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Target Concepts:
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Enzyme
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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)
Protein kinase C activating phorbol esters downregulated membrane CD4 by endocytosis in U-937 and human T-cells. Half-time for internalization (approximately 15 min at 50 ng/ml
PMA
) was determined by FACS. CD4-bound 125I-labeled anti-CD4 mAb was rapidly degraded in
PMA
-activated cells, whereas degradation was low in resting cells. Endocytosis and/or degradation of anti-CD4 mAb was suppressed by H7, and by inhibitors of membrane traffic (Monensin) and lysosome function (methylamine, chloroquine). Immunocytochemistry localized CD4 to the surface of unstimulated T-cells. Upon
PMA
stimulation occasional labeling was seen in endosomes but whole cell CD4 decreased dramatically. However, methylamine-treated
PMA
blasts showed accumulation of CD4 in lysosomes and accordingly, pulse-chase experiments in biolabeled cell cultures suggested a manifest reduction of CD4 half-life in response to
PMA
. Despite their low surface CD4 density,
PMA
blasts exhibited uptake and accelerated degradation of anti-CD4 mAb. Also, inhibitors of protein synthesis enhanced the
PMA
-induced downregulation, and membrane CD4 reappeared on fully activated as well as unstimulated cells treated with
trypsin
. Ongoing CD4 synthesis in activated cells was further evidenced by metabolic labeling and Northern blot analysis demonstrating unaltered or slightly increased CD4 protein and mRNA levels resulting from
PMA
. Our findings demonstrate that phorbol esters downregulate the cellular CD4 pool by endocytosis and subsequent lysosomal degradation of membrane CD4. Transport of CD4 to the cell surface and CD4 synthesis is unaffected by activation.
...
PMID:Internalization, lysosomal degradation and new synthesis of surface membrane CD4 in phorbol ester-activated T-lymphocytes and U-937 cells. 161 21
A GALT-derived B lymphoma, T560, that bears IgAR is described. T560 is IgG2a kappa +, Ia+, B220+, J11d+, Thy-1-, CD3-, CD4-, CD5-, Mac 1-, Mac 2-, nonspecific esterase negative and binds bromelain-treated mouse RBC but not SRBC or ORBC. It presents antigen, secretes IL-1, IL-4 and IL-6 but not IL-2, IL-5 or TGF beta and appears to be related to the Lyt 1+(CD5) lineage of B cells though it lacks Lyt 1. T560 bears IgAR that, on the cell surface, are completely cross-inhibited by low concentrations of IgM and by high concentrations of IgG2a and IgG2b. They do not appear to represent a cell-surface form of galactosyl transferase. They are inducible by high concentrations of IgA, sensitive to
trypsin
and insensitive to neuraminidase. They are down-regulated by activation of PKC with
PMA
, but their recovery is not inhibited by cycloheximide, indicating that they are not degraded or shed. They may either lose their affinity for IgA or be internalized without degradation. Seventy percent of IgA receptor activity is lost when T560 is treated with PI-PLC; part of this loss of activity is due to activation of PKC and is inhibited by staurosporine, but approximately 30% of it is not protected by staurosporine indicating that some, or all, of the IgA receptor of T560 is connected to the cell membrane via a GPI linker. The T560 IgA receptor could be related to the poly-Ig or M cell receptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sensitivity of receptors for IgA on T560, a murine B lymphoma, to phorbol myristate acetate and to phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C. 165 5
Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) inhibits the tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and urokinase activation of plasminogen to plasmin, a protease of
trypsin
-like specificity which is involved in a number of processes, including fibrinolysis, matrix degradation and angiogenesis. Both phorbol esters and cAMP elevating compounds have been shown to modulate PAI-1 and tPA expression in endothelial cell culture. HBGF-1 (previously designated endothelial cell growth factor) stimulates endothelial cell growth in vitro and is angiogenic in vivo. We have reported that removal of HBGF-1 from human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) media results in an approximately 5-fold increase in PAI-1 mRNA levels and in PAI-1 protein secreted into the media by 20 h. Here we report the effects of HBGF-1 on the phorbol ester and cAMP modulation of HUVEC PAI-1 expression. The phorbol ester
PMA
induced an approximate 5-fold increase in PAI-1 mRNA levels at 4 h, which returned to base line by 20 h, with or without HBGF-1 present in the media. This increase in PAI-1 mRNA levels was mediated by an increase in PAI-1 gene transcription and was abated in the presence of cycloheximide. Treatment of cells with the adenylate cyclase activator forskolin or the phosphodiesterase inhibitor HL 725, in the presence of HBGF-1 or immediately after its withdrawal, decreased PAI-1 mRNA levels and protein secreted into the conditioned media by 20 h. However, forskolin or HL 725 addition had little or no effect on PAI-1 mRNA when added 20 h after HBGF-1 withdrawal. Both the
PMA
and HBGF-1 modulation of PAI-1 were abolished by treatment with the protein kinase inhibitor H-7. Treatment of HUVEC with HBGF-1 had no acute effect on intracellular inositol phosphate hydrolysis or cAMP levels. Further studies on intracellular pathways involved in HBGF-1 modulation of PAI-1 will enhance our understanding of the role these factors play in cellular proliferation and angiogenesis.
