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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We examined the effect of amino acid substitutions of the GPGR (glycine-proline-glycine-
arginine
) tip sequence at the V3 domain of the Env protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) on its cell tropism and coreceptor use. We changed the GPGR sequence of a T-cell line (T)- and macrophage (M)-tropic (R5-R3-X4) HIV-1 strain, GUN-1wt, to GA(alanine)GR (the resulting mutant was designated GUN-1/A), GL(leucine)GR (GUN-1/L), GP(proline)GR (GUN-1/P), GR(
arginine
)GR (GUN-1/R), GS(serine)GR (GUN-1/S), or GT(threonine)GR (GUN-1/T). GUN-1/A, GUN-1/S, and GUN-1/T mutants infected brain-derived cells such as a CD4-transduced
glioma
cell line, U87/CD4, and a brain-derived primary cell strain, BT-20/N, as well as T-cell lines in a CD4-dependent manner, although the plating of these mutants onto macrophages was inhibited. GUN-1/L, GUN-1/P, and GUN-1/R mutants showed both T- and M-tropism, but did not plate onto the brain-derived cells. A CCR3, CCR5, CCR8, or CXCR4 gene was introduced into a CD4-positive
glioma
cell line, NP-2/CD4, which demonstrated complete resistance to various HIV-1 strains. Not only HIV-1 strains, which were infectious to macrophages, such as GUN-1wt, GUN-1v, GUN-1/L, and GUN-1/P, but also an HIV-1 strain, GUN-1v, which was hardly infectious to macrophages, grew well in NP-2/CD4 cells expressing CCR3 or CCR5. However, the M-tropic GUN-1/R mutant could not efficiently use CCR5 nor CCR3. No point mutants, except GUN-1/L, grew well in NP-2/CD4 cells expressing CCR8. These findings indicate that the cell tropism of HIV-1 to macrophages and brain-derived cells and their use of the coreceptors were markedly, though not always concomitantly, affected by the tip sequence of the V3 domain.
...
PMID:Changes in and discrepancies between cell tropisms and coreceptor uses of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 induced by single point mutations at the V3 tip of the env protein. 1038 57
We monitored the volume of C6
glioma
cells in suspension using a Coulter Counter and exposed the cells to micromolar or nanomolar levels of collagenase or clostripain. In 13 experiments, type IV collagenase (310 units ml-1; approximately 3 microM L-1) decreased the volume by 8-12%, 8 min after addition. In 13 of 21 experiments, the volume decrease was followed by a volume regulatory increase (VRI) back to control levels in the continued presence of collagenase. The shrinkage evoked by type IV collagenase was eliminated by heat-inactivation of the enzyme preparation. A highly purified collagenase (type VII) at the same concentration evoked a relatively minor decrease in volume. A well-known contaminating protease present in type IV collagenase, clostripain, which specifically cleaves arginyl peptide bonds, evoked a 7 +/- 2% shrinkage (100 nM L-1, 7 experiments). Clostripain did not evoke a volume regulatory increase. The initial velocity of shrinkage evoked by clostripain (0.0012 pL min-1, 0.0034 pL min-1, 0.0132 pL min-1; 1 pL = 10(-12) liters) scaled with its concentration (1 nM L-1, 10 nM L-1, 100 nM L-1). The effect of clostripain was inhibited by heat-inactivation of the enzyme. Leupeptin, an inhibitor of clostripain, prevented the decrease in volume evoked by clostripain. The activity of stretch-activated ion channels was unaffected by type IV collagenase. Barium, cesium, amiloride, DIDS, or bumetanide failed to block the shrinkage evoked by type IV collagenase. These results demonstrate that clostripain, present in crude collagenase enzyme preparations, causes the shrinkage, and that C6
glioma
cells can undergo a volume regulatory increase at virtually constant osmotic pressure. In addition, cleavage of a cell surface moiety, which contains
arginine
, and possibly proline, causes shrinkage. This moiety may be part of the extracellular or intracellular matrix providing mechanical support to the cells. VRI reflect actions of another substance in the type IV crude collagenase preparations, on a receptor independent of the arg-pro moiety. The enzymatic modulation of
glioma
cell volume by these two receptors may reflect a new mechanism by which such cells, and possibly other glia, regulate their contact area and interactions with other cells in the central nervous system.
...
