Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have identified and partially purified a novel cytolytic factor isolated from enriched plasma membranes prepared from highly purified lymphokine-activated killer cells (adherent-LAK. A-LAK cells) and a large granular lymphocytic NK cell leukemia, CRNK-16. The enriched plasma membranes were shown to be physically devoid of lytic granules and contained no detectable pore-forming protein (PFP, perforin) activity. The plasma membrane-associated cytolytic factor (designated M-CTX) was solubilized in biologically active form and was highly lytic to a large panel of target cells in 2- to 4-hr 51Cr release assays. Characteristics of the M-CTX include: (1) it is plasma membrane- not granule-associated: (2) it is not hemolytic and functions in the absence of Ca2+: (3) nucleated target cells are lysed in 2 to 4 hr at 37 degrees C but not at 4 degrees C: (4) it induces apoptotic cell death with nuclear DNA fragmentation and massive membrane blebbing: (5) it is isolated from the plasma membranes of cultured A-LAK cells, a lytically active LGL leukemia (CRNK-16), and fresh spleen cells but not from thymocytes or L929 fibroblasts: and (6) the lytic activity of the partially purified toxin is inactivated by trypsin, serum, and heat, but is not blocked by antibodies that inactivate TNF-alpha, LT or IFN-gamma. Taken collectively, these data suggest that M-CTX may represent a heretofore undescribed membrane-associated toxin possibly involved in contact-mediated cell killing.
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PMID:Identification and partial characterization of a novel plasma membrane-associated lytic factor isolated from highly purified adherent lymphokine-activated killer cells. 155 54

When screening skin cryosections with a panel of monoclonal antibodies (MoAb), we found that the anti-CD69 MoAb Leu-23 reacted with a subpopulation of epidermal dendritic cells, presumably Langerhans cells (LC). The staining intensity was enhanced by gentle trypsin pretreatment of the sections. Flow cytometric analysis of LC-enriched epidermal cells (EC) revealed that nearly all CD1a-bearing LC display anti-CD69 reactivity when tested briefly after termination of the enrichment procedure. Immunoprecipitation experiments showed that isolated LC specifically express a disulphide-linked dimer composed of 26/30kDa subunits that therefore slightly differs from the 28/32kDa CD69 complex described on activated T or natural killer (NK) cells. This difference is probably due to a different post-translational glycosylation pattern as evidenced by Endoglycosidase-F treatment of the immunoprecipitate disclosing the 24-kDa core protein of CD69. When freshly isolated LC-enriched EC were kept in culture, anti-CD69 reactivity gradually decreased but the addition of IFN-gamma to the culture medium sustained the CD69 expression on LC in vitro. These results strongly suggest that resident but not LC recovered from EC cultures bear CD69 moieties. It remains to be seen whether the expression of this antigen can be linked to (a) particular functional property (ies) of intraepidermal LC.
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PMID:CD69, an early activation antigen on lymphocytes, is constitutively expressed by human epidermal Langerhans cells. 156 26

Cultured murine bone marrow-derived macrophage (BMM phi) can be induced to secrete tumoricidal activity in vitro when activated with recombinant IFN-gamma and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). We have analyzed this activity for tumor specificity, relationship to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), serine proteases, and reactive nitrogen intermediates, and partially purified this activity by high pressure liquid chromatography. Cytolytic activity was recovered in conditioned culture supernatants of serum-free cultivated BMM phi treated with a combination of IFN-gamma and LPS but was not inducible by either stimulant alone. It selectively affected tumor cells of murine as well as human origin irrespective of sensitivity towards recombinant murine TNF-alpha (r-muTNF-alpha), but did not significantly affect non-tumorigenic cells of either species. It was inactivated by 56 degrees C, trypsin, and neuraminidase treatment, but could not be inhibited by neutralizing antibodies against r-muTNF-alpha or serine protease inhibitors. Tumoricidal activity was purified approximately 10-fold by gel filtration and eluted as a major peak with a Mr of 170 kDa, containing a single predominant protein band of approximately 170 kDa on SDS-PAGE analysis, which is shown to be a disulfide linked glycoprotein heterodimer of 110 and 58 kDa subunits (gp170). Expression of this glycoprotein was strongly dependent on activation of BMM phi by a combination of IFN-gamma and LPS but was only marginally induced by either stimulant alone. Furthermore, the level of gp170 expression was quantitatively correlated with the tumoricidal activity of BMM phi culture supernatants, whereas no such correlation was found with respect to the amount of secreted TNF-alpha or reactive nitrogen intermediates. These data demonstrate that activated murine BMM phi secrete a tumoricidal activity, which is not related to TNF-alpha, serine proteases, or reactive nitrogen intermediates, but is closely associated with a 170 kDa glycoprotein composed of two subunits with Mr's of 110 and 58 kDa.
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PMID:Characterization and partial purification of a high molecular weight tumoricidal activity secreted by murine bone marrow macrophages. 162 98