...
PMID:Heparin-binding growth factor-1 modulation of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 expression. Interaction with cAMP and protein kinase C-mediated pathways. 170 36
Human peripheral blood mononuclear cells are analyzed for preproenkephalin gene expression and peptide processing. Met-enkephalin immunoreactivity as detected with a specific antiserum is found in the cytoplasm of monocytes but not in T lymphocytes. Secretion of met-enkephalin was analyzed with an RIA that is specific for the met-enkephalin pentapeptide. Unfractionated PBMC spontaneously released 40 pg/ml met-enkephalin and this increased two- to fourfold after stimulation with PHA. Lower levels (less than 100 pg/ml) of met-enkephalin were detected in supernatants from purified T cells that were activated with PHA and IL-2. In contrast, stimulation of purified monocytes with LPS or
PMA
resulted in the release of up to 600 pg/ml of the processed peptide. To examine whether T cells can produce met-enkephalin precursor peptides, T cell conditioned media were treated with
trypsin
and carboxypeptidase-B, which is known to release met-enkephalin from the propeptide. This increased levels of met-enkephalin to 400 pg/ml, indicating that lymphocytes secrete the propeptide but do not process it to met-enkephalin. The 1.4-kb preproenkephalin mRNA is detected in activated blood mononuclear cells and in purified monocytes and T cells. To determine whether monocytes or lymphocytes express met-enkephalin in vivo, lymphoid tissues were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. In human spleen tissue, positive cells were found in the red pulp but not in the follicles, which is also consistent with met-enkephalin expression in monocytes. In summary, these results show that human peripheral blood mononuclear cells express preproenkephalin mRNA and that monocytes, but not T cells, process the propeptide to metenkephalin.
...
PMID:Differential processing of proenkephalin-A by human peripheral blood monocytes and T lymphocytes. 188 71
Recently, our laboratory reported the purification and partial amino acid sequence of a 10-kDa eosinophil cytotoxicity-enhancing factor (ECEF) polypeptide from the U937 cell source. This cytokine enhanced human eosinophil antibody-dependent cytotoxic function by greater than 200% and was half-maximally effective at a concentration of approximately 1 ng/ml. In this study, we describe the conditions required for ECEF synthesis and the use of rabbit antibody raised to 10-kDa ECEF to investigate the existence of related polypeptide species. Unstimulated U937 cells released an immunoreactive 14-kDA species. Cells stimulated with 7.5 micrograms/ml of LPS also released a 13-kDa species. Cells stimulated with 400 ng/ml of
PMA
also synthesized a 10-kDa species (equivalent in size to the form we had purified). This 10-kDa species remained primarily cell associated, but detectable amounts were released into the supernatant by 48 h of culture. In washed cell pellets, the location of the 10-kDa species was found to be in the plasma membrane, externally oriented, as determined by FACS analysis, iodination with the membrane impermeable reagent 125I-sulfosuccinimidyl-3-(4-hydroxyphenyl) propionate, and by its removal with brief
trypsin
treatment. Partial amino acid sequence data suggested that the 14-, 13-, and 10-kDa species all share the same N-terminal. The 14- and 10-kDa ECEF species were recovered by electroelution from SDS-PAGE gels and tested for activity in the assay of eosinophil cytotoxic function. Because of the amino acid sequence similarities between the ECEF species and thioredoxin (TRX), rTRX (synthesized in Escherichia coli and purified) was also tested for activity. The 14-kDa ECEF and rTRX induced a slight, but consistent and statistically significant enhancement of eosinophil cytotoxic function. By comparison, lower doses of the 10-kDa ECEF induced a major increase in cytotoxic function. Thus the forms of ECEF differ in size, conditions required for synthesis, trafficking by the U937 cell after synthesis, and biologic activity. It is likely that these considerations bear on the involvement of ECEF in the pathophysiology of eosinophilia in vivo.
