Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.23.5 (cathepsin D)
4,130 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This report describes a case of a malignant vascular tumor of the spleen with the morphologic, immunologic, and ultrastructural features observed in splenic sinus-lining cells (littoral cells). Histological examination showed a well-differentiated neoplasm forming ectatic blood channels with intraluminal papillary fronds. Tumor cells displayed malignant nuclear features and hemophagocytosis. Solid neoplastic areas with mitotic figures were present. Ultrastructurally, the tumor cells showed the concomitant presence of lysosomes and Weibel-Palade bodies. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for both endothelial (Factor VIII-AG, CD34) and histiocytic markers (cathepsin D, lysozyme, alpha-1-antichimotrypsin). Our results indicate that angiosarcoma may originate from all the vascular compartments of the spleen, including red-pulp sinuses, and may have morphologic and immunophenotypic similarities to littoral cell angioma, a recently described benign vascular tumor of the spleen.
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PMID:Littoral cell angiosarcoma of the spleen. Case report with immunohistochemical and ultrastructural analysis. 757 79

The identity of biochemical players which underpin the commitment of CD34(+) hematopoietic stem cells to immunogenic or tolerogenic dendritic cells is largely unknown. To explore this issue, we employed a previously established cell-based system amenable to shift dendritic cell differentiation from the immunogenic into the tolerogenic pathway upon supplementation with a conventional cytokine cocktail containing thrombopoietin (TPO) and IL-16. We show that stringent regulation of cathepsins S and D, two proteases involved in antigen presentation, is crucial to engage cell commitment to either route. In response to TPO+IL-16-dependent signaling, both cathepsins undergo earlier maturation and down-regulation. Additionally, cystatin C orchestrates cathepsin S expression through a tight but reversible interaction that, based on a screen of adult stem cells from disparate origins, CD14(+) cells, primary fibroblasts and the MCF7 cell line, appears unique to CD34(+) stem cells from peripheral and cord blood. As shown by CD4(+) T cell proliferation in mixed-lymphocyte reactions, cell commitment to either pathway is disrupted upon cathepsin knockdown by RNAi. Surprisingly, similar effects were also observed upon gene overexpression, which prompts atypically accelerated maturation of cathepsins S and D in cells of the immunogenic pathway, similar to the tolerogenic route. Furthermore, RNAi studies revealed that cystatin C is a proteolytic target of cathepsin D and has a direct, causal impact on cell differentiation. Together, these findings uncover a novel biochemical cluster that is subject to time-controlled and rigorously balanced expression to mediate specific stem cell commitment at the crossroads towards tolerance or immunity.
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PMID:Coordinated involvement of cathepsins S, D and cystatin C in the commitment of hematopoietic stem cells to dendritic cells. 2131 76