The expression of collagenolytic activity by cells represents the rate-limiting step in the turnover of collagen during remodeling. The collagenase gene is transcriptionally activated in normal dermal or rheumatoid synovial fibroblasts by interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), resulting in secretion of trypsin-activatable procollagenase measuring in the range of 2.0-5.0 units/10(6) cells/48 h in the 14C-fibril assay. The addition of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma; 50-100 units/ml) inhibits the expression of collagenase activity by 45-80% in these cells. The IL-1 beta induction of procollagenase protein was not altered by IFN-gamma, as judged by Western blot analysis using a monoclonal antibody to collagenase and by gelatin zymography, and procollagenase mRNA was also unaltered, as assessed by Northern blot analysis. Because collagenolytic activity is also controlled by the quantity of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases present, its expression was examined by Western blot analysis using a polyclonal antibody to tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases and by reverse gelatin zymography. Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase protein was found to be unaltered or slightly less abundant in conditioned media from cultures treated with IL-1 beta and IFN-gamma when compared with that from cultures treated with IL-1 beta alone. However, the expression of the metalloproteinase activator of procollagenase, stromelysin, was found to be significantly inhibited by the addition of IFN-gamma. Addition of purified activated stromelysin to these conditioned media completely reconstituted collagenolytic activity. These observations demonstrate in an intact system that stromelysin is a specific activator necessary for the development of collagenolytic activity. Despite stromelysin's lack of catalytic activity against collagen, its expression can serve as a control point in the regulation of collagenolysis.
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PMID:Stromelysin expression regulates collagenase activation in human fibroblasts. Dissociable control of two metalloproteinases by interferon-gamma. 166 Apr 74

Trypanosoma cruzi, which causes Chagas' disease, has been shown to cause polyclonal proliferation of lymphocytes after infection in vivo. This paper demonstrates that coculture of human PBMC with T. cruzi CL strain leads to proliferation of lymphocytes, which peaks on days 5 to 7 after infection. Approximately 15% of lymphocytes in culture undergo blast transformation. The proliferation of lymphoblasts can be measured by [3H]TdR incorporation, because the parasites incorporate little TdR. Parasites derived from autologous PBMC cultures or xenogeneic rat fibroblasts stimulate lymphocyte transformation similarly. By immunofluorescent cytometry, lymphoblasts from these cultures are 23 to 46% B cells (CD19+) and 39 to 64% T cells (CD3+), and approximately half of the T cells are CD4+ and half CD8+. A high percentage of lymphoblasts express MHC class II and IL-2R p55, suggesting both B and T lymphoblasts express these molecules. Anti-MHC class II and anti-IL-2R p55 mAb significantly inhibit the proliferative response of PBMC to T. cruzi. The mRNA for cytokines IL-1 beta, IL-2, IL-5, IL-6, IFN-gamma, and TNF-alpha are detected after T. cruzi coculture with PBMC, peaking on day 3. No IL-4 or IL-10 mRNA are detected. Large quantities of bioactive IL-1 and IL-6 are found in the supernatants of these PBMC. Monocytes, infected in the apparent absence of lymphocytes, assume activated morphology and accumulate mRNA for IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, and IL-6. T cells require accessory cells to proliferate and produce cytokine mRNA. A trypsin-sensitive activity in lysates of T. cruzi stimulates lymphocyte proliferation. The data presented demonstrate that T. cruzi coculture with PBMC leads to lymphocyte proliferation, monocyte activation, and cytokine production.
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PMID:Coculture of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells with Trypanosoma cruzi leads to proliferation of lymphocytes and cytokine production. 172 69

