal degeneration. Thus, the absence of dystonin results in the selective survival of NGF-responsive neurons and the postnatal degeneration of many NT-3- and GDNF-responsive neurons. Our results reveal that the loss of this ubiquitously expressed cytoskeletal linker has diverse effects on sensory subpopulations. Moreover, we show that dystonin is critical for the maintenance of certain DRG neurons, and its function may be related to neurotrophic support.
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PMID:Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor-responsive and neurotrophin-3-responsive neurons require the cytoskeletal linker protein dystonin for postnatal survival. 1124 83

This study investigates fasting serum levels of methionine and related metabolites, vitamin B6, and folate during highly active antiretroviral therapy in therapy-naive human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1-infected outpatients. The research design consisted of before and during therapy measurements with a median treatment period of 100 days (range, 50 to 188) in frozen samples. The subjects included 17 consecutive HIV-1-infected outpatients (15 men and 2 women; 25 to 65-years-old). Controls were 42 healthy individuals (28 men and 14 women; 24- to 82-years-old) without serologic evidence of HIV and/or hepatitis C infection and normal clinical chemistry. Subjects received treatment with the reverse transcriptase inhibitors, azidothymidine (AZT) or stavudine (D4T) plus lamivudine (3TC) and either the protease inhibitors, indinavir (IND), nelfinavir (NELF), ritonavir (RITV), or saquinavir (SAQ) at the standard dosage. Serum concentrations of methionine, total homocysteine (tHcy), cystathionine (CYSTA), N,N-dimethylglycine (DMG), N-methylglycine (MG), methylmalonic acid (MMA), and total cysteine, as well as vitamin B6, folate, and soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor p75 were taken at baseline and during highly active antiretroviral therapy. Baseline, serum tHcy, MMA, CYSTA, vitamin B6 concentrations were not significantly different from healthy controls. There was, however, a trend towards lower folate serum concentrations at baseline in HIV-infected patients as compared with healthy controls (P =.06). There were no significant correlations between tHcy and vitamin B6, folate, or MMA. Elevated baseline levels of DMG and MG decreased significantly during antiretroviral therapy (P =.0019 and.04, respectively), whereas no significant changes in serum concentrations of CYSTA, MMA, or methionine were detected. tHcy increased in 12 of 17 patients (P =.09). HIV-infected patients displayed significant alterations (elevated DMG and MG serum concentrations) in metabolite levels of the betaine pathway in methionine metabolism, which might be positively influenced by newly initiated antiretroviral combination therapy.
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PMID:Decrease of elevated N,N-dimethylglycine and N-methylglycine in human immunodeficiency virus infection during short-term highly active antiretroviral therapy. 1169 44

Neurotrophins (NTs) promote survival and differentiation of central and peripheral neurons, and display several activities also in non-neuronal cells. Human lungs synthesize and release NTs, which are probably involved in the pathophysiology of pulmonary disturbances. In this article the expression and anatomic localization of nerve growth factor, brain-derived neurotrophic factor, and NT-3 and of corresponding high-affinity receptors TrkA, TrkB (full-length and truncated [TR-] isoforms), TrkC, and of the low-affinity p75 receptor, were assessed in surgical samples from adult human lung by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, Western blot, and immunohistochemistry. NTs and their cognate receptor mRNA and protein transcripts were detected by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and immunoblotting, respectively, nerve growth factor (NGF) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) mRNA and corresponding protein transcripts being the most expressed. High levels of TrkB-[TR-] mRNA and of its protein transcript were also demonstrated, whereas a low expression of p75 mRNA and of corresponding protein transcript were found. Microanatomic analysis of immunohistochemical study revealed that bronchial epithelial cells were immunoreactive for different NTs, with a higher intensity of BDNF immune staining compared with other NTs, but did not express NT receptor immunoreactivity. Alveolar cells were immunoreactive for TrkA and TrkC receptor protein, but did not display immunoreactivity for NTs or other receptors investigated. Gland cells expressed NT and high-affinity NT receptor immunoreactivity, but not p75 receptor immunoreactivity. NT and low-affinity receptor immunoreactivity was observed within neurons and satellite cells of parasympathetic ganglia as well as in nerve fiber-like structures supplying the bronchopulmonary tree. An obvious immunoreactivity for NTs and NT receptor protein was also observed in intrapulmonary branches of pulmonary artery. Pulmonary lymphocytes and macrophages express nerve growth factor and high-affinity NT receptor immunoreactivity. The role of NTs in non-neuronal tissue including lung has not been clarified yet. The widespread expression of NTs and their receptors in different components of the lung suggests that these factors may contribute to regulate cell function in human lung.
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PMID:Neurotrophin and neurotrophin receptor protein expression in the human lung. 1279 75

