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Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (
proteasome
)
28,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 22-year-old man developed unconsciousness, severe quadriplegia and muscle atrophy, and had markedly elevated serum creatine kinase levels after using the high-dose steroid and nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents during the course of sepsis and DIC. On neurological examination, he was lethargic. The patient had generalized muscle weakness and wasting, and diminished deep tendon reflexes. He weakly responsed to painful stimuli on the legs. The motor nerve conduction study demonstrated decreased CMAP (compound muscle action potential) amplitudes. Motor and sensory nerve conduction velocities and their distal latencies were normal. Muscle biopsy revealed marked muscle fiber atrophy predominantly in type 2 fibers and numerous basophilic and a few necrotic fibers. Some atrophic fibers had decreased to absent myosin adenosine triphosphatase activity in their center. Accordingly, he was diagnosed as having acute quadriplegic myopathy (AQM), which has been reported mainly in Western countries. The mechanism of muscle fiber degradation in this myopathy is still unknown. On immunohistochemical analysis to our patient, enzyme activities of various proteases such as calpain, cathepsin B, and proteasomes were increased in the sarcoplasm, especially in the atrophic fibers. We suggest that lysosomal
cathepsin
, nonlysosomal calpain, and ATP-ubiquitin-
proteasome
proteolytic pathways participate in muscle fiber degradation in AQM.
...
PMID:[A case of acute quadriplegic myopathy]. 1108 98
Oxidized and cross-linked proteins tend to accumulate in aging cells. Declining activity of proteolytic enzymes, particularly the
proteasome
, has been proposed as a possible explanation for this phenomenon, and direct inhibition of the
proteasome
by oxidized and cross-linked proteins has been demonstrated in vitro. We have further examined this hypothesis during both proliferative senescence (this paper) and postmitotic senescence (see the accompanying paper, ref 1 ) of human BJ fibroblasts. During proliferative senescence, we found a marked decline in all
proteasome
activities (trypsin-like activity, chymotrypsin-like activity, and peptidyl-glutamyl-hydrolyzing activity) and in lysosomal
cathepsin
activity. Despite the loss of
proteasome
activity, there was no concomitant change in cellular levels of actual
proteasome
protein (immunoassays) or in the steady-state levels of mRNAs for essential
proteasome
subunits. The decline in
proteasome
activities and lysosomal
cathepsin
activities was accompanied by dramatic increases in the accumulation of oxidized and cross-linked proteins. Furthermore, as proliferation stage increased, cells exhibited a decreasing ability to degrade the oxidatively damaged proteins generated by an acute, experimentally applied oxidative stress. Thus, oxidized and cross-linked proteins accumulated rapidly in cells of higher proliferation stages. Our data are consistent with the hypothesis that
proteasome
is progressively inhibited by small accumulations of oxidized and cross-linked proteins during proliferative senescence until late proliferation stages, when so much
proteasome
activity has been lost that oxidized proteins accumulate at ever-increasing rates. Lysosomes attempt to deal with the accumulating oxidized and cross-linked proteins, but declining lysosomal
cathepsin
activity apparently limits their effectiveness. This hypothesis, which may explain the progressive intracellular accumulation of oxidized and cross-linked proteins in aging, is further explored during postmitotic senescence in the accompanying paper (1).
...
PMID:Protein oxidation and degradation during cellular senescence of human BJ fibroblasts: part I--effects of proliferative senescence. 1109 67
Oxidized/cross-linked intracellular protein materials, known as ceroid pigment, age pigment, or lipofuscin, accumulate in postmitotic tissues. It is unclear, however, whether diminishing proteolytic capacities play a role in the accumulation of such oxidized intracellular proteins. Previous studies revealed that the
proteasome
is responsible for the degradation of most oxidized soluble cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins and, we propose, for the prevention of such damage accumulations. The present investigation was undertaken to test the changes in protein turnover,
proteasome
activity, lysosome activity, and protein oxidation status during the aging of nondividing cells. Since the companion paper shows that both
proteasome
activity and the overall protein turnover decline during proliferative senescence whereas the accumulation of oxidized proteins increases significantly, we decided to use the same human BJ fibroblasts, this time at confluency, at different PD levels (including those that are essentially postmitotic) to investigate the same parameters under conditions where cells do not divide. We find that the activity of the cytosolic
proteasome
declines dramatically during senescence of nondividing BJ fibroblasts. The peptidyl-glutamyl-hydrolyzing activity was particularly affected. This decline in
proteasome
activity was accompanied by a decrease in the overall turnover of short-lived (radiolabeled) proteins in the nondividing BJ fibroblasts. On the other hand, no decrease in the actual cellular
proteasome
content, as judged by immunoblots, was found. The decline in the activity of the
proteasome
was also accompanied by an increased accumulation of oxidized proteins, especially of oxidized and cross-linked material. Unlike the loss of lysosomal function seen in our accompanying studies of proliferative senescence (1), however, the present study of hyperoxic senescence in nondividing cells actually revealed marked increases in lysosomal
cathepsin
activity in all but the very 'oldest' postmitotic cells. Our comparative studies of proliferating (1) and nonproliferating (this paper) human BJ fibroblasts reveal a good correlation between the accumulation of oxidized/cross-linked proteins and the decline in
proteasome
activity and overall cellular protein turnover during in vitro senescence, which may predict a causal relationship during actual cellular aging.
