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Query: EC:6.2.1.7 (
BAL
)
1,977
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To detect nuclear proteins that might be involved in induction of cellular mitogenesis, we examined the effect of various mitogens on early changes in synthesis of nuclear proteins in murine B lymphocytes. Using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, we found that activation of B cells by mitogens (anti-immunoglobulin antibody,
lipopolysaccharide
, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)/A23187) was associated with a rapid and prominent (5-20-fold) increase in the synthesis of a 40-kDa/pI 5.0 nuclear protein, here termed numatrin. Numatrin was found to be absent from the cytosol (soluble fraction) of resting as well as activated B cells and was markedly resistant to DNase/RNase digestion and 2 N NaCl extraction, indicating that this protein is tightly bound to the nuclear matrix. Kinetic studies showed that the increase in synthesis of numatrin was detected 60-120 min following mitogen activation, reached a peak at 16 h, and declined to almost control level by 48 h, correlating with the peak of cellular DNA synthesis. The increase in synthesis of numatrin in normal B cells was found to be associated exclusively with cellular commitment for mitogenesis because activation of B cells by stimuli such as B cell stimulating factor 1, PMA alone, and calcium ionophore A23187, which do not stimulate an increase in DNA synthesis, also failed to induce an increase in the synthesis of numatrin. Inhibition of anti-Ig-induced proliferation (by PMA pretreatment) was associated with a 63% inhibition in the synthesis of numatrin. Addition of 8-mercaptoguanosine to these PMA-treated cells was associated with restoration of the increase in synthesis of numatrin, concomitant with induction of proliferation. Elevated synthesis of numatrin was also detected in the malignant B lymphoma cells: Raji,
BAL
-17, and WEHI-231. Taken collectively, these results suggest that numatrin, a tightly bound nuclear matrix protein, is a growth-regulated protein which might have an important role in regulation of cellular mitogenesis in normal and malignant B lymphocytes.
...
PMID:"Numatrin," a nuclear matrix protein associated with induction of proliferation in B lymphocytes. 330 55
CD14 is a myeloid differentiation antigen which exists in a membrane-bound (55 kD) and a soluble (48 kD) form. This antigen is a receptor for
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) structures and triggers the production of various cytokines. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether in active sarcoidosis, a disease with increased proportions of alveolar macrophages (AM) with CD14 expression in
BAL
fluid, the soluble form of CD14 (sCD14) is also increased. The sCD14 levels were measured in
BAL
fluid with an ELISA, and membrane-bound CD14 was determined by an immunoperoxidase assay, in active sarcoidosis (n = 13), inactive sarcoidosis (n = 9), idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) (n = 6), and control subjects (n = 8). Higher concentrations of sCD14 were present in
BAL
fluid of patients with active sarcoidosis (58 +/- 34 ng/ml) than in those with inactive disease (13 +/- 10 ng/ml), patients with IPF (5 +/- 5 ng/ml), or control subjects (10 +/- 8% ng/ml) (p < 0.01). Similarly, the proportions of AM expressing membrane-bound CD14 were increased in active sarcoidosis (91 +/- 6%) compared with inactive sarcoidosis (82 +/- 6%), patients with IPF (76 +/- 13%), and control subjects (79 +/- 9%) (p < .05). In sarcoidosis, a significant correlation was found between the sCD14 concentration in
BAL
fluid and AM membrane expression of CD14 (r = 0.57, p < 0.01). We conclude that sCD14 is increased in
BAL
of active sarcoidosis suggesting a potential role for this substance as marker of activity and in the pathogenesis of pulmonary sarcoidosis.
...
