Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.27.5 (RNase)
17,967 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In multiple sclerosis (MS), exogenous or endogenous nucleic acid fragments not (or partially) catabolised inside central nervous system (CNS) could entertain an inflammatory and even demyelinating process, and delay resynthesis of myelin. So, exogenous nucleic acids could act as starting agents for acute phase. Nucleic acid material can be released by the enzymes of nucleic acid catabolism and by the antibodies to nucleic acids possibly synthesized. A preliminary approach of such hypothesis has been made by study of cerebrospinal fluid ribonuclease activity and intrathecal synthesis of antibodies to nucleic acids. These two factors are significantly different in MS and in infectious processes of CNS groups. According to our hypothesis MS could arise from a genetic defect of oligodendrocyte (ODC) acting in genome expression and consequently leading to the persistence of nucleic acid fragments. This defect of ODC might be associated to another immune defect explaining various evolutive forms of the disease.
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PMID:[Immunity and catabolism of nucleic acids: the problem of multiple sclerosis?]. 243 31

A mouse monoclonal antibody (MAb 6B9, isotype IgM) was raised against autopsy tissue samples from the central nervous system (CNS) of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. By immunofluorescence microscopy, MAb 6B9 intensely stains most or all cells in fetal rats. However, MAb 6B9 differentially stains various cell types in adult rats. Neurons, ependymal cells, and adrenal chromaffin cells are stained intensely, whereas astrocytes and oligodendrocytes are not stained. The 6B9-reactive antigen (6B9 antigen) is sensitive to periodic acid, but insensitive to treatment with protease, RNase, or hyaluronidase. Results from immunofluorescence microscopy on semithin sections and cultured neuroblastoma cells indicate that 6B9 antigen is intracellular. This is supported by immunoelectron microscopy, where labeling for 6B9 antigen appears in the cytoplasm distinct from any identifiable organelle. Further studies on 6B9 antigen should reveal its chemical nature as well as the significance of developmental changes in its distribution.
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PMID:Fetal antigen retained by mature neurons and ependyma studied with a monoclonal antibody (6B9). 338 2

After inactivation of RNase inhibitor by parachloromercuribenzoate, total alkaline RNase activity was found to be two fold higher in white matter as in grey matter extracts from human brain tissue. This activity was lower in human purified myelin. Two human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) RNase isoenzymes of group 3 (a minor one, RNase 3.1, and a major one, RNase 3.2) were found to be present in human grey and white matter extracts and in purified myelin, but absent in human serum, peripheral nerve, liver, and spleen extracts. A RNase isoenzyme similar to central nervous system (CNS) RNase 3.2 was present in human kidney extracts but it differed in its carbohydrate structure. RNase isoenzymes 3.1 and 3.2 were not found in mouse, rat, and bovine brains. Thus, RNases 3.1 and 3.2 seem specific to human CNS. RNases of group 3 are the predominant RNase isoenzymes in CSF and one of the two predominant RNase groups in brain tissue. However, the proportion of RNases of group 3 is different in CSF and in brain extracts: RNases 3.1-3.2 are the major constituents of group 3 RNases in brain tissue, while another RNase isoenzyme of group 3, RNase 3.0, which is more glycosylated than RNases 3.1-3.2, is only a minor part of RNase of group 3 in brain extracts. Conversely, RNases 3.1-3.2 are lower or equivalent to RNase 3.0 in control CSF since the ratio of RNases 3.1-3.2 to RNase 3.0 did not exceed 1.0. This ratio decreased in pathological CSF including multiple sclerosis or infectious CNS diseases that were free of transudation phenomena. In conclusion, CSF RNases 3.1-3.2 seem to originate in brain tissue and could be markers of RNA catabolism from brain cells.
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PMID:Specific RNase isoenzymes in the human central nervous system. 344 Dec 68

A CSF Poly(C)-avid ribonuclease (RNase) activity was determined in serum and CSF of 11 controls and 75 neurological patients (34 multiple sclerosis (MS), 18 infectious processes and 23 other neurological diseases (OND]. In controls, the blood-CSF ratio of RNase activity is low. This fact and the absence of correlation between serum and CSF RNase activity (except in OND group), and between CSF albumin and CSF RNase activity in controls and MS patients, suggest an intrathecal origin for the major part of this CSF RNase activity. A formula taking into account any plasmatic enrichment in RNase of the CSF is proposed to evaluate this intrathecal activity. The normal mean value of this intrathecal RNase activity is 27 +/- 3 units/ml (mean +/- SE) in our experimental conditions and using our formula. The highest intrathecal RNase activity is observed in infectious processes and this finding is associated with a significant increase in the local anti-RNA antibody synthesis. An increase in intrathecal RNase activity is rarely found in MS and local anti-RNA synthesis is only observed in one third of MS patients.
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PMID:Intrathecal origin of CSF ribonuclease. Differences between infectious processes of the nervous system and multiple sclerosis. 620 80

