Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0009443 (cold)
92,137 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neutrophil infiltration is a major feature in the pathogenesis of the common cold, and respiratory viral infection is the major cause of asthma exacerbations. The factors regulating the neutrophil influx are unknown. Interleukin-8 (IL-8) is a potent neutrophil chemoattractant, which has been implicated in several inflammatory diseases. In this study, we investigated the presence of IL-8 chemokine in the nasal aspirates of asthmatic children (n = 12) in whom asthma was precipitated by proven viral infection. There were increased IL-8 levels in nasal aspirates from children during the virus-induced asthma exacerbations compared with samples from the same children when they had been asymptomatic for 2 wk (medians 863 and < 20 pg/ml, respectively, p < 0.01). Biological relevance was shown in that IL-8 levels correlate with increased nasal aspirate neutrophil myeloperoxidase levels and there was also a correlation between myeloperoxidase levels and upper respiratory symptom severity. Furthermore, we purified IL-8 from these samples, and demonstrated biological neutrophil chemotactic activity. These are the first in vivo data to suggest an important role for IL-8 in neutrophil influx in proven upper respiratory viral infection associated with asthma exacerbations. We suggest that IL-8 might provide a target for therapeutic intervention in virus-induced respiratory diseases.
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PMID:Role of nasal interleukin-8 in neutrophil recruitment and activation in children with virus-induced asthma. 910 80

The myxoma virus T7 protein M-T7 is a functional soluble gamma interferon receptor homolog that has previously been shown to bind gamma interferon and inhibit its antiviral activities in a species-specific manner, but gene knockout analysis has suggested a further role for M-T7 in blocking leukocyte influx into infected lesions. We purified M-T7 to apparent homogeneity and showed that M-T7 is an N-linked glycoprotein that appears to be a stable homotrimer with a molecular mass of approximately 113 kDa in solution. M-T7, in addition to forming inhibitory complexes with rabbit gamma interferon, was also shown to bind to human interleukin-8, a prototypic member of the chemokine superfamily. Moreover, M-T7 was able to interact promiscuously with all members of the CXC, CC, and C chemokine subfamilies tested. Binding of human RANTES to M-T7 can be competed by rabbit gamma interferon and also by cold RANTES competitor with a 50% inhibitory concentration of 900 nM. Although M-T7 retains binding to a number of interleukin-8 N-terminal (ELR) deletion mutants, binding to mutants containing deletions in the C-terminal heparin-binding domain of interleukin-8 is abrogated. Furthermore, heparin effectively competes the interaction of M-T7 with the chemokine RANTES but not with rabbit gamma interferon. We propose that this novel M-T7 interaction with members of the chemokine superfamily may be facilitated through the conserved heparin-binding domains found in a wide spectrum of chemokines and that M-T7 may function by modulating chemokine-glycosaminoglycan interactions in virus-infected tissues.
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PMID:The purified myxoma virus gamma interferon receptor homolog M-T7 interacts with the heparin-binding domains of chemokines. 915 24

Eotaxin has been found to bind exclusively to a single chemokine receptor, CCR3. Using expression sequence tag screening of an activated monocyte library, a second chemokine has been identified; it was expressed and purified from a Drosophila cell culture system and appears to only activate CCR3. Eotaxin-2, MPIF-2, or CKbeta-6, is a human CC chemokine with low amino acid sequence identity to other chemokines. Eotaxin-2 promotes chemotaxis and Ca2+ mobilization in human eosinophils but not in neutrophils or monocytes. Cross-desensitization calcium mobilization experiments using purified eosinophils indicate that eotaxin and MCP-4, but not RANTES, MIP-1alpha, or MCP-3, can completely cross-desensitize the calcium response to eotaxin-2 on these cells, indicating that eotaxin-2 shares the same receptor used by eotaxin and MCP-4. Eotaxin-2 was the most potent eosinophil chemoattractant of all the chemokines tested. Eotaxin-2 also displaced 125I-eotaxin bound to the cloned CCR3 stably expressed in CHO cells (CHO-CCR3) and to freshly isolated human eosinophils with affinities similar to eotaxin and MCP-4. 125I-Eotaxin-2 binds with high affinity to eosinophils and both eotaxin and cold eotaxin-2 displace the ligand with equal affinity. Eotaxin and eotaxin-2 promote a Ca2+ transient in RBL-2H3 cells stably transfected with CCR3 (RBL-2H3-CCR3) and both ligands cross-desensitized the response of the other but not the response to LTD4. The data indicate that eotaxin-2 is a potent eosinophil chemotactic chemokine exerting its activity solely through the CCR3 receptor.
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PMID:Cloning and functional characterization of a novel human CC chemokine that binds to the CCR3 receptor and activates human eosinophils. 936 22