A cytotoxicity assay for sensitive measurement of cell-mediated lympholysis (CML) of human cultured keratinocytes (cK) is described. The usage of 51Cr-labeled keratinocytes in intact layers as target cells in this assay allows objective and accurate determination of lysis of keratinocytes which have not undergone trypsin- and suspension-induced membrane changes. Furthermore, the problem of high spontaneous 51Cr release values encountered with suspended keratinocytes is overcome. The assay was applied to study antigen-specific CML of cK by cloned cytotoxic T cells (CTL) and to determine the effect of IFN-gamma on the susceptibility of cK to lysis. The results showed that HLA-A2 specific CTLs could reproducibly lyse cK of HLA-A2 positive healthy skin donors both with and without incubation of cK with IFN-gamma. Applications of this keratinocyte cytotoxicity assay lie in determining the antigenic expression of human cK, in analysis of effector cell/keratinocyte interactions in CML and of the modulatory effects of cytokines on these mechanisms. The assay thus may provide a helpful tool in gaining insight into the role of CML of keratinocytes in the destruction of inflamed skin.
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PMID:A new sensitive assay for measurement of cell-mediated cytotoxicity to intact layers of cultured human keratinocytes. 210 19

Recombinant human interferon-gamma (rHuIFN-gamma) was associated with liposomes in an attempt to improve its therapeutic efficiency. It was associated with liposomes composed of phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) at a ratio of 3:7, and of PS:PC and cholesterol (CHOL) at a ratio of 1:4:5 with efficiencies of 13% and 21%, respectively. The lipid composition influenced the antiviral activity of the liposome-complexed IFN-gamma tested against vesicular stomatitis virus. IFN associated with PS:PC liposomes was fully bioavailable and degraded by trypsin treatment. In contrast, PS:PC:CHOL-IFN was resistant to trypsin, and appeared latent as its full biological activity was seen only after disruption of the liposomes with detergent. Four human tumor cell lines were exposed to free and liposome-associated IFN-gamma. The growth of three solid tumor lines (colon, bladder, and lung) was inhibited by similar concentrations of free IFN and PS:PC-IFN. In contrast, less PS:PC-IFN than free IFN was needed to inhibit histiocytic lymphoma cells. Higher concentrations of PS:PC:CHOL-IFN than of free IFN were needed to inhibit growth of all four cell lines. The specificity of these effects of liposome-associated IFN-gamma were shown by their partial or complete neutralization by antibody to IFN-gamma. When liposome-IFN complexes of either type were stored at 4 degrees C, 30% of the IFN activity remained after 7 days; thereafter, decay was minimal over the next 3 weeks. These data show the formation of stable HuIFN-gamma-liposomes and indicate that the lipid components of these complexes influence their antiviral and antiproliferative activity for several different cell types.
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PMID:Antiviral and antiproliferative properties of liposome-associated human interferon-gamma. 211 53