PMID:Soluble CD14 is increased in bronchoalveolar lavage of active sarcoidosis and correlates with alveolar macrophage membrane-bound CD14. 753 Oct 99
Pulmonary vascular sequestration of leukocytes has been reported to increase in some models of lung injury, including that induced by gram-negative bacterial
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
). Neutrophils recruited to the lung likely participate in
LPS
-induced lung inflammation and associated injury, but the functional activities of these pulmonary vascular neutrophils have not been directly assessed. In the current study, cells were recovered by pulmonary vascular lavage (PVL) of isolated rat lungs, harvested 2 h after intravenous infusion of
LPS
(3 mg/kg) or saline in intact rats, at which time
LPS
-induced neutrophil recruitment to the lung could be appreciated histologically but not by airway lavage. Relative concentrations of leukocytes recovered from the pulmonary vasculature by PVL were compared with those present in circulating blood, normalizing for lavage dilution on the basis of erythrocyte counts. Excess neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, and eosinophils were recovered from the pulmonary vasculature of controls, and
LPS
infusion increased recovery of neutrophils (most prominently), lymphocytes, and monocytes. Compared with cells recovered from controls, PVL neutrophils from
LPS
-infused animals were primed for increased zymosan-stimulated superoxide generation, determined by ferricytochrome C reduction, and were more adherent to nylon wool columns. Northern blots of extracted RNA demonstrated that
LPS
infusion also upregulated interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) mRNA expression in PVL leukocyte samples, but not
BAL
or circulating blood samples. Ficoll-hypaque separation demonstrated that the
LPS
-induced IL-1 beta signal in PVL leukocytes was derived primarily from polymorphonuclear rather than mononuclear leukocytes. In conclusion, all circulating leukocyte populations are sequestered in rat lungs, and
LPS
increases pulmonary vascular sequestration of leukocytes, recruiting most prominently an activated pool of neutrophils that are more adherent, primed for increased oxygen radical production, and expressing increased IL-1 beta message. These findings suggest a more prominent role than previously appreciated for sequestered neutrophils in sepsis-induced lung inflammation.
...
PMID:Activated pulmonary vascular neutrophils as early mediators of endotoxin-induced lung inflammation. 838 Dec 91
Endotoxin
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) administered intratracheally to rats causes pulmonary tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF) and interleukin-1 (IL-1) production and results in acute broncho-alveolar neutrophilic inflammation. In the present study, the recombinant human TNF soluble receptor type I (sTNFrI) co-injected intratracheally with
LPS
is shown to inhibit significantly (P < 0.0001) the number of neutrophils in bronchoalveolar lavage specimens at 6 hours as compared to intratracheal injection of
LPS
alone. The sTNFrI was at least as effective as the recombinant human IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) as an inhibitor of acute inflammation. Inhibition of
LPS
-induced acute inflammation by the combination of sTNFrI and IL-1ra was not significantly more than the inhibition afforded by sTNFrI alone. Intratracheal co-injection of sTNFrI with
LPS
unexpectedly increased TNF levels in
BAL
specimens, perhaps by changing the normal catabolism of TNF. On the other hand, co-injection of sTNFrI and
LPS
decreased IL-6 levels in
BAL
fluid, most likely by interfering with the induction of IL-6 by TNF. The sTNFrI may prove to be an important pharmacological down-regulator of acute inflammation.
...
PMID:Intratracheal administration of endotoxin and cytokines. IV. The soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor type I inhibits acute inflammation. 838 71
The mouse 3' enhancer contains a high-affinity binding site for the paired box protein Pax-5. Here, we demonstrate by genomic footprinting that the rat 3' enhancer contains a low-affinity binding site for Pax-5, which is occupied in activated splenic B cells. Thus, binding of Pax-5 to the IgH 3' enhancer appears to be evolutionarily conserved in rodents. Analysis of Pax-5 expression in primary B cells demonstrates that Pax-5 remains expressed after 4 days of
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) induction, but is down-regulated in 5-day stimulated cells. Similarly, the expression of Pax-5 is down-regulated in vivo in activated large splenocytes, in contrast to small resting cells. Multimerization of the high-affinity Pax-5 binding site linked to a heterologous reporter gene demonstrates that Pax-5 can function as a transcriptional activator. In contrast, Pax-5 overexpressed in cell lines represses both the mouse and the rat 3' enhancer. Surprinsingly, cross-linking of the IgM receptor in
BAL
-17 cells containing a stably integrated 3' enhancer-dependent beta globin reporter gene demonstrates that induction of 3' enhancer activity is not blocked by Pax-5. Moreover, stimulation of 3' enhancer beta globin-transgenic splenocytes demonstrate that Pax-5 cannot repress-activation of the 3' enhancer upon
LPS
induction or CD40 receptor stimulation. Hence, activation of the IgH 3' enhancer occurs independently of changes in Pax-5 gene expression. This indicates that previous studies conducted in vitro may be an oversimplification of the function of Pax-5 and 3' enhancer activity.