Chemokine receptor-like 1 (CKR-L1) was described recently as a putative seven-transmembrane human receptor with many of the structural features of chemokine receptors. To identify the ligand of CKR-L1, we have studied chemokine-induced calcium mobilization in 293 cells transfected with CKR-L1. Of 20 different chemokines tested, only I-309 was able to elicit a significant calcium mobilization. In addition, I-309 induced the transfectants to migrate in vitro. As expected for chemokine receptor-mediated effects, pertussis toxin, but not cholera toxin, inhibited both the calcium flux and migration of the CKR-L1 transfectants in response to I-309. All of these data support the conclusion that I-309 is a functional ligand for CKR-L1. According to the current chemokine receptor nomenclature, we have designated this gene as CCR8. The murine CCR8 (mCCR8) gene was cloned, and its predicted amino acid sequence showed a 71% identity with that of human CCR8. As human CCR8, mCCR8 is expressed in thymus. Both I-309 and its murine homologue TCA-3 were able to induce calcium mobilization in transiently transfected 293-EBNA cells expressing mCCR8. The affinity of the binding of 125I-labeled TCA-3 to mCCR8 was high (Kd approximately 2 nM); the binding was prevented completely by an excess of cold TCA-3, and only partially competed (40%) by I-309. The identification of I-309 and TCA-3 as the functional ligands for CCR8 receptors will help to unravel the role of these proteins in physiologic and pathologic situations.
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PMID:Identification of CCR8 as the specific receptor for the human beta-chemokine I-309: cloning and molecular characterization of murine CCR8 as the receptor for TCA-3. 946 61

Upper respiratory tract infections are one of the most common infectious diseases in man and are characterized by relatively mild symptoms. However, complications of bacterial super-infection or asthma exacerbations are not seldomly seen. Most upper respiratory tract infections are caused by rhinoviruses. The rhinovirus is a non-enveloped 30 nm RNA-virus with over 100 serotypes that belongs to the Picornaviridae family and only replicates in primates. It is characterized by a single positive stranded genome acting not only as a template for RNA synthesis, but also encoding for a single polypeptide necessary for viral replication. The viral capsid has an icosahedral symmetry and demonstrates deep canyons, with a receptor-binding domain. Rhinoviruses are transmitted mainly via direct- or indirect contact with infected secretions and invade their host by binding to the ICAM-1 receptor on the nasal epithelium. Typical for rhinovirus upper respiratory tract infections are isolated scattered foci of infected epithelium, not showing any striking damage or cytopathic alterations, between large areas of normal epithelium. Today there is still little detailed knowledge on the pathophysiology of common cold, especially on the aspect of cellular migration and defense. A better understanding in mechanisms underlying this cellular response would not only have therapeutical consequences, but may also explain the relationship between viral infectious rhinitis and asthma or atopy. During a rhinovirus infection, a selective neutrophil and monocyte recruitment is observed. In vitro and in vivo data have demonstrated a time-limited, rhinovirus-induced increase in bradykinin, cytokine, chemokine and sICAM-1 concentrations. Epithelial derived proinflammatory cytokines initiate an adhesion cascade and activate T lymphocytes that create a TH1-type cytokine environment within the infected tissue, necessary to eradicate the virus infection. The selective recruitment of neutrophils seems linked to increased concentrations of the chemokine IL-8 and common cold symptoms. It is doubtful that the cytokine-regulated-production of specific neutralising immunoglobulins is necessary for recovery from viral illnesses and presumably only contributes to a late and temporary protection against rhinovirus reinfection. These observations confirm the crucial role that cytokines and mediators play in the pathogenesis of a rhinovirus infection by mediating chemotaxis, transmigration and activation of inflammatory- and immunocompetent cells.
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PMID:An update on the pathophysiology of rhinovirus upper respiratory tract infections. 1056 86

