Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.37 (neutrophil elastase)
4,078 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

G-CSF (granulocyte-colony stimulating factor) is one of the cytokines which increase and activate neutrophils. These effects have been confirmed by a lot of clinical studies. Although only few side effects have been reported so far, we saw a patient with hypertension, facial edema, and severe headache after G-CSF administration. We have measured the sticking strength of leukocytes to the walls of narrow pores in modified Nuclepore filtration method of Kikuchi, in various clinical situations, and we have denoted the pore filtration time as the rheological activity of leukocytes (RAL). In this study, we tried to measure RALs of patients after G-CSF administration (60-100 micrograms) and to compare them with those of non-treated normal individuals. We also checked serum levels of granulocyte elastase in the patients. In the static state (in which neutrophils were not stimulated), RALs of the patients were 8.0 +/- 1.5sec. [N = 8], and those of the controls were 3.8 +/- 1.6sec. [N = 21] (p < 0.001). In the activated state (in which neutrophils were stimulated by formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine), PALs of patients were quite high, i.e. those of the patients and controls were 592 +/- 322sec. and 69 +/- 62sec., respectively (p < 0.001). In all cases given G-CSF, the serum levels of granulocyte elastase were above the normal range. In view of our results, we it is possible that highly activated leukocytes would injure tissue and then induce organ failure and several symptoms, as in this study.
...
PMID:[Leukocyte activity and occurrence of tissue injury by G-CSF]. 768 59

The genes encoding Hoxa9 and Meis1 are transcriptionally coactivated in a subset of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) in mice. In marrow reconstitution experiments, coexpression of both genes produces rapid AML, while neither gene alone generates overt leukemia. Although Hoxa9 and Meis1 can bind DNA as heterodimers, both can also heterodimerize with Pbx proteins. Thus, while their coactivation may result from the necessity to bind promoters as heterodimers, it may also result from the necessity of altering independent biochemical pathways that cooperate to generate AML, either as monomers or as heterodimers with Pbx proteins. Here we demonstrate that constitutive expression of Hoxa9 in primary murine marrow immortalizes a late myelomonocytic progenitor, preventing it from executing terminal differentiation to granulocytes or monocytes in the presence of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or interleukin-3. This immortalized phenotype is achieved in the absence of endogenous or exogenous Meis gene expression. The Hoxa9-immortalized progenitor exhibited a promyelocytic transcriptional profile, expressing PU.1, AML1, c-Myb, C/EBP alpha, and C/EBP epsilon as well as their target genes, the receptors for GM-CSF, G-CSF, and M-CSF and the primary granule proteins myeloperoxidase and neutrophil elastase. G-CSF obviated the differentiation block of Hoxa9, inducing neutrophilic differentiation with accompanying expression of neutrophil gelatinase B and upregulation of gp91phox. M-CSF also obviated the differentiation block, inducing monocytic differentiation with accompanying expression of the macrophage acetyl-low-density lipoprotein scavenger receptor and F4/80 antigen. Versions of Hoxa9 lacking the ANWL Pbx interaction motif (PIM) also immortalized a promyelocytic progenitor with intrinsic biphenotypic differentiation potential. Therefore, Hoxa9 evokes a cytokine-selective block in differentiation by a mechanism that does not require Meis gene expression or interaction with Pbx through the PIM.
...
PMID:Hoxa9 immortalizes a granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor-dependent promyelocyte capable of biphenotypic differentiation to neutrophils or macrophages, independent of enforced meis expression. 1075 11

Leukemia is observed with increased frequency in patients with severe congenital neutropenia (SCN). In the past decade, recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rh G-CSF) has prolonged the survival of patients with SCN increasingly reported to have leukemias. In this communication acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) associated with a mutation of the G-CSF receptor (G-CSF-R) developed in a patient with SCN maintained on long-term G-CSF therapy. The blast count in the blood and bone marrow fell to undetectable levels twice on withholding G-CSF and without chemotherapy administration, but the mutant G-CSF-R was detectable during this period. The patient subsequently underwent successful allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. After transplantation, the patient's neutrophil elastase (ELA-2) mutation and G-CSF-R mutation became undetectable by polymerase chain reaction. This report provides novel insights on leukemia developing in congenital neutropenia.
...
PMID:Spontaneous remission of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-associated leukemia in a child with severe congenital neutropenia. 1107 67