PMID:Enzymatic modulation of cell volume in C6 glioma cells. 1040 29
Interleukin 13 (IL13) belongs to a family of cytokines whose members exhibit structural homology, despite amino acid sequence dissimilarity. For example, while of limited sequence homology, IL13 and IL4 share a signaling receptor, IL13/4 receptor, on a variety of human normal cells. However, a subclass of IL4-independent IL13 receptors is overexpressed on certain transformed cells, including human malignant gliomas. We introduced mutations into human (h) IL13 to determine the site(s) involved in interaction with the shared receptor and/or the
glioma
-associated receptor. This analysis identified at least three protein regions that are needed for signaling through the shared receptor. These regions were localized to alpha-helices A, C, and D and were mainly separate from the region(s) needed to interact with the
glioma
-associated receptor. Glutamic acids at positions 13 and 16 in hIL13 alpha-helix A,
arginine
and serine at positions 66 and 69 in helix C, and
arginine
at position 109 in helix D were found to be important in inducing biological signaling since their specific mutation resulted in loss and/or gain of function phenomena. We demonstrate that the molecular requirements of hIL13 to interact with its respective receptors are generally distinct and can be controlled by mutagenesis of the cytokine.
...
PMID:Mutants of interleukin 13 with altered reactivity toward interleukin 13 receptors. 1051 77
The regulation of the high affinity cationic amino acid transporter (Cat-1) by amino acid availability has been studied. In C6
glioma
and NRK kidney cells, cat-1 mRNA levels increased 3.8-18-fold following 2 h of amino acid starvation. The transcription rate of the cat-1 gene remained unchanged during amino acid starvation, suggesting a post-transcriptional mechanism of regulation. This mechanism was investigated by expressing a cat-1 mRNA from a tetracycline-regulated promoter. The cat-1 mRNA contained 1.9 kilobase pairs (kb) of coding sequence, 4.5 kb of 3'-untranslated region, and 80 base pairs of 5'-untranslated region. The full-length (7.9 kb) mRNA increased 5-fold in amino acid-depleted cells. However, a 3.4-kb species that results from the usage of an alternative polyadenylation site was not induced, suggesting that the cat-1 mRNA was stabilized by cis-acting RNA sequences within the 3'-UTR. Transcription and protein synthesis were required for the increase in full-length cat-1 mRNA level. Because omission of amino acids from the cell culture medium leads to a substantial decrease in protein synthesis, the translation of the increased cat-1 mRNA was assessed in amino acid-depleted cells. Western blot analysis demonstrated that cat-1 mRNA and protein levels changed in parallel. The increase in protein level was significantly lower than the increase in mRNA level, supporting the conclusion that cat-1 mRNA is inefficiently translated when the supply of amino acids is limited, relative to amino acid-fed cells. Finally, y(+)-mediated transport of
arginine
in amino acid-fed and -starved cells paralleled Cat-1 protein levels. We conclude that the cat-1 gene is subject to adaptive regulation by amino acid availability. Amino acid depletion initiates molecular events that lead to increased cat-1 mRNA stability. This causes an increase in Cat-1 protein, and y(+) transport once amino acids become available.
...