...
PMID:Protein oxidation and degradation during cellular senescence of human BJ fibroblasts: part II--aging of nondividing cells. 1109 68
Patients with cancer often undergo a specific loss of skeletal muscle mass, while the visceral protein reserves are preserved. This condition known as cachexia reduces the quality of life and eventually results in death through erosion of the respiratory muscles. Nutritional supplementation or appetite stimulants are unable to restore the loss of lean body mass, since protein catabolism is increased mainly as a result of the activation of the ATP-ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic pathway. Several mediators have been proposed. An enhanced protein degradation is seen in skeletal muscle of mice administered tumour necrosis factor (TNF), which appears to be mediated by oxidative stress. There is some evidence that this may be a direct effect and is associated with an increase in total cellular-ubiquitin-conjugated muscle proteins. Another cytokine, interleukin-6 (IL-6), may play a role in muscle wasting in certain animal tumours, possibly through both lysosomal (
cathepsin
) and non-lysosomal (
proteasome
) pathways. A tumour product, proteolysis-inducing factor (PIF) is produced by cachexia-inducing murine and human tumours and initiates muscle protein degradation directly through activation of the
proteasome
pathway. The action of PIF is blocked by eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), which has been shown to attenuate the development of cachexia in pancreatic cancer patients. When combined with nutritional supplementation EPA leads to accumulation of lean body mass and prolongs survival. Further knowledge on the biochemical mechanisms of muscle protein catabolism will aid the development of effective therapy for cachexia.
...
PMID:Loss of skeletal muscle in cancer: biochemical mechanisms. 1117 57
Although proteasomes are mainly located in the cytosol, it is known that significant amounts are also associated with endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membranes where they may play a role in the degradation of specific ER membrane proteins. The present studies were undertaken to compare ER and cytosolic proteasomal activities in WB rat liver cells. N-Heptyl-beta-thioglucopyranoside (HTG) extracts of membrane or cytosol fractions were chromatographed in glycerol/ATP buffers on size-exclusion and ion-exchange columns and the elution profiles of proteasomal peptidase activity and immunoreactive components of the 20S complex, 19S complex, and PA28 were compared. Cytosol fractions showed a single peak of chymotrypsin-like peptidase activity (Cht-L), which was inhibited completely by 5 microM lactacystin (LC) or SDS (0.03%) and corresponded to 26S proteasomes based upon the presence of both 20S and 19S components. By comparison, membrane fractions contained two major peaks of Cht-L activity. The first peak shared the same properties as the peak activity observed in cytosol fractions. However, the second peak was stimulated by SDS and was LC-insensitive (5 microM) and contained trypsin-like (T-L) and peptide-glutamyl peptidase (PGPH) but no
cathepsin
or calcium-activated protease activities. PA28 activator protein was present in both membrane and cytosol fractions. Thus, the principal difference between cytosolic and membrane activity was that the latter fractions contained a novel membrane-associated LC-insensitive protease(s) catalyzing three of the major peptidase activities of the
proteasome
.
...
PMID:Characterization of membrane-associated proteasomes in WB rat liver epithelial cells. 1136 Oct 31
The molecular events by which eccentric muscle contractions induce muscle damage and remodelling remain largely unknown. We assessed whether eccentric exercise modulates the expression of proteinases (calpains 1, 2 and 3,
proteasome
,
cathepsin
B+L), muscle structural proteins (alpha-sarcoglycan and desmin), and the expression of the heat shock proteins Hsp27 and alphaB-crystallin. Vastus lateralis muscle biopsies from twelve healthy male volunteers were obtained before, immediately after, and 1 and 14 days after a 30 min downhill treadmill running exercise. Eccentric exercise induced muscle damage as evidenced by the analysis of muscle pain and weakness, creatine kinase serum activity, myoglobinaemia and ultrastructural analysis of muscle biopsies. The calpain 3 mRNA level was decreased immediately after exercise whereas calpain 2 mRNA level was increased at day 1. Both mRNA levels returned to control values by day 14. By contrast,
cathepsin
B+L and
proteasome
enzyme activities were increased at day 14. The alpha-sarcoglycan protein level was decreased immediately after exercise and at day 1, whereas the desmin level peaked at day 14. alphaB-crystallin and Hsp27 protein levels were increased at days 1 and 14. Our results suggest that the differential expression of calpain 2 and 3 mRNA levels may be important in the process of exercise-induced muscle damage, whereas expression of alpha-sarcoglycan, desmin, alphaB-crystallin and Hsp27 may be essentially involved in the subsequent remodelling of myofibrillar structure. This remodelling response may limit the extent of muscle damage upon a subsequent mechanical stress.
...
