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Query: HUMANGGP:031927 (
cytokine
)
144,509
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) converting enzyme (
ICE
) processes the inactive IL-1 beta precursor to the proinflammatory
cytokine
. Adherent monocytes from mice harboring a disrupted
ICE
gene (
ICE
-/-) did not export IL-1 beta or interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1 alpha) after stimulation with lipopolysaccharide. Export of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-6 (IL-6) from these cells was also diminished. Thymocytes from
ICE
-/- mice were sensitive to apoptosis induced by dexamethasone or ionizing radiation, but were resistant to apoptosis induced by Fas antibody. Despite this defect in apoptosis,
ICE
-/- mice proceed normally through development.
...
PMID:Altered cytokine export and apoptosis in mice deficient in interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme. 753 75
The Caenorhabditis elegans death susceptibility gene, ced-3, has a number of homologs in vertebrate species, including interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta)-converting enzyme (
ICE
), Ich-1long, and CPP32. These genes, which encode a family of related proteases, have been shown to induce apoptosis when transfected into eukaryotic cells. However, it remains to be determined whether these proteases are involved in apoptotic cell death under physiological conditions. The purpose of these studies was to examine the role of
ICE
-related proteases (IRPs) in apoptosis using a physiologically relevant model system, the ovarian follicle. Somatic granulosa cells within ovarian follicles undergo apoptosis during follicular atresia, a process responsible for the depletion of greater than 95% of the follicles established in the postnatal ovary. To accomplish these studies, we cloned partial rat complementary DNAs encoding
ICE
, Ich-1, and CPP32 and used these complementary DNAs to examine the gonadotropin regulation of
ICE
, Ich-1, and CPP32 gene expression in the immature rat ovary. We also examined levels of
ICE
activity in healthy and atretic rat follicles by monitoring the conversion of exogenous pro-IL-1 beta to the active
cytokine
, and then evaluated the actions of recombinant IL-1 beta on apoptosis in follicles incubated in vitro. Finally, we tested the requirement for IRP activity in granulosa cell apoptosis and follicular atresia by incubating follicles without and with IRP inhibitors. Northern blot analysis of total RNA samples indicated that gonadotropin-promoted follicular survival was associated with reduced ovarian expression of messenger RNAs encoding Ich-1 and CPP32. In contrast,
ICE
messenger RNA levels were extremely low and were not affected by gonadotropin treatment. We were also unable to detect
ICE
activity in proteins extracted from either healthy or atretic rat follicles, collectively suggesting that
ICE
per se may not function in granulosa cell death. As another approach to determine whether
ICE
is involved in atresia, healthy antral follicles were isolated from ovaries of gonadotropin-primed immature rats and incubated for 24 h in the absence or presence of 100 ng/ml transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF alpha) without and with 100 ng/ml IL-1 beta. Granulosa cells within follicles incubated in medium alone exhibited extensive levels of apoptosis, and this onset of apoptosis was prevented by the inclusion of TGF alpha. Addition of IL-1 beta did not alter basal levels of apoptosis nor did the
cytokine
antagonize TGF-alpha-promoted follicle survival, providing additional evidence that
ICE
activity is not required for atresia to occur.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Interleukin-1 beta-converting enzyme-related proteases (IRPs) and mammalian cell death: dissociation of IRP-induced oligonucleosomal endonuclease activity from morphological apoptosis in granulosa cells of the ovarian follicle. 758 40
Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) converting enzyme (
ICE
) processes the precursor of the
cytokine
IL-1 beta to a mature, biologically active form in monocytes and macrophages. To further understand the role of
ICE
in regulating IL-1 beta-mediated biological functions, we have isolated several genomic clones encoding the full-length murine
ICE
gene. Southern blot comparison of murine genomic DNA and the clones indicates that
ICE
is a compact, single-copy gene 8616 bp in size. We sequenced the entire gene as well as 1.0-kb segment upstream of the coding region and determined that the gene consists of 10 exons whose organization parallels the functional organization of the
ICE
proenzyme in that the prodomain and p20 and p10 subunits of
ICE
are encoded by three clusters of exons. Two initiation sites, 37 and 32 nucleotides upstream of the initiator methionine, were identified by primer extension analysis. The 5' region of the
ICE
gene lacks a TATA box, a CAAT box, and SP1 sites. However, the presence of a completely conserved 14-bp sequence spanning the transcription initiation site of both the murine and the human
ICE
genes suggests that this sequence plays a role in transcription.