PMID:Post-transcriptional regulation of the arginine transporter Cat-1 by amino acid availability. 1052 20
The inhibition of nitric oxide synthase by N-nitro-L-
arginine
methyl ester (0.03-3 mM) dose-dependently reduced nitric oxide (NO(*)) levels and enhanced the outward currents carried by human ether-a-gogo-related gene-1 (hERG1) K(+) channels expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes, whereas the increase in NO(*) levels achieved by exposure to L-
arginine
(0.03-10 mM) inhibited these currents. Furthermore, four NO(*) donors belonging to such different chemical classes as sodium nitroprusside (1-1000 microM), 3-morpholino-sydnonimine (100-1000 microM), (Z)-1-[N-(2-aminoethyl)-N-(2-ammonioethyl)amino]diazen-1- ium-1, 2-diolate (NOC-18; 1-300 microM), and S-nitroso N-acetylpenicillamine (1-300 microM) dose-dependently inhibited hERG1 outward K(+) currents. By contrast, the NO(*) donor NOC-18 (0.3 mM) did not affect other cloned K(+) channels such as rat neuroblastoma-
glioma
K(+) channel 2, rat delayed rectifier K(+) channel 1, bovine ether-a-gogo gene, rat ether-a-gogo-related gene-2, and rat ether-a-gogo-related gene-3. The inhibitory effect of NO(*) donors on hERG1 K(+) channels was prevented by the NO(*) scavengers 2-phenyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl 3-oxide and hemoglobin. The membrane permeable analog of cGMP, 8-bromo-cGMP (1 mM), failed to reproduce the inhibitory action of NO(*) donors on hERG1 outward currents; furthermore, the specific inhibitor of the NO(*)-dependent guanylyl cyclase, 1H-[1,2,4]oxadiazolo[4, 3-a]quinoxalin-1-one (50 microM), neither interfered with outward hERG1 K(+) currents nor prevented their inhibition by 0.3 mM NOC-18. Both L-
arginine
(10 mM) and NOC-18 (0.3 mM) counteracted the stimulatory effect on hERG1 outward currents induced by the radical oxygen species-generating system FeSO(4) (25 microM)/ascorbic acid (50 microM; Fe/Asc). Finally, L-
arginine
(10 mM) and NOC-18 (0.3 mM) inhibited both basal and Fe/Asc (0.1 mM/0.2 mM)-stimulated lipid peroxidation in X. laevis oocytes. Collectively, the present results suggest that NO(*), both endogenously produced and pharmacologically delivered, may exert in a cGMP-independent way an inhibitory effect on hERG1 outward K(+) currents via an interaction with radical oxygen species either generated under resting conditions or triggered by Fe/Asc.
...
PMID:Modulation of the K(+) channels encoded by the human ether-a-gogo-related gene-1 (hERG1) by nitric oxide. 1057 58
P11 cells, derived from the transplantahle rat pituitary tumor 7315a, have been used previously ias a model system to study the regulation of serotonin2A (5-HT2A) receptor expression. As our laboratory has been interested in characterizing the interactions between the 5-HT2A receptor and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), we have analyzed the Pl I cell line for iNOS expression. Treatment of P ll cells with interferon-gamma and lipopolysaccharide resulted in a 23-fold increase in nitrite production and induced expression of iNOS protein. The increase in nitrite levels was attenuated by the non-selective nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor N i-nitro-L-
arginine
methyl ester, hut not the neuronal NOS inhibitor 7-nitroindazole. Typically, Pl 11 cells have been grown in either charcoal-stripped or dialyzed serum-containing medium. We have observed that Pl 1 cells grown under these culture conditions express basal iNOS activity, as evidenced by a 5-fold increase in nitrite accumulation over a 48-hr period, compared with that in cells grown in non-modified serum, which was inhibited by the selective iNOS inhibitor L.N6-(1-iminoethyl)-lysine. Conditioned medium from Pll cells was ahle to stimulate nitrite accumulation in C6
glioma
cells, suggesting that the Pl I cells may produce a pro-inflammatory-like factor. As pro-inflammatory cytokines have been shown to modify hormone secretion from the anterior pituitary, the P11 cell line may be a useful in vitro model by which to characterize the function of cells from this organ. In addition, our data suggest that alteration of the microenvironment of the anterior pituitary may result in iNOS expression, possibly altering the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.
...
PMID:Inducible nitric oxide synthase in P11 cells: expression in the presence of interferon-gamma, lipopolysaccharide, and modified serum. 1066 Jan 17
The migratory behaviour of malignant gliomas relies on the interaction of integrins with extracellular matrix (ECM) components. Transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1)) potently stimulates
glioma
cell motility whereas TGF-beta(2) is known for its immunosuppressive properties. Here, we show that both TGF-beta(1) and TGF-beta(2) promote migration of
glioma
cells. In parallel, TGF-beta(1) and TGF-beta(2) induce alpha(V) and beta(3) intergrin mRNA expression and enhance cell surface expression of alpha(V)beta(3) integrin. TGF-beta-mediated promotion of migration is abrogated by echistatin, a
Arg
-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptide antagonist of alpha(V)beta(3) integrin, and by a neutralizing anti-alpha(V)beta(3) integrin antibody. Taken together, we report a novel mechanism by which TGF-beta modulates cell ECM interactions and promotes
glioma
cell motility.
...
