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Query: UMLS:C0003873 (
rheumatoid arthritis
)
53,068
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Dialysis-related amyloidosis (DRA) is caused by the deposition, in target tissues, of beta(2)-microglobulin (beta(2)M) in fibrillar conformation. Several reports indicate that fibrillar beta(2)M is chemically heterogeneous and such heterogeneity is partially related to the presence of truncated species of the protein. In association with the full-length species, a beta(2)M isoform lacking six N-terminal residues is present in all the samples of our collection of ex vivo fibrils. The pattern of proteolytic cleavage in amyloidosis and in other diseases is completely different, as demonstrated by the absence in fibrillar beta(2)M of the cleavage at
lysine
58, which is contrary to that described in
rheumatoid arthritis
and other diseases. The role of limited proteolysis of beta(2)M in the pathogenesis of the disease is uncertain. However, we have shown that the apparently minor modification of the intact protein, such as the removal of N-terminal hexapeptide, is capable of dramatically affecting its stability, protection from proteolytic digestion, and enhance its capacity to make in vitro amyloid fibrils. The structure, folding dynamic, and function of the truncated species of beta(2)M, peculiar of DRA, could shed new light on the mechanism of beta(2)M fibril formation and reabsorption.
...
PMID:Dynamic of beta(2)-microglobulin fibril formation and reabsorption: the role of proteolysis. 1126 79
Effects of cell walls (CWs) from two almost identical strains of Bifidobacterium adolescentis were studied in rats, using three different doses. A single i.p. injection of both CWs triggered a long-lasting arthritis with CW degradation products present in the joint tissue. Histologically, the arthritis was characterized by inflammatory cells, synovial hyperplasia, pannus formation and bone erosion, closely resembling human
rheumatoid arthritis
(RA). In addition, CWs of the other strain induced a remarkable granuloma formation in the spleen and liver. Both CWs have the same peptidoglycan (PG) type A4alpha/beta, but differ from each other in three aspects. CW of the granuloma inducing strain: firstly has more
lysine
and less ornithine in PG stem peptides; secondly is more resistant to lysozyme degradation, and thirdly is better retained in the spleen. All these in comparison to the other strain used. Such characteristics are associated with the capacity to induce chronic arthritis, but it remains open how crucial they are for the granuloma formation.
...
PMID:Experimental chronic arthritis and granulomatous inflammation induced by bifidobacterium cell walls. 1143 64
Immunization of mice with type II collagen (CII), a cartilage-restricted protein, leads to collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), a model for
rheumatoid arthritis
(RA). CIA symptoms consist of an erosive joint inflammation caused by an autoimmune attack, mediated by both T and B lymphocytes. CD4+ alphabeta T cells play a central role in CIA, both by helping B cells to produce anti-CII antibodies, and by interacting with other cells in the joints, eg macrophages. In H-2q mice, most CII-specific CD4+ T cells recognize the CII(256-270) peptide presented on the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II Aq molecule. Post-translational modifications (hydroxylation and variable glycosylation) of the
lysine
residue at position 264 of CII generate at least four different T-cell determinants that are specifically recognized by distinct T-cell subsets. Most T cells recognize CII(256-270) glycosylated with the monosaccharide galactose, which is consequently immunodominant in CIA. Recent studies indicate that the arthritogenic T cells in CIA are glycopeptide-specific, suggesting that induction of self-tolerance may be rendered more difficult by glycosylation of CII. These data open the possibility that outoimmune disease may be caused by the creation of new epitopes by posttranslational modification of proteins under circumstances such as trauma, inflammation or ageing.
...
