Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (proteasome)
28,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) has been implicated as an effector molecule of beta-cell destruction in autoimmune diabetes. IL-1beta inhibits insulin secretion from pancreatic beta-cells by stimulating the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) that generates the free radical nitric oxide. IL-1beta also induces the coexpression of the inducible isoform of cyclooxygenase (COX-2) that results in the overproduction of proinflammatory prostaglandins. The current studies were designed to characterize the involvement of protease(s) in the signaling pathway of IL-1beta-induced iNOS and COX-2 expression by rat islets and transformed rat pancreatic beta-cells. Because of the limitations of cell numbers of purified primary beta-cells obtained from rat islets, biochemical and molecular studies were performed using the rat insulinoma beta-cell line RINm5F. A serine protease inhibitor, Nalpha-P-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone (TLCK), and a proteasome complex (26S) inhibitor, MG 132, inhibited IL-1beta-induced nitrite formation, an oxidation product of nitric oxide produced by iNOS, in a concentration-dependent manner, with complete inhibition observed at 100 micromol/l and 10 micromol/l, respectively. Both TLCK and MG 132 also inhibited iNOS gene expression at the level of mRNA and protein. In an analogous manner, TLCK (100 micromol/l) and MG 132 (10 micromol/l) inhibited IL-1beta-induced COX-2 enzyme activity (PGE2 formation) and COX-2 gene expression at the level of mRNA and protein. In human islets, the proteasome inhibitor MG 132 also inhibited the formation of the products of iNOS and COX-2 enzyme activity, nitrite, and PGE2, respectively. These findings suggest that the inhibitory action of TLCK and MG 132 on iNOS and COX-2 expression precedes transcription. The transcription factor NFkappaB is essential for activation of a number of cytokine-inducible enzymes and was evaluated as a possible site of protease action necessary for IL-1beta-induced coexpression of iNOS and COX-2. TLCK and MG 132 inhibited both IL-1beta-induced activation of NFkappaB and degradation of IkappaBalpha by islets and RINm5F cells. These results implicate protease activation as an early signaling event in IL-1beta-induced inhibition of beta-cell function. This study also suggests that IL-1beta-induced iNOS and COX-2 coexpression by pancreatic beta-cells share a common signaling pathway in utilizing the proteasome complex (26S) and the transcription factor NFkappaB, and it identifies sites of intervention to prevent the overproduction of their inflammatory products.
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PMID:Evidence for involvement of the proteasome complex (26S) and NFkappaB in IL-1beta-induced nitric oxide and prostaglandin production by rat islets and RINm5F cells. 956 91

Previously we showed that infection of human type II airway epithelial (A549) cells with purified respiratory syncytial virus (pRSV) induced interleukin-8 transcription by a mechanism involving cytokine-inducible cytoplasmic-nuclear translocation of the RelA transcription factor. In unstimulated cells, RelA is tethered in the cytoplasm by association with the IkappaB inhibitor and can be released only following IkappaB degradation. In this study, we examined the spectrum of IkappaB isoform expression and kinetics of proteolysis of the isoforms in A549 cells following pRSV infection. In contrast to the rapid and robust activation of RelA DNA binding that peaked within 15 min of treatment produced by the prototypic activator tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), pRSV produced a weaker increase in RelA binding that began at 3 h and did not peak until 24 h after infection. A549 cells expressed the IkappaB inhibitory subunits IkappaBalpha, IkappaBbeta, and p105; however, following either stimulus, only the IkappaBalpha and IkappaBbeta steady-state levels declined in parallel with the increase in RelA DNA-binding activity. The >120-min half-life of IkappaBalpha in control cells was shortened to 5 min in TNF-alpha-stimulated cells and to 90 min in pRSV-infected cells. Although IkappaBalpha was resynthesized within 30 min following recombinant human TNFalpha treatment due to a robust 25-fold increase of IkappaBalpha mRNA expression (the RelA:IkappaBalpha positive feedback loop), following pRSV infection, there was no reaccumulation of IkappaBalpha protein, as infected cells produced only a 3-fold increase in IkappaBalpha mRNA at 24 h, indicating the RelA:IkappaBalpha positive feedback loop was insufficient to restore control IkappaBalpha levels. IkappaBalpha proteolysis induced by TNF-alpha occurred through the 26S proteasome, as both 26S proteasome activity and IkappaBalpha proteolysis were blocked by specific inhibitors lactacystin, MG-132, and ZLLF-CHO. Although total proteasome activity in 24-h pRSV-infected lysates increased twofold, its activity was >90% inhibited by the proteasome inhibitors; surprisingly, however, IkappaBalpha proteolysis was not. We conclude that RSV infection produces IkappaBalpha proteolysis through a mechanism primarily independent of the proteasome pathway.
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PMID:The major component of IkappaBalpha proteolysis occurs independently of the proteasome pathway in respiratory syncytial virus-infected pulmonary epithelial cells. 957 51