...
PMID:Human eosinophil cytotoxicity-enhancing factor. II. Multiple forms synthesized by U937 cells and their relationship to thioredoxin/adult T cell leukemia-derived factor. 191 52
Activated human neutrophils (PMN) degrade rTNF-alpha resulting in a loss of cytotoxic activity against murine L-929 cells (L cells). This inactivation is mediated through proteases released from activated PMN. Exposure of TNF to H2O2, glucose oxidase, xanthine oxidase, or myeloper-oxidase-H2O2-halide did not affect TNF cytotoxicity for L cells. Exposure to
trypsin
, chymotrypsin, pronase E, or elastase, however, did diminish TNF bioactivity. FMLP-stimulated PMN in the presence, but not in the absence, of cytochalasin B reduced TNF activity, whereas
PMA
-stimulated PMN did not affect TNF. Stimulation of PMN with opsonized bacteria also induced TNF inactivation as well as the supernatant of FMLP-stimulated cells. Addition of protease inhibitors to the FMLP-stimulated cytochalasin B-treated PMN abrogated the inactivation of TNF cytotoxicity for L cells, whereas scavengers were not protective. In addition, PMN from a chronic granulomatous disease patient also decreased TNF bioactivity. Inactivation of TNF by activated PMN correlated with granule release and not with superoxide production. Exposure of TNF to proteases and FMLP-activated PMN also resulted in a loss of reactivity with anti-TNF antibodies, as measured by ELISA, and in the formation of an approximately 10-kDa split product from the 17-kDa rTNF molecule. Partial degradation of TNF by proteases released from activated PMN may result in a diminished TNF bioactivity and thereby contribute to the regulation of local inflammatory reactions.
...
PMID:Inactivation of recombinant human tumor necrosis factor-alpha by proteolytic enzymes released from stimulated human neutrophils. 194 Mar 72
Although prior studies with mAb have defined an endogenous chymotrypsin-like protease in the neutrophil (polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN)) membrane that is associated with initiation of superoxide response to inflammatory stimuli, it is not known whether extracellular proteases (in the inflammatory milieu) can also influence PMN activation. This study examined the ability of four neutral proteases: cathepsin G, elastase, chymotrypsin, and
trypsin
, to modify PMN superoxide response to FMLP,
PMA
, and arachidonate. In response to 1 microM FMLP, PMN treated with cathepsin G, chymotrypsin, or elastase showed 64%, 60%, and 32% increases, respectively, in superoxide generation when compared with control, untreated cells (p less than 0.05 for each). These increments were dependent on intact enzymatic function of the proteases, were greatest when enzyme and stimulus were added concurrently, and persisted after PMN were washed free of enzyme. Enhancement of superoxide response was not stimulus specific; in response to 10 ng/ml
PMA
, cells treated with cathepsin G showed a 84%, and elastase a 57%, increase in superoxide generation (p less than 0.05 for both) with a marked reduction in the time required for onset of this response. For cell activation with 80 microM arachidonate, treatment with elastase produced a 180% increase in superoxide production (p less than 0.025). Neutrophils incubated with
trypsin
demonstrated significant decreases in superoxide response to
PMA
(-34%, p less than 0.05) and arachidonate (-39%, p less than 0.01). The enzymes themselves were not stimuli for superoxide production nor were they scavengers for superoxide in cellfree system. We conclude that local release of the PMN primary-granule neutral proteases, cathepsin G, and elastase within inflammatory sites can augment neutrophil effector function by up-regulating oxidative response to defined inflammatory stimuli. This autocrine/paracrine function may provide a significant increase in antimicrobial activity, but may also enhance the potential for host tissue injury.
...