The enzymes 2':3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase (CNPase) and RNase were simultaneously measured in the sera and CSF of multiple sclerosis (MS) and non-MS patients. No evidence of increased activity for these enzymes could be found regardless of pathology in either fluid source. Discrepancies between the present results and those from two previous studies that reported significant increases in CNPase activity in the CSF of patients with MS were carefully analyzed. It was concluded that the apparent increased CNPase activity correlated with MS in both previous studies was most probably the result of methodological and computational difficulties.
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PMID:Simultaneous measurement of 2':3' cyclic-nucleotide 3' phosphodiesterase and RNase activities in sera and spinal fluids of multiple sclerosis patients. 631 83

It is known that in the blood of patients with some autoimmune diseases catalytically active antibodies hydrolyzing proteins, DNA, and RNA may be detected. In the present work homogeneous preparations of IgG antibodies (Ab) possessing high affinity for nucleic acids (NA) were obtained for the first time from blood and cerebrospinal fluid of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The fraction of IgG Ab as well as its Fab fragments and isolated light chains of both kappa- and lambda-types were shown to catalyze effectively the hydrolysis of DNA and RNA. It is shown by different methods that the capability for nucleic acid hydrolysis is an intrinsic property of the polyclonal Ab. NA-hydrolyzing Ab were detected in the blood of 69 of 72 and in the cerebrospinal fluid of 5 of 5 examined MS patients, while they were not detected in the blood of any of 50 healthy donors examined. Comparison of relative rates of RNA hydrolysis and of the substrate specificity in hydrolysis of various model RNAs--cCMP, poly(U), poly(A), and poly(C)--revealed pronounced differences of MS antibodies from ribonucleases of human blood, ribonuclease A, and all earlier described abzymes. The abzymes are usually characterized by relatively low specific activities in comparison with that of normal enzymes catalyzing analogous reactions. Ab from the blood of MS patients are the first example of autoabzymes whose specific activity in RNA hydrolysis is comparable or even higher than that of pancreatic ribonuclease A--one of the most active RNA-hydrolyzing enzymes.
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PMID:Polyclonal antibodies from blood and cerebrospinal fluid of patients with multiple sclerosis effectively hydrolyze DNA and RNA. 986 61

Infection of C57BL/6 mice with mouse hepatitis virus strain V5A13.1 (MHV-V5A13.1) results in an acute encephalitis followed by a chronic, progressive demyelinating disease with clinical and histological similarities to the human demyelinating disease Multiple Sclerosis (MS). Studies were undertaken to evaluate the contribution of NOS2 generated NO in demyelination in MHV-infected mice. MHV-infected animals were treated daily with either 8 mg of aminoguanidine (AG), a selective inhibitor of NOS2 activity, or PBS by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection. MHV-infection of mice resulted in 20% mortality in both groups with surviving mice clearing virus below levels of detection, as measured by plaque assay, by day 12 postinfection (p.i.). A significant decrease in the severity of clinical disease was observed in AG-treated animals as compared to mice receiving PBS at days 7 and 12 p.i. (P< or =0.001 and 0.003, respectively) however, by day 21 p.i. AG-treated mice exhibited the same severity of clinical disease as control animals. Examination of brain and spinal cords from infected mice revealed a pronounced reduction in the severity of inflammation at day 7 p.i. in mice treated with AG as compared to control mice. By day 12 p.i. there was a significant decrease (P< or =0.02) in the severity of demyelination in AG-treated mice as compared to control animals yet both PBS and AG treated mice had a similar degree of demyelination by day 21 p.i. Analysis of chemokine mRNA transcripts by RNase protection assay revealed that AG-treated mice had significantly lower levels (P < or = 0.007) of transcripts for the C-C chemokine monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) at day 7 p.i. as compared to control animals. By day 12 p.i., AG-treated mice and control mice had similar levels of chemokine transcripts. Together, these data suggest that inhibition of NOS2/NO slows the progression of MHV-induced demyelination. One potential mechanism by which this may occur is through controlling inflammation through modulation of chemokine expression in the CNS.
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PMID:Inhibition of nitric oxide synthase-2 reduces the severity of mouse hepatitis virus-induced demyelination: implications for NOS2/NO regulation of chemokine expression and inflammation. 1019 Jun 90