Our previous studies have shown that isolated cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL), B-cell, and T-helper epitopes, for which we coined the term minigenes, can be effective vaccines; when expressed from recombinant vaccinia viruses, these short immunogenic sequences confer protection against a variety of viruses and bacteria. In addition, we have previously demonstrated the utility of DNA immunization using plasmids encoding full-length viral proteins. Here we combine the two approaches and evaluate the effectiveness of minigenes in DNA immunization. We find that DNA immunization with isolated minigenes primes virus-specific memory CTL responses which, 4 days following virus challenge, appear similar in magnitude to those induced by vaccines known to be protective. Surprisingly, this vigorous CTL response fails to confer protection against a normally lethal virus challenge, although the CTL appear fully functional because, along with their high lytic activity, they are similar in affinity and cytokine secretion to CTL induced by virus infection. However this DNA immunization with isolated minigenes results in a low CTL precursor frequency; only 1 in approximately 40,000 T cells is epitope specific. In contrast, a plasmid encoding the same minigene sequences covalently attached to the cellular protein ubiquitin induces protective immunity and a sixfold-higher frequency of CTL precursors. Thus, we show that the most commonly employed criterion to evaluate CTL responses-the presence of lytic activity following secondary stimulation-does not invariably correlate with protection; instead, the better correlate of protection is the CTL precursor frequency. Recent observations indicate that certain effector functions are active in memory CTL and do not require prolonged stimulation. We suggest that these early effector functions of CTL, immediately following infection, are critical in controlling virus dissemination and in determining the outcome of the infection. Finally, we show that improved performance of the ubiquitinated minigenes most probably requires polyubiquitination of the fusion protein, suggesting that the enhancement results from more effective delivery of the minigene to the proteasome.
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PMID:DNA immunization with minigenes: low frequency of memory cytotoxic T lymphocytes and inefficient antiviral protection are rectified by ubiquitination. 957 89

The ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (UPP) regulates critical cell processes, including the cell cycle, cytokine-induced gene expression, differentiation, and cell death. Recently we demonstrated that this pathway responds to oxidative stress in mammalian cells and proposed that activities of ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1) and ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes (E2s) are regulated by cellular redox status (i.e., GSSG:GSH ratio). To test this hypothesis, we altered the GSSG:GSH ratio in retinal pigment epithelial cells with the thiol-specific oxidant, diamide, and assessed activities of the UPP. Treatment of cells with diamide resulted in a dose-dependent increase in the GSSG:GSH ratio resulting from loss of GSH and a coincident increase in GSSG. Increases in the GSSG:GSH ratio from 0.02 in untreated cells to > or = 0.5 in diamide-treated cells were accompanied by dose-dependent reductions in the levels of endogenous Ub-protein conjugates, endogenous E1-ubiquitin thiol esters, and de novo ubiquitin-conjugating activity. As determined by the ability to form E1-ubiquitin and E2s-ubiquitin thiol esters, E1 and E2s were both inhibited by elevated GSSG:GSH ratios. Inhibition of E1 was associated with the formation of E1-protein mixed disulfides. Activities of E1 and E2s gradually recovered to preoxidation levels, coincident with gradual recovery of the GSSG:GSH ratio. These data support S-thiolation/dethiolation as a mechanism regulating E1 and E2 activities in response to oxidant insult. Ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic capacity was regulated by the GSSG:GSH ratio in a manner consistent with altered ubiquitin-conjugating activity. However, ubiquitin-independent proteolysis was unaffected by changes in the GSSG:GSH ratio. Potential adaptive and pathological consequences of redox regulation of UPP activities are discussed.
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PMID:Redox regulation of ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes: mechanistic insights using the thiol-specific oxidant diamide. 957 83

The hepatic stellate cell (HSC), following a fibrogenic stimulus, is transformed from a quiescent to an activated cell. Cytokines induce NFkappaB activity in activated but not in quiescent HSCs with subsequent expression of NFkappaB-responsive genes, such as intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1 and interleukin (IL)-6. We investigated the effect of proteasome inhibitors and an IkappaB super-repressor on the cytokine mediated activation of NFkappaB, ICAM-1, and IL-6 in activated HSCs. Culture-activated HSCs were stimulated with IL-1beta or tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) in the presence or absence of proteasome inhibitors, ALLN or MG-132, or after infection with an adenovirus expressing the IkappaB super-repressor (Ad5IkappaB) or beta-galactosidase (Ad5LacZ) as a control. NFkappaB activity was evaluated by immunofluorescence and by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. The steady state level of cytoplasmic IkappaB protein was measured by Western Blot. ICAM-1 and IL-6 expression was measured by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay. Proteasome inhibitors, which block the degradation of IkappaB, and the Ad5IkappaB, which provides an exogenous nondegradable IkappaB, block the stimulation of NFkappaB activity by TNFalpha and IL-1beta in activated HSCs. These reagents block the subsequent nuclear translocation of p65 NFkappaB and induction of ICAM-1 and IL-6 by cytokines. The specificities of the proteasome inhibitors and the IkappaB super-repressor are demonstrated by their failure to block c-Jun N-terminal kinase induction by cytokines. Cytokine-induced stimulation of NFkappaB, ICAM-1, and IL-6 is blocked by proteasome inhibitors and Ad5IkappaB in activated HSCs. Inhibition of IkappaBalpha degradation is a potential target for anti-inflammatory therapy in the liver and might influence the activation process of HSCs following fibrotic stimuli.
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PMID:Inhibition of NFkappaB in activated rat hepatic stellate cells by proteasome inhibitors and an IkappaB super-repressor. 958 6

