Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.17 (lysozyme)
21,489 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The expression of c-ets2 is rapidly induced in a variety of myelomonocytic cell lines as they differentiate into macrophages. We find that constitutive expression of c-ets2 in the M1D+ myeloblast leukemic cell line (M1ets2) is sufficient to push these cells to a more differentiated state. The expression of several differentiation-specific genes is upregulated in M1ets2 cells, including those encoding macrophage-specific lysozyme M and tumor necrosis factor alpha, which are involved in bacteriolytic and inflammatory processes, respectively. Transcription factors c-jun and junB, previously shown to induce partial macrophage differentiation when overexpressed in myelomonocytic leukemia cell lines, are also upregulated in M1ets2 cells. The upregulation of junB is the result of a direct interaction of Ets2 with ets binding sites of the junB promoter, since transient or constitutive Ets2 expression in M1D+ cells activates junB transcription via ets binding sites. In addition, transfection of a dominant negative mutant of Ets2, devoid of its transcriptional activation domain, greatly reduces transcriptional activities of the junB promoter in M1ets2 cells. Finally, unlike their parental M1D+ counterparts, M1ets2 cells secrete the macrophage colony-stimulating factor, CSF-1, and are able to phagocytize. Taken together, these results show that when the immature myeloid M1D+ cell line constitutively expresses c-ets2, these cells acquire different functions of mature macrophages.
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PMID:Constitutive c-ets2 expression in M1D+ myeloblast leukemic cells induces their differentiation to macrophages. 894 40

We previously have shown that the zinc finger transcription factor Egr-1 blocked granulocytic differentiation of HL-60 cells, restricting differentiation along the monocytic lineage. Egr-1 also was observed to block granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-induced differentiation of interleukin-3 (IL-3)-dependent 32Dcl3 hematopoietic precursor cells, endowing the cells with the ability to be induced by granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) for terminal differentiation along the macrophage lineage. To better understand the function of Egr-1 as a positive modulator of monocytic differentiation, in this work we have studied the effect of ectopic expression of Egr-1 on the murine myeloblastic leukemic cell line M1, which is induced for differentiation by the physiological inducer IL-6. It is shown that, unlike in HL-60 and 32Dcl3 cells, ectopic expression of Egr-1 in M1 cells resulted in activation of the macrophage differentiation program in the absence of differentiation inducer. This included the appearance of morphologically differentiated cells, decreased growth rate in mass culture, and cloning efficiency in soft agar, and expression of endogenous c-myb and c-myc mRNAs was markedly downregulated. Untreated M1Egr-1 cells also exhibited cell adherence, expression of Fc and C3 receptors, and upregulation of the myeloid differentiation primary response genes c-Jun, junD, and junB and the late genetic markers ferritin light-chain and lysozyme. Ectopic expression of Egr-1 in M1 cells also dramatically increased the sensitivity of the cells for IL-6-induced differentiation, allowed a higher proportion of M1 cells to become terminally differentiated under conditions of optimal stimulation for differentiation, and decreased M1 leukemogenicity in vivo. These findings demonstrate that the functions of Egr-1 as a positive modulator of macrophage differentiation vary, depending on the state of lineage commitment for differentiation of the hematopoietic cell type.
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PMID:The zinc finger transcription factor Egr-1 activates macrophage differentiation in M1 myeloblastic leukemia cells. 973 Oct 53

We report an inducible system of self Ag expression that examines the relationship between serum protein levels and central T cell tolerance. This transgenic approach is based on tetracycline-regulated expression of a secreted form of hen egg lysozyme, tagged with a murine hemoglobin (Hb) epitope. In the absence of the tetracycline-regulated transactivator, serum levels of the chimeric protein are extremely low (< or = 0.1 ng/ml) and the mice show partial tolerance to both Hb(64-76) and lysozyme epitopes. In the presence of the transactivator, expression increases to 1.5 ng/ml and the mice are completely tolerant. Partial tolerance was further investigated by crossing these mice to strains expressing transgenic TCRs. At the lowest Ag levels, 3.L2tg T cells (specific for Hb(64-76)/I-E(k)) escape the thymus and approximately 10% of CD4(+) splenocytes express the 3.L2 TCR. In contrast, 3A9 T cells (specific for hen egg lysozyme(46-61)/I-A(k)) are completely eliminated by negative selection. These data define a tolerogenic threshold for negative selection of Ag-specific T cells by circulating self proteins that are 100-fold more sensitive than previously demonstrated. They suggest that partial tolerance at extremely low levels of self Ag exposure is the result of a restricted repertoire of responding T cells, rather than a simple reduction in precursor frequency; tolerogenic thresholds are T cell specific.
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PMID:A threshold for central T cell tolerance to an inducible serum protein. 1262 54