Recent studies suggest the participation of cholinergic neurons in the brain processes underlying reinforcement. The involvement of cholinergic neurons in cocaine self-administration has been recently demonstrated in studies using muscarinic and nicotinic agonists and antagonists, microdialysis, assessment of choline acetyltransferase activity and acetylcholine (ACh) turnover rates. The present experiment was initiated to identify subsets of cholinergic neurons involved in the brain processes that underlie cocaine self-administration by lesioning discrete populations with a selective neurotoxin. Rats were trained to self-administer cocaine and the cholinergic neurotoxin 192-IgG-saporin or vehicle was then bilaterally administered into the posterior nucleus accumbens (NAcc)-ventral pallidum (VP). The 192-IgG-saporin induced lesions resulted in a pattern of drug-intake consistent with either a shift in the dose intake relationship to the left or downward compared to sham-treated controls. A second experiment used a self-administration threshold procedure that demonstrated this lesion shifted the dose intake relationship to the left compared to the sham-vehicle treated rats. The magnitude and extent of the lesion was assessed by measuring the expression of p75 (the target for 192-IgG-saporin) and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) in the NAcc, VP, caudate nucleus-putamen (CP) and vertical limb of the medial septal nucleus-diagonal band (MS-DB) of these rats using real time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Significant reductions in gene expression for p75 (a selective marker for basal forebrain cholinergic neurons) and ChAT were seen in the MS-DB and VP while only small decreases were seen in the NAcc and CP of the 192-IgG-saporin treated rats. These data indicate that the overall influence of cholinergic neurons in the MS-DB and VP are inhibitory to the processes underlying cocaine self-administration and suggest that agonists directed toward subclasses of cholinergic receptors may have efficacy as pharmacotherapeutic adjuncts for the treatment of cocaine abuse.
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PMID:Involvement of cholinergic neuronal systems in intravenous cocaine self-administration. 1501 33

Individual neurons dissected from immunohistochemically stained paraffin sections of the developing rat geniculate (VIIth cranial) ganglion were assayed for their content of mRNA of the neurotrophin receptor genes, p75 , trkA , trkB and trkC. Fetal and postnatal rats, from the 13th embryonic day (E13) until the 20th postnatal day (P20), were used. Single cells were subjected to RNA amplification, followed by treatment with reverse transcriptase and DNA amplification by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The identity of the PCR products was verified by subcloning and sequencing. A total of 227 neurons were examined, of which 212 (93%) gave a PCR signal for at least one neurotrophin receptor. We found: (1) Approximately half of the neurons expressed more than one receptor. (2) A truncated version of trkB , possessing the ligand-binding region but lacking the tyrosine kinase domain, occurred quite frequently, often in combination with the full-length trkB, with trkA or both. (3) The pattern of staining for trkB-like immunoreactivity was usually predictive that either its full length or truncated mRNA would be present. This was not the case for trkC-like immunoreactivity. Western blots on E15 brain tissue showed no band for full-length trkC ( approximately 150 kDa), suggesting the antibody may have been immunoreactive with a truncated ( approximately 120 kDa) but not a full-length version of the trkC receptor. (4) The pattern of neurotrophin receptor gene expression changed during development. (5) p75 expression occurred infrequently--in only 7 of the 212 neurons that gave a signal for any receptor.
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PMID:Developmental expression of neurotrophin receptor genes in rat geniculate ganglion neurons. 1547 88