Rat C6 glioma cells were stably transfected with a human cDNA encoding heat shock protein (HSP)70. Immunostaining revealed the presence of largely cytosolic HSP70 in C6-hsp70 cells, but not in control (vector transfected) C6-pTK cells. Induction of nitric oxide synthase (NOS-2) expression in C6-hsp70 cells, assessed by nitrite accumulation, was significantly reduced compared to control C6-pTK cells (25+/-8% of control cell induction, P < 0.005), when induced with a maximally stimulatory combination of bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) plus a mixture of three cytokines ("CM:" TNF-alpha, IL1-beta, and IFN-gamma). Immunostaining for the transcription factor NFkappaB p65 subunit revealed decreased cytokine-dependent nuclear uptake in HSP70 expressing cells compared to control cells. Activation of C6 cell NFkappaB by LPS plus CM required IkappaB degradation by the 20S proteasome, since NOS-2 expression was blocked by a selective proteasome inhibitor. In parental C6 cells, the presence of LPS plus CM caused a rapid (within 30 min) decrease in inhibitory IkappaB-alpha protein levels, and this loss was abolished by prior heat shock of the cells. In contrast, IkappaB-alpha levels in transfected cells were not modified by the expression of HSP70. These results demonstrate that constitutive HSP70 expression in glial cells can reduce NOS-2 induction, presumably due to inhibition of NFkappaB nuclear uptake. Furthermore, whereas prevention of decreases in IkappaB-alpha can account for the suppressive effects of heat shock, the results suggest that HSP70 blocks NOS-2 induction by interfering at a later step in the NFkappaB activation pathway.
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PMID:Suppression of glial nitric oxide synthase induction by heat shock: effects on proteolytic degradation of IkappaB-alpha. 970 Oct 55

The family of cytokines signalling through the common receptor subunit gp130 comprises interleukin (IL)-6, IL-11, leukaemia inhibitory factor, oncostatin M, ciliary neurotrophic factor and cardiotrophin-1. These so-called IL-6-type cytokines play an important role in the regulation of complex cellular processes such as gene activation, proliferation and differentiation. The current knowledge on the signal-transduction mechanisms of these cytokines from the plasma membrane to the nucleus is reviewed. In particular, we focus on the assembly of receptor complexes after ligand binding, the activation of receptor-associated kinases of the Janus family, and the recruitment and phosphorylation of transcription factors of the STAT family, which dimerize, translocate to the nucleus, and bind to enhancer elements of respective target genes leading to transcriptional activation. The important players in the signalling pathway, namely the cytokines and the receptor components, the Janus kinases Jak1, Jak2 and Tyk2, the signal transducers and activators of transcription STAT1 and STAT3 and the tyrosine phosphatase SHP2 [SH2 (Src homology 2) domain-containing tyrosine phosphatase] are introduced and their structural/functional properties are discussed. Furthermore, we review various mechanisms involved in the termination of the IL-6-type cytokine signalling, namely the action of tyrosine phosphatases, proteasome, Jak kinase inhibitors SOCS (suppressor of cytokine signalling), protein inhibitors of activated STATs (PIAS), and internalization of the cytokine receptors via gp130. Although all IL-6-type cytokines signal through the gp130/Jak/STAT pathway, the comparison of their physiological properties shows that they elicit not only similar, but also distinct, biological responses. This is reflected in the different phenotypes of IL-6-type-cytokine knock-out animals.
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PMID:Interleukin-6-type cytokine signalling through the gp130/Jak/STAT pathway. 971 87