PMID:Protease-modulation of neutrophil superoxide response. 254 73
Incubation of murine bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMM) in medium containing recombinant macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rM-CSF) stimulated influx, efflux, and the net accumulation of the fluid-phase pinocytic marker, lucifer yellow (LY). Stimulation was dose dependent, occurred within 5 min of addition of the growth factor, and was sustained. Previous experiments had shown that BMM treated with
PMA
were stimulated to accumulate LY, but compared with rM-CSF-treated cells, the onset of stimulation in
PMA
-treated macrophages was slower. In further comparisons of rM-CSF- and
PMA
-stimulated LY accumulation, it was found that rM-CSF-stimulated pinocytosis could be abolished by pretreatment with 0.5 mg/ml
trypsin
, whereas neither unstimulated nor
PMA
-stimulated LY accumulation was affected by
trypsin
pretreatment. These findings indicate that the rM-CSF response was initiated at the cell surface, while the
PMA
response occurred via intracellular (or
trypsin
-resistant) receptors. However, once initiated, the pinocytic responses elicited by either agent were very similar. First, rM-CSF-treated cells, like
PMA
-treated cells, showed extensive ruffling and formation of large phase-bright pinosomes. Second, both rM-CSF- and
PMA
-stimulated LY accumulation could be inhibited by treatment of cells with the cytoskeleton destabilizing drugs nocodazole, colchicine, or cytochalasin D. Finally, rM-CSF, like
PMA
, was found to stimulate efflux of LY from cells preloaded with the dye. Thus, both rM-CSF and
PMA
stimulate the net rate of solute flow through the macrophage endocytic compartment.
...
PMID:Macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rM-CSF) stimulates pinocytosis in bone marrow-derived macrophages. 268 16
The expression of serine protease genes was examined in murine NK cells that were purified by panning spleen cells with
PMA
. Although unstimulated NK cells were cytolytic, they were found not to express the C11 (chymotrypsin-like) mRNA. Culturing these cells in IL-2 (500 to 800 U/ml) for 5 to 7 days induced both the lytic activities and the protease enzymes by 20- to 30-fold. Concomitant to these activation events, the total steady state mRNA of both C11 and HF (
trypsin
-like) genes were also elevated. The activation of lysis, serine protease enzymes, and C11 and HF mRNA all peaked around day 5 in culture and was dose dependent. In order to exclude the possibility that
PMA
synergizes with IL-2 in this system, spleen cells from SCID mice, which contained mainly NK cells, were cultured under the same conditions (800 U/ml IL-2, with or without
PMA
) and
PMA
did not appear to enhance the expression of these mRNA. Similarly, IL-2 also induced the lytic activities, enzyme levels, and mRNA in the non-Ag-specific T killer cells isolated from spleens of normal mice. Lytic activity of T killer cells was not as high as the NK cells, however, the addition of PHA into the lytic assay resulted in enhanced lysis comparable to that of NK cells. These results showed that lytic activity increased along with protease enzyme levels and mRNA expression in both NK and resting T cells. Therefore, elevated levels of the protease enzymes could be one mechanism involved in optimal lytic activity of IL-2-induced lymphokine activated killer cells.
...
PMID:IL-2 induces expression of serine protease enzymes and genes in natural killer and nonspecific T killer cells. 278 61
The production of bovine IL 2 was studied and IL 2 was partially characterized.
PMA
at 5 ng/ml + Concanavalin A at 5 micrograms/ml treatment of peripheral blood mononuclear cells gave a greater yield of IL 2 activity in the supernatants than Con A,
PMA
or sodium periodate treatments alone. Macrophage depletion increased yields as did the addition of indomethacin, a prostaglandin E2 inhibitor. Bovine IL 2 was sensitive to
trypsin
, relatively stable at pH 2-9, 2-ME resistant and sensitive to increasing molar concentrations of urea. The activity of bovine IL 2 was reduced by over 45% at 70 degrees C for 30 min and 95% at 90 degrees C for 30 min. Bovine IL 2 was more stable at 4 degrees C than at room temperature and the stability at room temperature could be improved by inclusion of 1% BSA. Bovine IL 2 eluted from DEAE-Sephadex as a broad peak with 0.1-0.2 M NaCl. Peak activity corresponded to a molecular weight of approximately 16,000 daltons on Sephadex G-100.
...
PMID:Bovine interleukin 2: production and characterization. 283 49
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