PMID:Role of glycopeptide-specific T cells in collagen-induced arthritis: an example how post-translational modification of proteins may be involved in autoimmune disease. 1168 Jul 93
Rheumatoid arthritis
is an autoimmune disease in which susceptibility is strongly associated with the expression of specific HLA-DR haplotypes, including DR1 (DRB1*0101) and DR4 (DRB1*0401). As transgenes, both of these class II molecules mediate susceptibility to an autoimmune arthritis induced by immunization with human type II collagen (hCII). The dominant T cell response of both the DR1 and DR4 transgenic mice to hCII is focused on the same determinant core, CII(263-270). Peptide binding studies revealed that the affinity of DR1 and DR4 for CII(263-270) was at least 10 times less than that of the model Ag HA(307-319), and that the affinity of DR4 for the CII peptide is 3-fold less than that of DR1. As predicted based on the crystal structures, the majority of the CII-peptide binding affinity for DR1 and DR4 is controlled by the Phe(263); however, unexpectedly the adjacent
Lys
(264) also contributed significantly to the binding affinity of the peptide. Only these two CII amino acids were found to provide binding anchors. Amino acid substitutions at the remaining positions had either no effect or significantly increased the affinity of the hCII peptide. Affinity-enhancing substitutions frequently involved replacement of a negative charge, or Gly or Pro, hallmark amino acids of CII structure. These data indicate that DR1 and DR4 bind this CII peptide in a nearly identical manner and that the primary structure of CII may dictate a different binding motif for DR1 and DR4 than has been described for other peptides that bind to these alleles.
...
PMID:HLA-DR1 (DRB1*0101) and DR4 (DRB1*0401) use the same anchor residues for binding an immunodominant peptide derived from human type II collagen. 1175 69
During acute inflammation, leukocytes release proteolytic enzymes including matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), but the physiopathological mechanisms and consequences of this process are not yet fully understood. Neutrophils, the predominant leukocyte type, produce neutrophil collagenase (MMP-8) and gelatinase B (MMP-9) but not the tissue inhibitors of MMPs. After stimulation, these cells also activate MMPs chemically. In arthritic diseases, neutrophils undergo great chemoattraction to the synovium, are activated by interleukin-8, and are stimulated to release gelatinase B in vivo. Production levels and net activities of gelatinase B were found to be absent in degenerative osteoarthritis but significantly increased in
rheumatoid arthritis
. The cleavage sites in cartilage type II collagen by gelatinase B were determined by a combination of reverse phase high-performance liquid chromatography, Edman degradation, and mass spectrometry analysis. The analysis revealed the site specificity of proline and
lysine
hydroxylations and O-linked glycosylation, the cleavage specificities by gelatinase B, and the preferential absence and presence of post-translational modifications at P2' and P5', respectively. Furthermore, gelatinase B leaves the immunodominant peptides intact, which are known from studies with (autoreactive) T cells.
Lysine
hydroxylation was detected at a critical position for T-cell activation. These data lend support to the thesis that extracellular proteolysis and other post-translational modifications of antigenic peptides may be critical in the establishment and perpetuation of autoimmune processes.
...
PMID:Cleavage of denatured natural collagen type II by neutrophil gelatinase B reveals enzyme specificity, post-translational modifications in the substrate, and the formation of remnant epitopes in rheumatoid arthritis. 1187 87
Mannose-binding lectin (MBL) plays a critical role in innate immunity. Point mutations in the collagen-like domain (R32C, G34D, or G37E) of MBL cause a serum deficiency, predisposing patients to infections and diseases such as
rheumatoid arthritis
. We examined whether MBL mutants show enhanced susceptibility to proteolysis by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), which are important mediators in inflammatory tissue destruction. Human and rat MBL were resistant to proteolysis in the native state but were cleaved selectively within the collagen-like domain by multiple MMPs after heat denaturation. In contrast, rat MBL with mutations homologous to those of the human variants (R23C, G25D, or G28E) was cleaved efficiently without denaturation in the collagen-like domain by MMP-2 and MMP-9 (gelatinases A and B) and MMP-14 (membrane type-1 MMP), as well as by MMP-1 (collagenase-1), MMP-8 (neutrophil collagenase), MMP-3 (stromelysin-1), neutrophil elastase, and bacterial collagenase. Sites and order of cleavage of the rat MBL mutants for MMP-2 and MMP-9 were: Gly(45)-
Lys
(46) --> Gly(51)-Ser(52) --> Gly(63)-Gln(64) --> Asn(80)-Met(81) which differed from that of MMP-14, Gly(39)-Leu(40) --> Asn(80)-Met(81), revealing that the MMPs were not functionally interchangeable. These sites were homologous to those cleaved in denatured human MBL. Hence, perturbation of the collagen-like structure of MBL by natural mutations or by denaturation renders MBL susceptible to MMP cleavage. MMPs are likely to contribute to MBL deficiency in individuals with variant alleles and may also be involved in clearance of MBL and modulation of the host response in normal individuals.