Gamma delta T lymphocytes are thought to play a role in the pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis (MS) contributing to demyelinization and fibrosis in the central nervous system. In this study, we show that, in MS patients with active disease, the percentage of circulating V delta 2+ gamma delta T cells coexpressing NKRP1A is significantly increased compared with healthy donors. V delta 2+ and V delta 1+ T cells were sorted from MS patients and healthy volunteers and cloned. At variance with V delta 1+ clones, all V delta 2+ clones expressed NKRP1A, which was strongly up-regulated upon culture with IL-12; this effect was neutralized by specific anti-IL-12 Abs. No up-regulation of NKRP1A by IL-12 was noted on V delta 1+ clones. RNase protection assay showed that IL-12R beta 2 subunit transcript was significantly less represented in V delta 1+ than V delta 2+ clones. This finding may explain the different effect exerted by IL-12 on these clones. In transendothelial migration assays, V delta 2+ NKRP1A+ clones migrated more effectively than V delta 1+ clones, and this migratory potential was enhanced following culture with IL-12. Migration was strongly inhibited by the F(ab')2 of an anti-NKRP1A Ab, suggesting that this lectin is involved in the migration process. We also show that, in freshly isolated PBMC from MS patients, the migrated population was enriched for V delta 2+ NKRP1A+ cells. We conclude that the expression of NKRP1A on V delta 2+ cells is associated with increased ability to migrate across the vascular endothelium and that this phenomenon may be regulated by IL-12 present in the microenvironment.
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PMID:IL-12-mediated NKRP1A up-regulation and consequent enhancement of endothelial transmigration of V delta 2+ TCR gamma delta+ T lymphocytes from healthy donors and multiple sclerosis patients. 1020 68

IgG binding to multiple protein constituents in lysates of Jurkat cells was detected by Western blot in sera of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The distribution patterns of bands with sera tested against protein lysates from normal Jurkat cells or from Jurkat cells exposed to apoptosis or oxidative stress inducing conditions were similar in most patients, but with inter-individual differences. The number of bands with sera of both patient populations far exceeded those (0 or 2 bands) detected with sera of healthy controls. Proteinase K, RNase and DNase pre-treatment of cell lysates suggested a protein nature for all of the antigens and a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) nature for some of the antigens recognized by serum IgG of MS and SLE patients. Only two MS patients had positive anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) titers, while all of them had positive Western blots. In addition to similarities, dissimilarities were also recognized between the humoral immune responses in MS and SLE. No IgG molecules were detected against phosphorylated proteins in the sera of MS patients, while multiple phosphoproteins were recognized by IgG molecules of SLE patients in immunoprecipitation experiments. These data suggest that in addition to ANA, the sera of MS patients contain autoantibodies directed against multiple intracellular proteins. The protein recognition patterns of immunoglobulins in MS share similarities, but also have distinct features when compared to those in SLE. The biological significance of these autoantibodies in MS remains to be understood.
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PMID:Autoreactive IgG to intracellular proteins in sera of MS patients. 1049 79

Macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha is a chemokine that is associated with Th1 cytokine responses. Expression and antibody blocking studies have implicated MIP-1alpha in multiple sclerosis (MS) and in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). We examined the role of MIP-1alpha and its CCR5 receptor in the induction of EAE by immunizing C57BL / 6 mice deficient in either MIP-1alpha or CCR5 with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG). We found that MIP-1alpha-deficient mice were fully susceptible to MOG-induced EAE. These knockout animals were indistinguishable from wild-type mice in Th1 cytokine gene expression, the kinetics and severity of disease, and infiltration of the central nervous system by lymphocytes, macrophages and granulocytes. RNase protection assays showed comparable accumulation of mRNA for the chemokines interferon-inducible protein-10, RANTES, macrophage chemoattractant protein-1, MIP-1beta, MIP-2, lymphotactin and T cell activation gene-3 during the course of the disease. CCR5-deficient mice were also susceptible to disease induction by MOG. The dispensability of MIP-1alpha and CCR5 for MOG-induced EAE in C57BL / 6 mice supports the idea that differential chemokine expression patterns represent differences in disease mechanism that underlie various models of EAE, and possibly distinct patterns of pathology seen in MS.
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PMID:Induction of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in C57BL/6 mice deficient in either the chemokine macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha or its CCR5 receptor. 1082 Mar 88


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