...
PMID:The structure and complete nucleotide sequence of the murine gene encoding interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme (ICE). 803 21
Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) converting enzyme (
ICE
) is a cysteine protease that specifically cleaves precursor IL-1 beta to its biologically active form. Recent studies have also implicated
ICE
in the induction of apoptosis in vertebrate cells. Because IL-1 plays a major role in acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) blast proliferation, we sought to investigate the effect of
ICE
inhibition on AML progenitors. To do this, we used bocaspartyl (benzyl) chloromethylketone (BACMK) an inhibitor designed to penetrate cells and bind covalently to the active site of
ICE
. Our preliminary experiments showed that incubation of activated peripheral blood cells with 2.5 mumol/L of BAMCK downregulated production of mature IL-1 beta but had no effect on tumor necrosis factor-alpha. To test the effects of the inhibitor on AML cells, we first used the OCI/AML3 cell line. We found that these cells produce IL-1 beta and bind the biotinylated
cytokine
and that IL-1 inhibitors, such as IL-1 neutralizing antibodies, IL-1 receptor antagonist, and soluble IL-1 receptors, specifically inhibit OCI/AML3 proliferation, indicating that IL-1 beta is an autocrine growth factor for OCI/AML3 cells. The
ICE
inhibitor suppressed OCI/AML3 growth in a dose-dependent manner (at 0.4 to 4 mumol/L) and downregulated mature IL-1 beta production, as assessed by Western immunoblotting. Similar results were obtained with marrow aspirates from 16 AML patients. The
ICE
inhibitor suppressed proliferation of AML precursors (by up to 78%; mean, 44%) in a dose-dependent fashion at concentrations ranging from 0.4 to 5 mumol/L but not proliferation of normal marrow progenitors; the suppressive effect was reversed by IL-1 beta. Furthermore, incubation of AML cells with 4 mumol/L BAMCK downregulated the production of mature IL-1 beta, suggesting that the growth-inhibitory effect is mediated through suppression of the biologically active
cytokine
. Our data indicate that inhibition of
ICE
suppresses AML blast proliferation and suggest that
ICE
inhibitors may have a role in future therapies for AML.
...
PMID:Effect of interleukin-1 beta converting enzyme inhibitor on acute myelogenous leukemia progenitor proliferation. 854 50
Apoptosis is an important cellular process by which superfluous or unwanted cells are deleted from an organism during tissue remodeling and differentiation. Recent studies have demonstrated the role of this programmed cell death or "controlled cell suicide" in the physiological function of an organism. Suppression of apoptosis increases the susceptibility of an individual to malignancy whereas uncontrolled cell death is associated with degenerative diseases. Normal development of both female and male gonads is characterized by massive cell death. More than 99% of ovarian follicles endowed at early life are destined to undergo apoptosis and the exhaustion of these follicles serves as a "clock" for female reproductive senescence. In the testis, up to 75% of male germ cells also undergo apoptosis, perhaps as a mechanism to delete superfluous or defective germ cells. Gonadal cell apoptosis provides valuable models to study hormonal regulation of apoptosis. In the ovary, gonadotropins, estrogens, growth hormone, growth factors (IGFI, EGF/TGF-alpha, basic FGF),
cytokine
(interleukin-1 beta) and nitric oxide act in concert to ensure the survival of preovulatory follicles. In contrast, androgens, interleukin-6 and gonadal GnRH-like peptide are apoptotic factors. Developmental studies further indicate that fractions of endowed follicles are recruited throughout the reproductive life whereas most of the primordial follicles are "arrested" at the initial stage of development for a prolonged time. Because a transcriptional factor WT1 is expressed in high levels in follicles at early stages of development and because WT1 over-expression represses the promoter activity of inhibin-alpha gene, this nuclear protein may be important in the maintenance of follicles at early stages of development. Once a cohort of follicles is recruited to grow, it is destined to undergo apoptosis unless rescued by survival factors. After puberty onset and under gonadotropin stimulation, some of the growing antral follicles are "selected" to continue their final maturation and secrete high levels of estrogens to trigger ovulation. Following repeated cycles of recruitment, atresia or ovulation, the follicle reserve is exhausted, thus signaling the onset of reproductive senescence. Although the somatic granulosa cell is the major cell type undergoing apoptosis in the ovary, the germ cells in the testis also exhibit signs of apoptotic cell demise. In the testis, gonadotropins and androgens act as survival factors whereas exposure to elevated temperature in cryptorchid testes increases apoptosis. In the seasonally breeding hamster model, photoperiod-entrained regression and recrudescence of testis tissue serves as a unique natural model of apoptosis. With recent advances in our understanding of the cellular mechanism of apoptosis, including the elucidation of the Ced9/bc12 and Ced3/
ICE
family of proteins, further investigation of gonadal apoptosis may lead to a better understanding of gonadal degenerative disorders (such as premature ovarian failure and oligospermia), reproductive senescence and tumorigenesis. The gonadal model should also be valuable in studying the regulation of intracellular apoptosis genes by external hormonal signals.