...
PMID:Mannose-binding lectin (MBL) mutants are susceptible to matrix metalloproteinase proteolysis: potential role in human MBL deficiency. 1189 Dec 30
Synovial hyperplasia is an important feature of
rheumatoid arthritis
(RA) and we have reported that several transcription factors were highly activated in rheumatoid synoviocytes. The purpose of this study was to examine nuclear acetylation in synoviocytes as an activation marker and determine its role in cell activation. Autonomous acetylation of approximately 53 and 62 kDa nuclear proteins was detected in rheumatoid synoviocytes by anti-acetylated
lysine
specific antibody. Furthermore, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha), a potent mitogen for synoviocytes, dose-dependently increased their state of acetylation. Immunoprecipitation analysis revealed that 53 kDa acetylated protein (ap53) was identical with p53, a tumor suppressor gene product. Since enhanced p53 binding to the promoter by TNFalpha treatment was detected by gel shift assay, we analyzed p53 promoter activity by reporter assay system. Contrary to enhanced binding activity, the transcriptional activity was attenuated in a TNFalpha concentration-dependent manner. Since p53 activation requires recruitment of CREB binding protein (CBP) as a coactivator, we also examined the effect of CBP on TNFalpha-induced attenuation of p53 promoter activation. Overexpression of CBP induced p53 transcriptional activity and recovery of TNFalpha-induced inhibition. Our results clearly indicate that autonomous nuclear acetylation is characteristically enhanced in rheumatoid synoviocytes and that p53 is one of acetylated protein. Our results also demonstrate that TNFalpha-induced acetylation of p53 attenuated its transcriptional activation via CBP depletion, and that overexpression of CBP enhanced TNFalpha-induced cell death in rheumatoid synoviocytes, suggesting that regulation of transcriptional coactivator become a novel strategy for RA therapy.
...
PMID:TNFalpha induces acetylation of p53 but attenuates its transcriptional activation in rheumatoid synoviocytes. 1216 99
To determine the effect of the major histocompatibility complex on the development of symptoms during acute human parvovirus B19 infection, we compared human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I and II alleles in 36 patients with symptomatic acute B19 infection with those in >900 control subjects from northwestern England. The frequency of each of HLA-DRB1*01 (P=.016), DRB1*04 (P=.007), and DRB1*07 (P<.0001) alleles was significantly higher in parvovirus B19 patients than in control subjects. In the parvovirus group, 63.9% carried the
rheumatoid arthritis
-associated shared epitope sequence, compared with 45% of control subjects (odds ratio [OR], 2.2; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.97-4.8; P=.04), and carriage was associated with fatigue during the acute phase (OR, 4.2; 95% CI, 0.8-23.9; P=.047). All symptomatic parvovirus-associated HLA-DRB1 molecules carry a neutrally charged glutamine at position 10 and a positively charged
lysine
at position 12 of the first hypervariable region. HLA-B49 was associated with parvovirus infection independently of HLA-DRB1*01, DRB1*04, and DRB1*07.
...