PMID:Molecular adaptations of neuromuscular disease-associated proteins in response to eccentric exercise in human skeletal muscle. 1218
Calpain-3 deficiency leads to muscular dystrophy in humans and mice and to perturbation of the NFkappaB/IkappaB pathway. As this phenotype is mainly atrophic, this study was performed to determine whether protein turnover and/or proteolytic gene expression was altered in muscles following calpain-3 deficiency. In vitro rates of protein turnover and of substrate ubiquitination, cathepsin B and B+L activities, and mRNA levels for several proteolytic genes were measured in skeletal muscles from 4-5 month-old control and calpain-3 knockout mice. Rates of protein synthesis and breakdown,
cathepsin
activities, and rates of substrate ubiquitination remained stable in muscles from calpain-3 deficient mice. However, and surprisingly, mRNA levels for cathepsin L, the 14-kDa ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2, and the C2 subunit of the 20S
proteasome
decreased by approximately 47% (P<0.005) in the gastrocnemius muscle from calpain-3 deficient mice. In contrast, muscle mRNA levels for ubiquitin and subunit S5a of the 26S
proteasome
were unaffected by calpain-3 deficiency. Taken together these data demonstrate that the expression of some genes that are involved in distinct proteolytic pathways is selectively and coordinately down-regulated without any effect on proteolysis. This suggests new pathophysiological hypotheses, e.g. a lack of maturation of NFkappaB precursor and/or a defect in specific substrate targeting.
...
PMID:Down-regulation of genes in the lysosomal and ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic pathways in calpain-3-deficient muscle. 1267 59
This study identifies calpain as being instrumental for brush border (BB) microvillus assembly during differentiation and effacement during bacterial pathogenesis. Calpain activity is decreased by 25-80% in Caco 2 lines stably overexpressing calpastatin, the physiological inhibitor of calpain, and the effect is proportional to the calpastatin/calpain ratio. These lines exhibit a 2.5-fold reduction in the rate of microvillus extension. Apical microvillus assembly is reduced by up to 50%, as measured by quantitative fluorometric microscopy (QFM) of ezrin, indicating that calpain recruits ezrin to BB microvilli. Calpain inhibitors ZLLYCHN2, MDL 28170, and PD 150606 block BB assembly and ezrin recruitment to the BB. The HIV protease inhibitor ritonavir, which inhibits calpain at clinically relevant concentrations, also blocks BB assembly, whereas
cathepsin
and
proteasome
inhibitors do not. Microvillus effacement is inhibited after exposure of calpastatin-overexpressing cells to enteropathogenic Escherichia coli. These results suggest that calpain regulates BB assembly as well as pathological effacement, and indicate that it is an important regulator involved in HIV protease inhibitor toxicity and host-microbial pathogen interactions.
...
PMID:Calpain regulates enterocyte brush border actin assembly and pathogenic Escherichia coli-mediated effacement. 1276 39
The ubiquitin-
proteasome
system is the major pathway for intracellular protein degradation in eukaryotic cells. Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is the key enzyme of vascular homeostasis involved in the pathophysiology of several cardiovascular diseases. The aim of our study was to investigate whether eNOS expression and activity are regulated by the
proteasome
. Bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (CPAE cells) were treated with the proteasome inhibitor MG132. MG132 (50-250 nmol/L) dose-dependently increased mRNA and protein levels of eNOS. Comparable results were obtained with other specific
proteasome
inhibitors, whereas the nonproteasomal calpain and
cathepsin
inhibitor ALLM had no effect. Efficacy of
proteasome
inhibition was evidenced by accumulation of poly-ubiquitinylated proteins and by measuring proteasomal activity in cell extracts. Cycloheximide prevented up-regulation of eNOS protein, indicating that post-translational stabilization of eNOS is not involved. eNOS activity was increased up to 2.8-fold (MG132 100 nmol/L, 48 h). Incubation of rat aortic rings with MG132 significantly enhanced endothelial-dependent vasorelaxation. Single MG132 treatment (100 nmol/L) induced long-term effects in CPAE cells, with increases of eNOS protein and activity for up to 10 days. Our results indicate that low-dose
proteasome
inhibition enhances eNOS expression and activity, and improves endothelial function.
...
PMID:Long-term up-regulation of eNOS and improvement of endothelial function by inhibition of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. 1476 21
Changes in protein conformation and proteolysis in chick myotubes in response to the induction of oxidative stress by H2O2 treatment were studied. Myotubes were treated for 1 h with H2O2. After this treatment, the H2O2 was removed and the cells were cultured in serum-free medium for 6 and 24 h. Protein carbonyl content, as an index of protein modification, was increased at 6 and 24 h after H2O2 treatment. N(tau)-methylhistidine release, as an index of myofibrillar proteolysis, was also increased at 6 and 24 h after H2O2 treatment. Calpain and
cathepsin
(B+L and D) activities were increased at 24 but not 6 h after H2O2 treatment. Proteasome activity was increased at 6 and 24 h after H2O2 treatment. These results indicate that oxidative stress increased
proteasome
activity and caused an increase in myofibrillar proteolysis during short-term incubation, whereas it increased calpain,
proteasome
and
cathepsin
activities during long-term incubation, finally resulting in an increase of myofibrillar proteolysis in chick myotubes.
...
PMID:Myofibrillar proteolysis in chick myotubes during oxidative stress. 1522 17
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