...
PMID:Gonadal cell apoptosis. 870 Oct 90
Prointerleukin-1 beta (pro-IL-1 beta) is the only known physiologic substrate of the interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta)-converting enzyme (
ICE
), the founding member of the
ICE
/ced-3 cell death gene family. Since secreted mature IL-1 beta has been detected after apoptosis, we investigated whether this
cytokine
, when produced endogenously, plays a role in cell death. We found that hypoxia-induced apoptosis can be inhibited by either the IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) or by neutralizing antibodies to IL-1 or to its type 1 receptor. IL-1Ra also inhibits apoptosis induced by trophic factor deprivation in primary neurons, as well as by tumor necrosis factor alpha in fibroblasts. In addition, during the G1/S phase arrest, mature IL-1 beta induces apoptosis through a pathway independent of CrmA-sensitive gene activity. We also demonstrate that Ice, when expressed in COS cells, requires the coexpression of pro-IL-1 beta for the induction of apoptosis, which is inhibited by IL-1Ra. Interestingly, we found that mature IL-1 beta has antiapoptotic activity when added exogenously before the onset of hypoxia, which we found is caused in part by its ability to downregulate the IL-1 receptor. Our findings demonstrate that pro-IL-1 beta is a substrate of
ICE
relevant to cell death, and depending on the temporal cellular commitment to apoptosis, mature IL-1 beta may function as a positive or negative mediator of cell death.
...
PMID:Functional role of interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta) in IL-1 beta-converting enzyme-mediated apoptosis. 876 Aug 25
A new member of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF)
cytokine
family, designated Apo-2 ligand (Apo-21) [1] or TRAIL [2], has been shown recently to induce apoptosis in various tumor cell lines; however, its biological role is unknown. Here, we show that Apo-21, activated apoptosis in T-cell-enriched cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes stimulated by interleukin-2 (IL-2), but not in unstimulated cells. This finding suggests that, like Fas/Apo-1 ligand and TNF [3-5], Apo-2L may play a role in regulating post-stimulation apoptosis of mature lymphocytes. Studies on the mechanism of Apo-2L action demonstrated marked membrane blebbing, a hallmark of apoptosis, within a few minutes of the addition of Apo-2L to tumor cells. Ectopic expression of a dominant negative mutant of FADD, a cytoplasmic protein that mediates death signalling by Fas/Apo-1 and by TNF receptor type 1 (TNFR1) [6-9], inhibited the induction of apoptosis by anti-Fas/Apo-1 antibody, but had little effect on Apo-2L function. In contrast, expression of CrmA, a cowpox virus-derived inhibitor of the Ced-2-like proteases
ICE
[10] and CPP32/Yama [11,12], blocked the induction of apoptosis by either Apo-2L or anti-Fas/Apo-1 antibody. These results suggest that Apo-2L activates a rapid, FADD-independent pathway to trigger a cell-death programme that requires the function of cysteine proteases such as
ICE
or CPP32/Yama.
...