...
PMID:Physiological activation of the IgH 3' enhancer in B lineage cells is not blocked by Pax-5. 889 66
Human cyclin G2 together with its closest homolog cyclin G1 defines a novel family of cyclins (Horne, M. C., Goolsby, G. L., Donaldson, K. L., Tran, D., Neubauer, M., and Wahl, A. F. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 6050-6061). Cyclin G2 is highly expressed in the immune system where immunologic tolerance subjects self-reactive lymphocytes to negative selection and clonal deletion via apoptosis. Here we investigated the effect of growth inhibitory signals on cyclin G2 mRNA abundance in different maturation stage-specific murine B cell lines. Upon treatment of wild-type and p53 null B cell lines with the negative growth factor, transforming growth factor beta1, or the growth inhibitory corticosteroid dexamethasone, cyclin G2 mRNA levels were increased in a time-dependent manner 5-14-fold over control cell levels. Unstimulated immature B cell lines (WEHI-231 and CH31) and unstimulated or IgM B cell receptor (BCR) -stimulated mature B cell lines (
BAL
-17 and CH12) rapidly proliferate and express low levels of cyclin G2 mRNA. In contrast, BCR-stimulated immature B cell lines undergo growth arrest and coincidentally exhibit an approximately 10-fold increase in cyclin G2 transcripts and a decrease in cyclin D2 message. Costimulation of WEHI-231 and CH31 cells with calcium ionophores and protein kinase C agonists partially mimics anti-IgM stimulation and elicits a strong up-regulation of cyclin G2 mRNA and down-regulation of cyclin D2 mRNA. Signaling mutants of WEHI-231 that are deficient in the phosphoinositide signaling pathway and consequently resistant to the BCR stimulus-induced growth arrest did not display a significant increase in cyclin G2 or decrease in cyclin D2 mRNAs when challenged with anti-IgM antibodies. The two polyclonal activators
lipopolysaccharide
and soluble gp39, which inhibit the growth arrest response of immature B cells, suppressed cyclin G2 mRNA expression induced by BCR stimulation. These results suggest that in murine B cells responding to growth inhibitory stimuli cyclin G2 may be a key negative regulator of cell cycle progression.
...
PMID:Cyclin G2 is up-regulated during growth inhibition and B cell antigen receptor-mediated cell cycle arrest. 913 21
Glucocorticoids, while potent antiinflammatory agents, have not been proven to be efficacious in Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, ARDS. Previous studies from this laboratory have reported that dexamethasone pretreatment of rats resulted in a 40-60% reduction in neutrophil influx into the airways following intratracheal administration of
lipopolysaccharide
, LPS. In the present study, the in vivo effects of dexamethasone on
BAL
neutrophil effector functions were evaluated by flow cytometry.
BAL
neutrophils from rats pretreated with dexamethasone (20 mg/kg, i.p. at 2 h before and 8 h after LPS) and harvested 20 h after LPS challenge demonstrated a 35% reduction in their ability to undergo an ex vivo oxidative burst with phorbol myristate acetate. This modest reduction in the oxidative burst was not related to a more general suppression of neutrophil effector functions as neither phagocytosis of opsonized bacteria nor expression of the beta-2 integrins CD11a and CD11b were similarly inhibited. Therefore, the neutrophil population which has migrated into the airways in dexamethasone pretreated rats retains the capacity to mediate host defense but also to exacerbate inflammation associated tissue damage.
...
PMID:In vivo dexamethasone effects on neutrophil effector functions in a rat model of acute lung injury. 942 7
It is generally accepted that physiological modulators for tumour necrosis factor (TNF) are present in a variety of body fluids including serum. Among these modulators are soluble TNF receptors (TNF-R) that are cleaved from the extracellular domain of the TNF-Rs. Two receptors of different structures with molecular weights of 55 kDa (CD120a) and 75 kDa (CD120b) are known to be expressed on monocytes, lymphocytes, granulocytes and other cells of peripheral blood. The aim of our study was to determine the expression of CD120a and CD120b on bronchoalveolar lavage cells (
BAL
cells).