Upper respiratory tract infections are one of the most common infectious diseases in man and are characterized by transient, relatively mild symptoms. Human rhinoviruses are known to be the major causative agent in adult common colds and their relative importance has further increased with the use of the sensitive RT-PCR technique. Characteristic for a common cold is the selective neutrophil recruitment and time-limited increase in mediator, cytokine, and chemokine concentrations that orchestrate chemotaxis, transmigration, and activation of inflammatory and immunocompetent cells. Common cold symptoms are found to correlate to rhinovirus-induced IL-8 elaboration and neutrophil activation. Treatment of rhinoviral upper respiratory tract infections consists of an inhibition of viral infection by antiviral agents and/or a reduction of symptoms by damping the host inflammatory response.
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PMID:The common cold at the turn of the millennium. 1106 60

We examined the influence of atopy on virus-induced airway inflammation by comparing the nasal response to naturally acquired upper respiratory tract infection in atopic and nonatopic subjects by measurement of cytokine, chemokine, and mediator levels in nasal lavage from 44 adults (23 atopic) taken during the acute and the convalescent phases of the common cold. Nasal aspirates were examined for the presence of upper respiratory viruses by RT-PCR. In atopic and nonatopic subjects there were increased levels of IL-1beta, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-alpha, RANTES, sICAM-1, MPO, ECP, IL-10, and IFN-gamma in nasal lavage during the acute compared with the convalescent phase (p < 0.001). During the acute phase histamine levels were significantly higher in the atopic than in the nonatopic subjects (p < 0.05), whereas IL-10 levels were significantly greater in the nonatopic than in the atopic subjects (p < 0.05). At convalescence levels of IL-1beta, IL-6, sICAM-1, ECP, RANTES and albumin were significantly higher in the atopic group (p < 0.05). An upper respiratory tract virus was found in 27 volunteers (61%) during the acute stage and in two volunteers (4%) at convalescence. We conclude that virus-induced inflammatory changes within the nose are more prolonged in atopic than in nonatopic subjects and that this is associated with reduced IL-10 levels in atopic compared with nonatopic subjects during the acute phase of upper respiratory tract infection.
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PMID:The relationship between atopic status and IL-10 nasal lavage levels in the acute and persistent inflammatory response to upper respiratory tract infection. 1131 43

The C-X-C chemokine SDF-1 and its receptor CXCR4, mediate a pivotal role in the pathophysiology of HIV-1 infection and vascular inflammatory diseases. In this study, we investigated the pharmacological properties of SDF-1alpha interaction with CXCR4 in human leukemia cell lines. Our data, based on [125I]-SDF-1alpha radioligand binding, SDF-1alpha-induced [35S]-GTPgammaS binding and use of specific CXCR4 antagonist AMD3100 reveals the complex nature of SDF-1alpha-CXCR4 interaction. Firstly, homologous competition with cold SDF-1alpha revealed a bimodal ligand displacement curve and secondly, although AMD3100 inhibited both SDF-1alpha-mediated chemotaxis (IC(50)=4.7 nM) and [35S]-GTPgammaS binding (IC(50)=7.4 nM) with high affinity, it was intriguingly up to 3000-fold less potent (IC(50)=15.2 microM) in the radioligand binding assay. These results provide pharmacological evidence for the recently described two-site model for SDF-1alpha-CXCR4 interaction. Accordingly, inhibition of SDF-1alpha binding to one of the receptor sites is sufficient to antagonize function, without causing its complete displacement from the receptor. Furthermore, these findings have important implications in the development and evaluation of CXCR4-selective small molecule antagonists for therapeutic use.
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PMID:Pharmacological evidence for complex and multiple site interaction of CXCR4 with SDF-1alpha: implications for development of selective CXCR4 antagonists. 1147 Jan 48