The pathophysiological significance of seminal cytokines in sperm function is still controversial. We determined the repertoire of cytokines in seminal plasma obtained from men with or without abnormalities in semen and assessed the pathophysiological significance of seminal cytokines. After conventional analysis of semen samples obtained from 86 men, levels of seminal cytokines (interleukin [IL]-1alpha, IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-8, tumor necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-alpha], interferon-gamma, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor [G-CSF], macrophage CFS [M-CSF]) and granulocyte elastase were measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Leukocytospermia was defined as seminal plasma, which has > or =1000 ng/ml granulocyte elastase. Leukocytospermia was found in nine of 62 of the subjects in the normozoospermic group but in none of the 24 subjects showing abnormal sperm parameters (azoospermia, n=5; oligozoospermia, n=4; asthenozoospermia, n=15). The IL-8 level in the leukocytospermic group was significantly higher than those in the normal and oligozoospermic groups. IL-1alpha and TNF-alpha levels in the leukocytospermic group were significantly higher than those in the normal and asthenozoospermic groups. Although the G-CSF level in the leukocytospermic group was significantly higher than that in the normal group, high levels of M-CSF were detected in all groups. The IL-8 level was strongly correlated with IL-1alpha (r=0.935, P<0.0001) and G-CSF (r=0.916, P<0.0001) levels. Cytokines detected in seminal plasma are associated with the pathogenesis of leukocytospermia but not with the pathogenesis of asthenozoospermia and oligozoospermia.
...
PMID:A repertoire of cytokines in human seminal plasma. 1183 94

We examined the expression of granule constituent genes in myeloid progenitor cells during proliferation and differentiation in patients with severe congenital neutropenia (SCN). The heterozygous mutation of the neutrophil elastase gene was identified in two of four patients. The CD34+/granulocyte-colony stimulating factor receptor (G-CSFR)+ cells of SCN patients showed defective responsiveness to G-CSF in serum-deprived culture. The CD34+/G-CSFR+ cells expressed low levels of the granule constituent mRNAs. The transcription levels of primary granule enzyme genes in CD34+/G-CSFR+ cells were gradually enhanced and then decreased when cells were induced toward myeloid lineage with G-CSF in normal subjects. However, the primary up-regulation and the following down-regulation of these enzyme transcriptions were not clearly observed in SCN patients. No differences in expressions of the lactoferrin gene were seen between normal subjects and patients with SCN. We hypothesize that the abnormal regulation of the transcription in primary granule constituents might involve the defective proliferation and differentiation of myeloid cells in patients with SCN.
...
PMID:Dysregulation of transcriptions in primary granule constituents during myeloid proliferation and differentiation in patients with severe congenital neutropenia. 1255 99

The term congenital neutropenia (CN) has been used for a group of hematologic disorders characterized by severe neutropenia with absolute neutrophil counts (ANC) below 0.5 x 10(9)/L associated with increased susceptibility to bacterial infections. This group of diseases includes primary bone marrow failure syndromes with isolated neutropenias and neutropenias associated with metabolic or immunologic disorders or with a complex syndrome. To avoid confusion, we prefer using the term CN only for the most severe disorder among this group: severe neutropenia characterized by an early stage maturation arrest of myelopoiesis leading to bacterial infections from early infancy. This disease has originally been described as Kostmann syndrome with an autosomal recessive inheritance. Recent pathogenetic investigations have demonstrated that this clinical phenotype includes also autosomal dominant and sporadic cases with different point mutations in the neutrophil elastase gene in a subgroup of patients. Data on over 400 patients with CN collected by the Severe Chronic Neutropenia International Registry demonstrate that independent from the CN-subtype more than 90% of these patients respond to recombinant human granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (rHuG-CSF filgrastim, lenograstim) with ANC that can be maintained around 1.0 x 10(9)/L. Adverse events include mild splenomegaly, moderate thrombocytopenia, osteoporosis and malignant transformation into myelodysplastic syndrome/leukemia. Development of additional genetic aberrations, e.g., G-CSF-receptor gene mutations, monosomy 7 or ras mutations during the course of the disease indicate an underlying genetic instability leading to an increased risk of malignant transformation. If and how G-CSF treatment impacts on these adverse events remains unclear since there are no historical controls for comparison. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is still the only available treatment for patients refractory to G-CSF treatment.
...
PMID:Congenital neutropenias. 1469 35