BAL
cells of 14 patients with different pulmonary disorders were stained with anti-CD120a and anti-CD120b monoclonal antibodies and were differentiated by FACS analysis. Both TNF-Rs are expressed on monocytes, macrophages, lymphocytes and granulocytes of the
BAL
. Although the relation of CD120a to CD120b is individual for a given cell type and an individual patient, strict correlations between both receptors were observed for
BAL
monocytes and alveolar macrophages. CD120a are expressed on 29.7% of alveolar macrophages; similar data were obtained for CD120b. 24.3% of the
BAL
monocytes were positive for CD120a and 25.5% for CD120b. 4.1% of the
BAL
lymphocytes were positive for CD120a whereas the percentage of CD120b positive
BAL
lymphocytes was approximately six times greater. Analysis of
BAL
granulocytes revealed 21.2% cells positive for CD120a and 11.6% for CD120b. In contrast to the
BAL
cells named above there was no positive correlation between CD120a and CD120b expression on
BAL
lymphocytes and granulocytes. We were able to show that TNF-Rs of
BAL
cells, like those of blood cells, are shedded in vitro after incubation with or without
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
), detected as TNFalpha-inhibitor activity in cell culture supernatant. In conclusion,
BAL
cells express and shed TNF-Rs, as is known for cells of other body compartments.
...
PMID:Expression of tumour necrosis factor receptors (CD120a and CD120b) on bronchoalveolar cells. 1043 9
Microbial growth in buildings is associated with respiratory symptoms in the occupants. However, the specific effects of the microbes and the way they provoke clinical manifestations are poorly understood. In the current study, mice were exposed via intratracheal instillation to single doses of the spores of Streptomyces californicus, isolated from indoor air of a moisture-damaged building (2.2 x 10(7), 1.1 x 10(8), and 3.3 x 10(8) spores), or
lipopolysaccharide
(50 microg). Inflammation and toxicity in lungs were evaluated 24 h later. The time course of the effects was explored with the dose of 1.1 x 10(8) spores for up to 7 days. The microbial spores elevated proinflammatory cytokine (i.e., TNFalpha and IL-6) levels in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) and in serum in a dose- and time-dependent manner and evoked expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase in
BAL
cells. Both TNFalpha and IL-6 responses peaked at 6 h after instillation, but TNFalpha leveled off more quickly than IL-6. The cytokine surge was followed by inflammatory cell recruitment into airways. Moreover, the spores increased dose- and time-dependently total protein, albumin, hemoglobin, and lactate dehydrogenase concentrations in BALF during the first 24 h. Histopathological examination of lungs confirmed the inflammatory changes. With the exception of macrophage and lymphocyte numbers, all parameters returned to control level at 7 days. In summary, these observations indicate that the spores of S. californicus are capable of provoking an acute inflammation in mouse lungs and can cause cytotoxicity. Thus, S. californicus can be considered as a species with potential to cause adverse health effects in occupants of moisture-damaged buildings.
...
PMID:Inflammatory responses in mice after intratracheal instillation of spores of Streptomyces californicus isolated from indoor air of a moldy building. 1118 Nov 12
To determine the effect of heat stress on histopathology of acute lung injury (ALI) caused by administration of
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
), and to determine the roles of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interleukin (IL)-1beta, interferon (IFN)-gamma, IL-10 and surfactants in heat-induced tolerance to ALI, we administered either saline or
LPS
(3 mg/kg of body weight) intravenously to male Sprague-Dawley rats without and with heat pretreatment. Five hours after
LPS
or saline treatment (23 h after heat-pretreatment), samples were obtained. We found that the histopathologic features of
LPS
-induced ALI were attenuated by heat-pretreatment. Heat-pretreatment did not decrease the elevated plasma or
BAL
fluid levels of TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, and IFN-gamma by
LPS
. The plasma level of IL-10 in
LPS
-treated rats with heat-pretreatment, however, was increased compared to that of
LPS
-treated rats without heat-pretreatment (P = 0.001). There were no differences in the
BAL
fluid concentrations of light or heavy density pulmonary surfactant phospholipids depending on heat-pretreatment in
LPS
-treated rats. These observations suggest that IL-10 might play a role in decreasing
LPS
-induced acute lung injury after heat-pretreatment.
...
PMID:Effects of heat pretreatment on histopathology, cytokine production, and surfactant in endotoxin-induced acute lung injury. 1140 10
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