Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (CD10)
9,792 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The EBV-transformed B cell line JR-2 proliferates in response to partially purified preparations of low m.w. B cell growth factor (LMW-BCGF). Two clones of JR-2 were generated that retained this LMW-BCGF responsiveness, exhibiting similar dose/response characteristics but differing phenotypically. The B10 clone grows as single, discrete, small round cells, whereas D3 grows in aggregates. The clones also differ in the expression of cell surface Ag, D3 being weakly DR+ and strongly CD23+, whereas B10 lacks these Ag. The CD23 on D3 cells binds IgE. Both clones are T9+, 4F2+, B1-, B2- and CALLA-. D3 expresses surface IgG and differentiates in the presence of LMW-BCGF, to secrete IgG. B10 lacks surface and cytoplasmic Ig and fails to differentiate in response to LMW-BCGF. CD23 cannot be induced on B10 by incubation with either LMW-BCGF or IL-4. B10 does not shed CD23 and shed CD23 is not a growth factor for either cloned line. Expression of CD23 on D3 cells is not affected by preincubation with LMW-BCGF. Neither B10 or D3 cells respond to rIL-1, rIL-2, rIL-4, rIL-6, rTNF-alpha/beta, rIFN-gamma, or to high m.w. BCGF (Namalwa), alone or in combination. Both clones absorb BCGF activity and crossover absorptions indicate that the clones remove growth factors required by each other. D3 and B10 both appear therefore to respond selectively to LMW-BCGF. These data suggest that the loss of CD23 from a cloned derivative of the cell line JR-2, although accompanied by considerable phenotypic change, is not associated with the disappearance of LMW-BCGF responsiveness, indicating that CD23 is not the essential receptor for LMW-BCGF.
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PMID:Low molecular weight B cell growth factor-responsive cloned human B cell lines. I. Phenotypic differences and lack of requirement for CD23 (Fc epsilon RII). 252 11

Success in controlling hyperglycemia in type I diabetics will require a restoration of basal insulin. To this end, three plasmid DNAs (pDNA) encoding preproinsulin were compared for constitutive expression and processing to insulin in nonendocrine cells in vitro. The pDNAs were designed to express rat proinsulin I (VR-3501), rat proinsulin I with the B10 aspartic acid point mutation (VR-3502), and a derivative of VR-3502 with a furin cleavage site added at the B-chain and C-peptide junction (VR-3503). Cells transfected with VR-3501 or VR-3502 were able to secrete only proinsulin, whereas transfection with VR-3503 yielded 30-70% mature insulin, which could be increased to >99% by cotransfection with a furin expression plasmid (VR-3505). The insulin produced was biologically active. The bilateral injection of 100 microg of VR-3502 plasmid into the tibialis anterior muscles of mice on two consecutive days yielded, on average, several hundred picograms of heterologous proinsulin per milliliter of serum. In BALB/c mice, serum proinsulin peaked 7-14 days postinjection and declined to preinjection levels by days 21-28. In athymic nude mice, serum proinsulin was sustained for at least 6 weeks. The therapeutic efficacy of delivering insulin via muscle injection of pDNA was evaluated in athymic nude mice made diabetic with the beta cell toxin streptozotocin (STZ). All animals given control DNA died within 1 week of receiving STZ while 40% of the mice coinjected with plasmids VR-3503 and VR-3505 lived through the duration of the 4-week experiment. Muscles of the surviving animals contained 17-100 ng of immune-reactive insulin (IRI), 86-94% of which was mature insulin. The results suggest that heterologous insulin made in muscle increased the survival rate. We propose that insulin plasmid expression in skeletal muscle may be a valid approach to basal insulin delivery. The feasibility of plasmid DNA-based delivery of basal insulin was investigated. An expression system consisting of pDNAs encoding a selectively mutated rat preproinsulin and mouse furin was developed and characterized in vitro and in vivo. When injected with preproinsulin pDNA, the mouse tibialis anterior muscle expressed and released proinsulin into serum at levels comparable to normal basal insulin in rodents. These heterologous proinsulin levels were sustained for several weeks in immune-compromised nondiabetic mice. Mouse muscle coinjected with a pDNA encoding the endopeptidase furin and a pDNA encoding a pre-proinsulin modified to contain two furin cleavage sites produced fully processed insulin. This muscle-made insulin appears to have contributed to the survival of mice treated with a highly diabetogenic dose of streptozotocin, a beta cell toxin. The results demonstrate that skeletal muscle is able to express and deliver therapeutic insulin from plasmid DNA.
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PMID:Insulin delivery with plasmid DNA. 1056 91