PMID:Transforming growth factors beta(1) (TGF-beta(1)) and TGF-beta(2) promote glioma cell migration via Up-regulation of alpha(V)beta(3) integrin expression. 1067 51
The role of nitric oxide (NO) and adherent spleen cells in systemic immunosuppression developing in animals carrying malignant
glioma
isografts was analyzed. Rats harboring a subcutaneous
glioma
isograft for 3 weeks were immunized with
glioma
cells genetically engineered to express IFN-gamma. One week later spleen cells were tested for immune responsiveness in vitro. A decreased cytotoxic activity of NK-cells and T-cells compared to tumor-free animals immunized in parallel was shown. Spleen cell proliferative responses to tumor cells, SEA, and anti-CD3 were all significantly suppressed, as was the production of IFN-gamma and IL-10. Plastic adherent spleen cells from tumor-bearing rats suppressed the SEA-induced proliferative response and the production of IFN-gamma and IL-10 by nonadherent spleen cells from tumor-free rats. A major part of this suppression appears to be dependent on the production of NO because suppression was efficiently counteracted in vitro by the NO-synthase inhibitor N-nitro-l-
arginine
methyl ester. Moreover, a significantly increased level of nitrite in culture supernatants correlated with the observed suppression. We conclude that the systemic immunosuppression associated with growing gliomas is in part mediated by mechanisms dependent on NO overproduction in adherent spleen cells.
...
PMID:Nitric-oxide-dependent systemic immunosuppression in animals with progressively growing malignant gliomas. 1075 3
We compared the properties of mammalian arginine decarboxylase (ADC) and ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) in rat liver and brain. Mammalian ADC is thermally unstable and associated with mitochondrial membranes. ADC decarboxylates both
arginine
(Km = 0.75 mM) and ornithine (Km = 0.25 mM), a reaction not inhibited by the specific ODC inhibitor, difluoromethylomithine. ADC activity is inhibited by Ca2+, Co2+, and polyamines, is present in many organs being highest in aorta and lowest in testis, and is not recognized by a specific monoclonal antibody to ODC. In contrast, ODC is thermally stable, cytosolic, and mitochondrial and is expressed at low levels in most organs except testis. Although ADC and ODC are expressed in cultured rat C6
glioma
cells, the patterns of expression during growth and confluence are very different. We conclude that mammalian ADC differs from ADC isoforms expressed in plants, bacteria, or Caenorhabditis elegans and is distinct from ODC. ADC serves to synthesize agmatine in proximity to mitochondria, an organelle also harboring agmatine's degradative enzyme, agmatinase, and a class of imidazoline receptor (I2) to which agmatine binds with high affinity.
...
PMID:Characterization of arginine decarboxylase in rat brain and liver: distinction from ornithine decarboxylase. 1080 Sep 66
Cathepsin B and in particular cell-surface and secreted cathepsin B has been implicated in the invasive and metastatic phenotype of numerous types of cancer. We describe here a method to easily survey cancer cell lines for cathepsin B activity using the highly selective substrate Z-
Arg
-
Arg
-AMC. Intact human U87
glioma
cells hydrolyze Z-
Arg
-
Arg
-AMC with a Km of 460 microM at pH 7.0 and 37 degrees C. This is nearly the same as the Km of 430 microM obtained with purified cathepsin B assayed under the same conditions. The pericellular (i.e. both cell-surface and released) cathepsin B activity was inhibited by the cysteine protease inhibitors E-64, leupeptin, Mu-Np2-HphVS-2Np, Mu-Leu-HpHVSPh and the cathepsin B selective inhibitor Mu-Tyr(3,5 I2)-HphVSPh with IC50 values similar to those observed for the inhibition of purified human liver cathepsin B. Other human cancer cell lines with measurable pericellular cathepsin B activity included HT-1080 fibrosarcoma, MiaPaCa pancreatic, PC-3 prostate and HCT-116 colon. Cathepsin B activity correlated with protein levels of cathepsin B as determined by immunoblot analysis. Pericellular cathepsin B activity was also detected in the rat cell lines MatLyLu prostate and Mat B III adenocarcinoma and in the murine lines B16a melanoma and Lewis lung carcinoma. The ability to determine pericellular cathepsin B activity will be useful in selecting appropriate cell lines for use in vivo when analyzing the effects of inhibiting cathepsin B activity on tumor growth and metastasis.
...
PMID:Fluorescent microplate assay for cancer cell-associated cathepsin B. 1086 20
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