Long-term use of antiretroviral nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) as therapy for human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infection is limited by mitochondrial toxicity. Here we document mitochondrial pathology during the long-term culture of human HeLa cells in the presence or absence of the NRTI Zidovudine(R) (AZT, 800 muM) for up to 77-passages (p), with samples taken at early (p5-p11), middle (p36 and p37), and late (p70-p77) passages. Samples were analyzed for changes in mitochondrial morphology, mitochondrial (mt)DNA quantity, nuclear and mitochondrial gene expression, and mitochondrial membrane potential. Mitochondria showed abnormal proliferation at p5 and abnormal morphology >/=p36. mtDNA quantity was increased at p5 and p11, and 65% depleted at p71. Hierarchical clustering of nuclear gene expression, examined at p37 by the NCI cDNA microarray in AZT-exposed cells, showed down-regulation of 13 out of 16 lipid-metabolizing genes, and up-regulation of most oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) genes. OXPHOS genes encoded by mtDNA, examined at p5, p36, and p75 using the Mitochondrial Gene Mini Array, revealed up-regulation of genes coding for polypeptides of NADH dehydrogenase, ATP synthase, and cytochrome c oxidase. Mitochondrial membrane potential, monitored by JC1 staining, was elevated at p10 and p32, and essentially completely absent at p71. The data show that during chronic exposure of HeLa cells to AZT, a compensatory response was induced at the earlier passages (p5-p37), and by p71 there was widespread mitochondrial morphological damage, severe mtDNA depletion, and a substantial loss of mitochondrial membrane potential.
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PMID:Morphological and molecular course of mitochondrial pathology in cultured human cells exposed long-term to Zidovudine. 1689 29

Clinical solid organ xenotransplantation is precluded by the strong immune response that results in rejection of pig xenografts in primate models. Innate immunity seems to play a major role in this process. In particular, tumor necrosis factor (TNF), produced by natural killer cells and macrophages, contributes to xenograft rejection by promoting endothelial cell activation and the recruitment of inflammatory cells. To further elucidate its molecular mechanism, we cloned the full-length cDNA of porcine TNF-Receptor 2 (pTNFR2, p75) by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of total RNA isolated from porcine peripheral blood mononuclear cells. To this end, we used degenerate primers based on the sequences of the mouse, rat, and human homologues. Two PCR fragments were obtained that contained the pTNFR2 sequence, but differed in size. The shorter clones lacked the sequence corresponding to exon 4 by homology but identical for the rest, suggesting there is an alternative spliced mRNA variant of the porcine receptor. The predicted protein sequence (461 amino acids, containing exon 4) exhibited 72.5% identity to the human TNFR2 and 58.7% to the mouse molecule. By predicted protein sequence analysis, we determined that it comprised the four TNFR cysteine-rich repeats conserved between species. However, the molecule missing exon 4 lacks one cysteine-rich repeat. To assess function, we produced two recombinant proteins containing the extracellular domain of each pTNFR2 variant fused to the Fc portion of human IgG1. Next, we examined their ability to inhibit human TNF-mediated activation of porcine aortic endothelial cells. The addition of the whole pTNFR2 fusion protein to the TNF treatment blocked the up-regulation of activation markers. However, the fusion protein lacking exon 4 failed to effectively counteract TNF effects. These two pTNFR2 isoforms may play differential roles in the process of xenograft rejection.
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PMID:Characterization of porcine tumor necrosis factor receptor 2: implications for xenotransplantation. 1788 14