Recent evidence has suggested that plasma membrane sphingolipids and cholesterol spontaneously coalesce into raft-like microdomains and that specific proteins, including CD4 and some other T-cell signaling molecules, sequester into these rafts. In agreement with these results, we found that CD4 and the associated Lck tyrosine kinase of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and H9 leukemic T cells were selectively and highly enriched in a low-density lipid fraction that was resistant at 0 degrees C to the neutral detergent Triton X-100 but was disrupted by extraction of cholesterol with filipin or methyl-beta-cyclodextrin. In contrast, the CXCR4 chemokine receptor, a coreceptor for X4 strains of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), was almost completely excluded from the detergent-resistant raft fraction. Accordingly, as determined by immunofluorescence with confocal microscopy, CD4 and CXCR4 did not coaggregate into antibody-induced cell surface patches or into patches of CXCR4 that formed naturally at the ruffled edges of adherent cells. The CXCR4 fluorescent patches were extracted with cold 1% Triton X-100, whereas the CD4 patches were resistant. In stringent support of these data, CD4 colocalized with patches of cholera toxin bound to the raft-associated sphingoglycolipid GM1, whereas CXCR4 did not. Addition of the CXCR4-activating chemokine SDF-1 alpha did not induce CXCR4 movement into rafts. Moreover, binding of purified monomeric gp120 envelope glycoproteins from strains of HIV-1 that use this coreceptor did not stimulate detectable redistributions of CD4 or CXCR4 between their separate membrane domains. However, adsorption of multivalent gp120-containing HIV-1 virion particles appeared to destabilize the local CD4-containing rafts. Indeed, adsorbed HIV-1 virions were detected by immunofluorescence microscopy and were almost all situated in nonraft regions of the cell surface. We conclude that HIV-1 initially binds to CD4 in a raft domain and that its secondary associations with CXCR4 require shifts of proteins and associated lipids away from their preferred lipid microenvironments. Our evidence suggests that these changes in protein-lipid interactions destabilize the plasma membrane microenvironment underlying the virus by at least several kilocalories per mole, and we propose that this makes an important contribution to fusion of the viral and cellular membranes during infection. Thus, binding of HIV-1 may be favored by the presence of CD4 in rafts, but the rafts may then disperse prior to the membrane fusion reaction.
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PMID:Segregation of CD4 and CXCR4 into distinct lipid microdomains in T lymphocytes suggests a mechanism for membrane destabilization by human immunodeficiency virus. 1179 76

3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitors (statins) are drugs very effective to decrease low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol. In addition, a number of studies suggest that statins have other beneficial clinical effects beyond cholesterol lowering. We recently reported that statins decrease nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappaB) binding activity in monocytes and vascular smooth muscle cells. We now explored the effect of two different statins, simvastatin and atorvastatin, in the activation of the octamer transcription factor Oct-1 on the monocytic cell line THP-1. Oct-1 is a nuclear factor that represses the transcription of proinflammatory genes such as interleukin-8, CD11c/CD18, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1) and platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1). Low concentrations of both statins increased Oct-1 DNA binding activity (electrophoretic mobility shift assay) that was resolved into two specific bands. The upper one was supershifted by preincubation of nuclear extracts with anti-Oct-1 antibody. The lower one was supershifted by preincubation of nuclear extracts with an anti-Oct-2 antibody, also partially competed with 100 mol/l excess of cold activator protein-1 (AP-1) and attenuated by anti-c-Jun antibody. Both statins increased Oct-1 and Oct-2 nuclear protein levels (Western blot). In contrast, neither had any effect on PMA-differentiated cells, suggesting a distinct sensitivity between circulating monocytes and resident tissular macrophages. In addition, statins did not increase Oct-lipoprotein lipase binding activity that contains an Oct-1 binding element. The mRNA expression of interleukin-8, a chemokine containing Oct sites in its promoter, was diminished by statin pretreatment. Our results indicate that simvastatin and atorvastatin increase the activity of the transcriptional repressor Oct-1 in mononuclear cells, and could thus contribute to decrease the activation of these cells. These data suggest a possible novel mechanism supporting a certain anti-inflammatory effect of these two 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase inhibitors.
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PMID:3-Hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors increase the binding activity and nuclear level of Oct-1 in mononuclear cells. 1214 30


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