PMID:Activation of apoptosis by Apo-2 ligand is independent of FADD but blocked by CrmA. 879 1
The cysteine protease
interleukin-1beta converting enzyme
(
ICE
) is implicated as an effector of apoptosis in mammalian cells. Proteolytic activity of
ICE
can be blocked in vitro by the
cytokine
response modifier A (crmA), a serpin-like protease inhibitor encoded by cowpox virus. Here we show that CD2 enhancer-driven expression of crmA in T lymphocytes of transgenic mice (CD2-crmA mice) reduces CD95 (Fas/APO-1)-transduced apoptosis in vitro to the level seen in CD95-deficient mutant lpr mice, but does not protect against gamma-radiation or corticosteroid-induced cell death. Unlike lpr mice, CD2-crmA transgenic mice developed neither T cell hyperplasia nor serum autoantibodies. These results provide evidence that the phenotype of lpr mice is not simply due to failure of CD95 to trigger T cell apoptosis mediated by
ICE
.
...
PMID:CrmA expression in T lymphocytes of transgenic mice inhibits CD95 (Fas/APO-1)-transduced apoptosis, but does not cause lymphadenopathy or autoimmune disease. 889 61
The interacting cellular and molecular systems which we classify as immunity and inflammation evolved to protect the organism from exogenous parasites including viruses and bacteria. Cytokines play a pivotal, but paradoxical, role both in immunity and inflammation. These local peptide hormone-like molecules form a major arm of the organisms, defenses against infectious microorganisms but they are also implicated as potent mediators of the pathology of infectious diseases. The apparently lethal effects of interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor in experimental septic shock testify to the latter. In the current paradigm,
cytokine
induction, as a protective or pathological mechanism, is a direct response to the presence of infectious microorganisms. Evidence is now accumulating that cytokines play a much more complex role in the interplay between exogenous microorganisms and the host. For example, it has been established that viruses have evolved pro-active methods of subverting the
cytokine
network by producing: (i) soluble
cytokine
receptors which bind and inactivate cytokines, (ii) immunomodulatory
cytokine
homologues, and (iii)
ICE
inhibitors. The possibility exists that the major role of these 'viral cytokines' is to neutralize certain host responses. Recent
cytokine
transgenic knockouts demonstrate that the normal benign response to commensal gut microflora becomes a lethal inflammatory state in the absence of the cytokines interleukin 2 or interleukin 10. The human body contains an enormous number of microorganisms which constitute the normal microflora. It is estimated that the average human contains 10(13) eukaryotic cells but 10(14) bacteria. We propose that the ability of the multicellular organism to live harmoniously with its commensal microflora must depend on mutual signalling involving eukaryotic cytokines and prokaryotic
cytokine
-like molecules. Such interactive signalling sets up non-inflammatory
cytokine
networks in tissues which form the background on which responses to infectious microorganisms must be built and related. The capacity of bacteria to induce
cytokine
synthesis was believed to be due to a small number of components, such as lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which is only active as a complex with host factors (lipopolysaccharide binding protein and CD14). However, it is now clear that bacteria contain and produce a large number of diverse molecules which can selectively induce the synthesis of both pro-inflammatory and immunomodulatory/anti-inflammatory cytokines. Many toxins are potent inducers of
cytokine
release or synthesis and some can inhibit LPS-induced cell activation. We have introduced the term bacteriokine to describe these bacterial
cytokine
inducers. The question that has to be addressed therefore is - who controls the
cytokine
network (eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells) and how is it controlled? It is proposed that an understanding of this question will bring with it an understanding of how to control the pathological inflammatory response and may allow the development of truly effective anti-inflammatory agents.
...
PMID:Microbial/host interactions in health and disease: who controls the cytokine network? 891 90
The interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) converting enzyme (
ICE
) processes the inactive IL-1beta precursor to the proinflammatory
cytokine
.
ICE
was also shown to cleave the precursor of interferon-gamma inducing factor (IGIF) at the authentic processing site with high efficiency, thereby activating IGIF and facilitating its export. Lipopolysaccharide-activated
ICE
-deficient (
ICE
-/-) Kupffer cells synthesized the IGIF precursor but failed to process it into the active form. Interferon-gamma and IGIF were diminished in the sera of
ICE
-/- mice exposed to Propionibacterium acnes and lipopolysaccharide. The lack of multiple proinflammatory cytokines in
ICE
-/- mice may account for their protection from septic shock.
...
PMID:Activation of interferon-gamma inducing factor mediated by interleukin-1beta converting enzyme. 899 48
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