The rapid loss of muscle mass that accompanies many disease states, such as cancer or sepsis, is primarily a result of increased protein breakdown in muscle, and several observations have suggested an activation of the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Accordingly, in extracts of atrophying muscles from tumor-bearing or septic rats, rates of 125I-ubiquitin conjugation to endogenous proteins were found to be higher than in control extracts. On the other hand, in extracts of muscles from hypothyroid rats, where overall proteolysis is reduced below normal, the conjugation of 125I-ubiquitin to soluble proteins decreased by 50%, and treatment with triiodothyronine (T3) restored ubiquitination to control levels. Surprisingly, the N-end rule pathway, which selectively degrades proteins with basic or large hydrophobic N-terminal residues, was found to be responsible for most of these changes in ubiquitin conjugation. Competitive inhibitors of this pathway that specifically block the ubiquitin ligase, E3alpha, suppressed most of the increased ubiquitin conjugation in the muscle extracts from tumor-bearing and septic rats. These inhibitors also suppressed ubiquitination in normal extracts toward levels in hypothyroid extracts, which showed little E3alpha-dependent ubiquitination. Thus, the inhibitors eliminated most of the differences in ubiquitination under these different pathological conditions. Moreover, 125I-lysozyme, a model N-end rule substrate, was ubiquitinated more rapidly in extracts from tumor-bearing and septic rats, and more slowly in those from hypothyroid rats, than in controls. Thus, the rate of ubiquitin conjugation increases in atrophying muscles, and these hormone- and cytokine-dependent responses are in large part due to activation of the N-end rule pathway.
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PMID:Rates of ubiquitin conjugation increase when muscles atrophy, largely through activation of the N-end rule pathway. 977 May 32

The implantation of the Lewis lung carcinoma (a fast-growing mouse tumour that induces cachexia) to both wild-type and gene-deficient mice for the TNF-alpha receptor type I protein (Tnfr1 degree/Tnfr1 degree), resulted in a considerable loss of carcass weight in both groups. However, while in the wild-type mice there was a loss of both fat and muscle, in the gene-knockout mice muscle wastage was not affected to the same extent. In both groups, tumour burden resulted in significant increases in circulating TNF-alpha, a cytokine which, as we have previously demonstrated, can induce protein breakdown in skeletal muscle. Muscle wastage in wild-type mice was accompanied by an increase in the fractional rate of protein degradation, while no changes were observed in protein synthesis. The result is a decreased rate of protein accumulation that accounts for the muscle weight loss observed as a result of tumour burden. In contrast, gene knockout mice did not have significantly lower rates of protein accumulation as a result of tumour implantation. The increase in protein degradation in the tumour-bearing wild mice was accompanied by an enhanced expression of both ubiquitin and proteasome subunit genes, all of them related to the activation of the ATP-dependent proteolytic system in skeletal muscle. Tumour-bearing gene-deficient mice did not show any increase in gene expression. It is concluded that TNF-alpha (alone or in combination with other cytokines) is responsible for the activation of protein breakdown in skeletal muscle of tumour-bearing mice.
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PMID:Role of TNF receptor 1 in protein turnover during cancer cachexia using gene knockout mice. 978 14

Inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha), are known to activate sphingomyelinase (SMase) and nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) in certain cell types, which also stimulate inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) gene in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). However, it remains unknown whether the SMase pathway is involved in iNOS gene expression in VSMCs. Therefore, the present study was designed to examine whether SMase induces iNOS gene expression via the NF-kappaB activation pathway similar to that of IL-1beta and TNF alpha in cultured rat VSMCs. Neutral SMase, although less potently than IL-1beta and TNF alpha, stimulated nitrite/nitrate (NOx) production, and iNOS messenger RNA and protein expression, as assessed by Northern and Western blot analyses, respectively. Neutral SMase, IL-1beta, and TNF alpha activated NF-kappaB, as revealed by electrophoretic mobility shift assay, and its nuclear translocation, as demonstrated by immunocytochemical study. Neutral SMase potentiated NOx production, iNOS expression, and NF-kappaB activation stimulated by TNF alpha, but not by IL-1beta. Aldehyde peptide proteasome inhibitors completely blocked NOx production, iNOS expression, NF-kappaB activation, and its nuclear translocation induced by cytokines and neutral SMase. IL-1beta and TNF alpha, but not neutral SMase, caused a transient decrease in IkappaB-alpha protein levels, whereas IkappaB-beta protein expression was not affected by either agent. Proteasome inhibitors prevented cytokine-mediated IkappaB-alpha degradation. Several cell-permeable ceramide analogs (C2, C6, and C8), hydrolysis products of sphingomyelin, activated NF-kappaB less potently than neutral SMase, but had no effect on NOx production. These results demonstrate an essential role of NF-kappaB activation in mediation of neutral SMase-induced iNOS expression, but distinct from the proteasome-mediated IkappaB-alpha degradation by cytokines, suggesting the possible involvement of an additional signaling pathway(s).
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PMID:Role of nuclear factor-kappaB activation in cytokine- and sphingomyelinase-stimulated inducible nitric oxide synthase gene expression in vascular smooth muscle cells. 979 59


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