PMID:Association of symptomatic acute human parvovirus B19 infection with human leukocyte antigen class I and II alleles. 1219 70
Many eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells bind plasminogen in a specific and saturable manner. When plasminogen is bound to cell-surface proteins with C-terminal lysines via its
lysine
binding sites, its activation to plasmin is accelerated, and cell-bound plasmin is protected from inactivation by natural inhibitors. Plasmin mediates direct or indirect degradation of the extracellular matrix, and bound plasmin is used by cells to facilitate migration through extracellular matrices. Since cell migration and tissue remodelling are the underpinnings of many physiological and pathological responses, the modulation of plasminogen receptors may serve as a primary regulatory mechanism for control of many cellular responses. Specific examples of cell types on which plasminogen receptors undergo modulation include: fibroblasts, where modulation may contribute to cartilage and bone destruction in
rheumatoid arthritis
; leukemic cells, where enhanced plasminogen binding may contribute to the heightened fibrinolytic state in the patients; other tumor cells, where up-regulation may support invasion and metastasis; bacteria, where enhanced plasminogen binding may facilitate tissue destruction and invasion; platelets, where up-regulation of plasminogen binding may play a role in regulating clot lysis; and adipocytes, where the modulation of plasminogen receptor expression may regulate cell differentiation and fat accumulation. Two pathways for modulation of plasminogen receptors have been characterized: A protease-dependent pathway can either up-regulate or down-regulate plasminogen binding to cells by changing the availability of plasminogen-binding proteins with C-terminal lysines. New receptors may be generated by trypsin-like proteases, including plasmin, which create new C-terminal lysines; other enzymes may expose existing membrane proteins by altering the cell surface; or receptor function may be lost by removal of C-terminal lysines. The basic carboxypeptidases of blood carboxypeptidase N and plasma carboxypeptidase B (TAFI) mediate such down-regulation. A non-protease dependent pathway for modulation of plasminogen receptors may be initiated by growth factors, chemokines or cytokines that alter the cell membrane and/or cytoskeleton architectures to expose plasminogen binding sites. Many examples of the modulation of plasminogen receptors have been demonstrated in vitro, and the development of knock-out mice may soon lead to incisive evaluations of the significance of the regulation of plasminogen receptors in vivo.
...
PMID:Regulation of plasminogen receptors. 1245 18
Cryogel is a physical gel formed by the heterophilic aggregation of extra domain A (EDA) containing fibronectin [EDA(+)FN], plasma fibronectin (pFN), fibrinogen (Fbg) and heparin (Hep) in the blood of
rheumatoid arthritis
(RA) patients. In cryogelation EDA(+)FN cross-links to form an interaggregate of cryogel with Hep. In the present study, we determined the recognition structure of Hep for EDA(+)FN by using oligo- and desulfonated-Hep. The affinity constant (KA) (1.2 x 10(8) per M) of oligo-Hep for EDA(+)FN did not change with a decrease in number-average molecular weight (4.9 x 10(4)-->6.0 x 10(3)). The KA-value of desulfonated-Hep for EDA(+)FN decreased from 3.2 x 10(8) to 1.0 x 10(7) per M with a decrease in the sulfonation ratio (7.0-->4.3%). We also determined the recognition structure of EDA(+)FN for Hep by an inhibition experiment on the heparin binding domain II (HepII) in EDA(+)FN with the synthetic peptides, Arg-Arg-Ala-Arg (RRAR), Asp-Gln-Ala-Arg (DNAR), Ile-
Lys
-Tyr-Glu-
Lys
(IKYEK), and Gly-Arg-
Lys
-
Lys
-Try (GRKKT). The GRKKT sequence clearly inhibited bonding between EDA(+)FN and Heps containing oligo- and desulfonated-Hep. The amount of cryogel formed in the RA-patient model plasma corresponded to the EDA(+)FN concentration in cryogel (36.7%) normalized by the EDA(+)FN concentration in plasma. When GRKKT was added to plasma, the EDA(+)FN concentration fell to 10.5%. These results demonstrated that inhibition of cryogelation in plasma could progress to a novel treatment for RA.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cryogelation by the novel synthetic peptide (Gly-Arg-Lys-Lys-Thr): recognition site of extra domain A containing fibronectin for heparin in cryogelation. 1256 29
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