The activity of the basal forebrain cholinergic neurons (BFCNs) that innervate the cerebral cortex and hippocampus is essential for normal learning and memory. Here, we present a method to isolate and culture BFCNs from the embryonic murine septum that takes advantage of their restricted expression of the nerve growth factor receptor (p75) in conjunction with fluorescence-activated cell sorting. The septal region dissection, cell dissociation and staining process, and cell sorting parameters are described in detail. Sufficient cell yield and optimized cell culture conditions make this protocol suitable for multiple assays including immunocytochemistry, reverse transcriptase PCR, microarray profiling, acetylcholine measurements and electrophysiological assessment. The study of these neurons as a purified population will greatly advance our understanding of factors that influence their development and maintenance.
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PMID:Purification and culture of nerve growth factor receptor (p75)-expressing basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. 1819 19

The underlying mechanism for electroacupuncture (EA) associated functional improvement in patients suffering from spinal cord injury (SCI) is largely unknown. Collateral sprouting is one plausible factor, where the cord microenvironment may contribute greatly. The present study evaluated the effects of EA on collateral sprouting from spared dorsal root ganglion (DRG), sensory functional restorations, and differential gene expressions in spinal cord after partial DRG removal in the rat. Following EA, N1 waveform latencies for cortical somatosensory evoked potential significantly shortened. The densities of terminal sprouting from the spared DRG significantly increased on the EA versus the non-EA side. Microarray analysis revealed that several genes were upregulated on the acupunctured side at different time points; they were ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) at 1 day postoperation (dpo), fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-1, insulin-like growth factor (IGF) 1 receptor, neuropeptide Y, and FGF-13 at 7 dpo, and CNTF and calcitonin gene-related polypeptide-alpha at 14 dpo, respectively. Meanwhile, five genes (CNTF, p75-like apoptosis-inducing death domain protein, IGF-1, transforming growth factor-beta 2, and FGF-4) were downregulated at 7 dpo. Furthermore, reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction results supported the gene chip analysis. It was concluded that the EA induced sensory functional restorations following partial DRG ganglionectomies could be brought about by intraspinal sprouting from the spared DRG, as well as multiple differential gene expressions in the spinal cord. The results could have clinical application in EA treatment of patients after spinal injury.
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PMID:Electroacupuncture induced spinal plasticity is linked to multiple gene expressions in dorsal root deafferented rats. 1858 Dec 69

The synthesis of acetylcholine and its release from basal forebrain cholinergic neurons (BFCN) that innervate the cerebral cortex and hippocampus are considered essential processes for normal learning, memory and attention. We have developed a purification and cell culture method of BFCN in order to examine the regulation of their cholinergic phenotype. Cells isolated from the septal region of late embryonic mice were purified by fluorescence-activated cell sorting based on their expression of the nerve growth factor receptor (p75), a surface marker for mature BFCN. Consistent with previous reports, p75-positive (p75+) cells were enriched in choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and the high-affinity choline transporter (ChT), as measured by reverse transcriptase PCR. In culture, these cells maintained their gene expression of p75, ChAT and ChT, while p75-negative (p75-) cells had a low expression of these genes. Incubation of the cells with BMP9 not only increased p75 and ChAT gene expression in p75- cells, but also augmented the expression of these genes in p75+ cells. Conversely, BMP9 decreased ChT gene expression in p75+ cells and had no such effect in p75- cells. Immunostaining confirmed that p75 protein expression was modulated by BMP9 in a similar way as p75 mRNA, and also revealed that only a subset of p75- cells respond to BMP9 in this manner. These data suggest that mature BFCN in culture may express their cholinergic phenotype in the absence of exogenous trophic input, but that BMP9 can further modulate this phenotype. Moreover, BMP9 induces the cholinergic phenotype in a set of basal forebrain non-cholinergic neurons or precursor cells.
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PMID:Differential modulation of nerve growth factor receptor (p75) and cholinergic gene expression in purified p75-expressing and non-expressing basal forebrain neurons by BMP9. 1895 73


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