Adhesion of lymphocytes to high endothelial venule (HEV) cells is the first step in the migration of these cells from blood into lymph nodes and Peyer's patches (PP). In the present study, we isolated and cultured HEV cells from PP of the rat and assessed their capacity to interact with lymphocytes. Flow cytometric analysis with a rat HEV-specific mAb KJ-4 revealed that greater than 90% of the cultured cells were stained by the antibody. Furthermore, confluent monolayers of PP HEV cells retained the capacity to support the adhesion of lymphocytes from spleen, thoracic duct, and lymph nodes but not binding of immature cells from thymus and bone marrow, which are deficient in cells capable of binding to HEV in vivo. In addition, intraepithelial lymphocytes that preferentially migrated into mucosal lymphoid tissues were also enriched in cells that adhered to the endothelial monolayers. The binding process required energy, was calcium-dependent, and could be inhibited by cytochalasin D, trypsin, and mixed glycosidase. Interestingly, pretreatment of PP HEV cells with rTNF, IFN-gamma, or granulocyte-macrophage CSF significantly increased the endothelial adhesiveness for thoracic duct lymphocytes in a time- and dose-dependent manner. In contrast, stimulation of lymphocytes with phorbol ester or TNF resulted in the rapid modulation of the surface expression of the PP homing receptor and decrease in lymphocyte binding to normal or TNF-stimulated HEV cells. The adhesion of lymphocytes to normal or cytokine-stimulated HEV cells can be blocked by pretreatment of lymphocytes, but not HEV cells, with the PP homing receptor-specific 1B.2.6 antibody. Taken together, these experiments provide strong evidence that the interaction between lymphocytes and cultured HEV cells are mediated by adhesive mechanisms that regulate lymphocyte entry into PP in vivo and that cytokines can promote HEV adhesiveness for lymphocytes through increased expression of organ-specific ligands on HEV cells.
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PMID:Lymphocyte adhesion to cultured Peyer's patch high endothelial venule cells is mediated by organ-specific homing receptors and can be regulated by cytokines. 212 24

The ability of resting and activated rat bone marrow-derived mononuclear phagocytes (BMM phi) to bind monomeric rat, mouse, and human IgG was determined by means of flow cytometry. Rat IgG2b bound with high affinity (Kd approximately equal to 3 x 10(-9) M); binding was optimal at 4 degrees C and was only little affected by trypsin treatment. The other IgG bound with only low affinity (rat IgG2a, mouse and human IgG) or not at all to rat BMM phi (rat IgG1, rat IgG2c). The binding of rat IgG2b was not affected by the presence of a surplus of low-affinity binding IgG, and vice versa, indicating that high- and low-affinity IgG bind to different sites. Binding of high- and low-affinity IgG as well as expression of MHC class II molecules and of tumoricidal activity by BMM phi was markedly enhanced by rat interferon-gamma in low concentration (0.1 to 1.0 IU IFN-gamma/ml). On the other hand, heat-killed Corynebacterium parvum organisms, that were equally potent in triggering tumoricidal activity, neither enhanced the binding of IgG nor the expression of MHC class II molecules by BMM phi, suggesting that these abilities are not necessarily closely related phenomena.
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PMID:Binding of monomeric immunoglobulins by bone marrow-derived mononuclear phagocytes; its modulation by interferon-gamma. 214 76

Products prepared from broth extracts of beta-hemolytic Group A streptococci activate human natural killer (NK) cells. The active moiety is likely a protein since the enhancing capability is destroyed by the proteolytic enzyme pronase, although not by trypsin. The enhancement in NK cytotoxicity is due at least in part to lymphokines, since normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells and T cells, upon incubation with streptococcal products (SP), release supernatant factors which augment NK activity. These cell culture supernatants contain interferons (IFN) as well as low levels of interleukin-2 (IL-2). Treatment of supernatants with anti-IFN antibodies has variable effects, depending on the donor cells used to produce the factors. In most cases, anti-IFN-gamma totally abrogates enhancement. Treatment of supernatants with antibodies to IFN-alpha modestly decreases enhancement of most donor cells; however, IFN-alpha appears not to be a major factor in SP-activated lymphokines. Pretreating effector cells with a monoclonal antibody directed against the IL-2 receptor (anti-Tac) usually reduces the supernatant effect. The combination of anti-Tac and anti-IFN-gamma totally nullifies enhancement. Thus T lymphocytes stimulated with streptococcal products augment NK activity at least in part by producing IFN-gamma and a factor whose activity is reduced by the interaction of the IL-2 receptor with anti-Tac.
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PMID:The mechanism of enhancement of natural killer cell activity by soluble streptococcal products. 242 53


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