The endosomal compartment of hepatic parenchymal cells contains an acidic endopeptidase, endosomal acidic insulinase (EAI), which hydrolyzes internalized insulin at a limited number of sites. Although the positions of these cleavages are partially known, the residues of insulin important in its binding to and proteolysis by EAI have not been defined. To this end, we have studied the degradation over time of native human insulin and three insulin-analog peptides using a soluble endosomal extract from rat liver parenchyma followed by purification of the products by HPLC and determination of their structure by mass spectrometry. We found variable rates of ligand processing, i.e. high ([Asp(B10)]- and [Glu(A13),Glu(B10)]-insulin), moderate (insulin) and low (the H2-analog). On the basis of IC(50) values, competition studies revealed that human and mutant insulins display nearly equivalent affinity for the EAI. Proteolysis of human and mutant insulins by EAI resulted in eight cleavages in the B-chain which occurred in the central region (Glu(B13)-Leu(B17)) and at the C-terminus (Arg(B22)-Thr(B27)), the latter region comprising the initial cleavages at Phe(B24)-Phe(B25) (major pathway) and Phe(B25)-Tyr(B26) (minor pathway) bonds. Except for the [Glu(A13),Glu(B10)]-insulin mutant, only one cleavage on the A-chain was observed at residues Gln(A15)-Leu(A16). Analysis of the nine cleavage sites showed a preference for hydrophobic and aromatic amino acid residues on both the carboxyl and amino sides of a cleaved peptide bond. Using the B-chain alone as a substrate resulted in a 30-fold increase in affinity for EAI and a 6-fold increase in the rate of hydrolysis compared with native insulin. A similar role for the C-terminal region of the B-chain of insulin in the high-affinity recognition of EAI was supported by the use of the corresponding B(22)-B(30) peptide, which displayed an increase in EAI affinity similar to the entire B-chain vs. wild-type insulin. Thus, we have identified a highly specific molecular interaction of insulin with EAI at the aromatic locus Phe(B24)-Phe(B25)-Tyr(B26). Analytical subfractionation of a postmitochondrial supernatant fraction showed that a pulse of internalized [(125)I]Tyr(A14)-H2-analog, a protease-resistant insulin analog, undergoes a greater lysosomal transfer and lesser degradation than [(125)I]Tyr(A14)-insulin, confirming that endosomal sorting is regulated directly or indirectly by endosomal proteolysis.
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PMID:Identification of insulin domains important for binding to and degradation by endosomal acidic insulinase. 1114 91

Small membranous vesicles, between 25- and 75-nm diameter, were collected by high-speed centrifugation from the ram cauda epididymal fluid and were found to be normal constituents of this fluid and of the seminal plasma. The SDS-PAGE protein pattern of these vesicles was specific and very different from that of the caudal fluid, seminal plasma, sperm extract, and cytoplasmic droplets. After two-dimensional electrophoresis separation and mass spectrometry analysis, several proteins were identified and grouped into i) membrane-linked enzymes, such as dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP-IV), neprilysin (NEP), phosphodiesterase-I (E-NPP3), and protein G-beta; ii) vesicle-associated proteins, such as lactadherin (MFEG8-PAS6/7) and vacuolar ATPase; iii) several cytoskeleton-associated proteins, such as actin, ezrin and annexin; and iv) metabolic enzymes. The presence of some of these proteins as well as several different hydrophobic proteins secreted by the epididymis was further confirmed by immunoblotting. These markers showed that the majority of the vesicles originated from the cauda epididymal region. The physical and biochemical characteristics of these vesicles suggest they are the equivalent of the exosomes secreted by several cell types and epithelium. The main membrane-linked proteins of the vesicles were not retrieved in the extract from cauda or ejaculated sperm, suggesting that these vesicles did not fuse with sperm in vivo.
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PMID:Identification, proteomic profiling, and origin of ram epididymal fluid exosome-like vesicles. 1563 28