The treatment of children affected by severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) with G-CSF strongly reduces the risk of sepsis by reversing neutropenia. However, SCN patients who respond to the treatment with the growth factor still have an elevated risk of succumbing to sepsis. Because the disease is usually caused by heterozygous mutations of ELA2, a gene encoding for neutrophil elastase (NE), we have investigated in G-CSF-responder and nonresponder patients affected by SCN the expression of polypeptides that constitute the antimicrobial machinery of these cells. In peripheral blood-derived neutrophils of patients with heterozygous mutations of ELA2 who were treated with G-CSF, NE was nearly absent as detected by immunofluorescence and immunoblotting, suggesting that production of the mutant protein interferes with normal gene expression. This defect was associated with abnormal expression of other granule-associated proteins such as myeloperoxidase, lactoferrin, cathepsin G, and human-neutrophil-peptide. Moreover, in one patient with partial response to G-CSF, we observed an impairment of neutrophil antimicrobial activity against Candida albicans, and, to a lower extent against Escherichia coli. Thereby, we propose that the treatment with G-CSF is not sufficient to correct all of the functional deficiency of neutrophils, and this might account for the consistent risk of infections observed in SCN patients.
...
PMID:G-CSF treatment of severe congenital neutropenia reverses neutropenia but does not correct the underlying functional deficiency of the neutrophil in defending against microorganisms. 1788 43

The differentiation of macrophages from their progenitors is controlled by macrophage colony-stimulating factor (CSF-1), which binds to a receptor (CSF-1R) encoded by the c-fms proto-oncogene. We have previously used the promoter region of the CSF-1R gene to direct expression of an enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) reporter gene to resident macrophage populations in transgenic mice. In this paper, we show that the EGFP reporter is also expressed in all granulocytes detected with the Gr-1 antibody, which binds to Ly-6C and Ly-6G or with a Ly-6G-specific antibody. Transgene expression reflects the presence of CSF-1R mRNA but not CSF-1R protein. The same pattern is observed with the macrophage-specific F4/80 marker. Based on these findings, we performed a comparative array profiling of highly purified granulocytes and macrophages. The patterns of mRNA expression differed predominantly through granulocyte-specific expression of a small subset of transcription factors (Egr1, HoxB7, STAT3), known abundant granulocyte proteins (e.g., S100A8, S100A9, neutrophil elastase), and specific receptors (fMLP, G-CSF). These findings suggested that appropriate stimuli might mediate rapid interconversion of the major myeloid cell types, for example, in inflammation. In keeping with this hypothesis, we showed that purified Ly-6G-positive granulocytes express CSF-1R after overnight culture and can subsequently differentiate to form F4/80-positive macrophages in response to CSF-1.
...
PMID:Mouse neutrophilic granulocytes express mRNA encoding the macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor (CSF-1R) as well as many other macrophage-specific transcripts and can transdifferentiate into macrophages in vitro in response to CSF-1. 1743 63

Congenital neutropenia are extremely rare diseases, defined by a permanent or cyclic decrease of blood neutrophils. Molecular basis of several congenital neutropenia has been recently determined, involving gene coding for the neutrophil elastase gene (ELA2), GFI1, WAS protein and mitochondrial HAX1 protein. These mutations, dominant (ELA2, GFI1), X-linked (WAS) and autosomal recessive (HAX1), result in instability of the contents of the granules- particularly the neutrophil elastase- or in abnormalities of the cytoskeleton, and possibly, in an increased apoptosis. ELA2 mutations resulting both in profound and permanent neutropenia, and in cyclic--pseudo sinusoidal--neutropenia lead to consider that time pattern is very close in the two apparently distinct phenotypes. This observation suggests that temporal variations of neutrophils could be represented by non linear functions. Congenital neutropenia, specifically ELA2 mutated, are also characterized by a high rate of leukemia (about 15% at 20 years of age). Leukemia risk does not appear to be related to an oncogenic effect of ELA2 mutations, but much likely to the deepness of the neutropenia, and the intensity of G-CSF therapy.
...
PMID:[Granulopoeisis and leukemogenesis: lessons from congenital neutropenia]. 1833 77

Most severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) cases possess constitutive neutrophil elastase mutations; a smaller cohort has acquired mutations truncating the granulocyte colony-stimulating factor receptor (G-CSF-R). We have described a case with constitutive extracellular G-CSF-R mutation hyporesponsive to ligand. Here we report two independent acquired G-CSF-R truncation mutations and a novel constitutive neutrophil elastase mutation in this patient. Co-expression of a truncated receptor chain restored STAT5 signalling responses of the extracellular G-CSF-R mutant, while constitutively-active STAT5 enhanced its proliferative capacity. These data add to our knowledge of SCN and further highlight the importance of STAT5 in mediating proliferative responses to G-CSF.
...
PMID:Functional interaction between mutations in the granulocyte colony-stimulating factor receptor in severe congenital neutropenia. 1851 86


1 2 Next >>