Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During mammalian development, many cells are programmed to die most mediated by apoptosis. The Fas antigen coded by the structural gene for mouse lymphoproliferation mutation (lpr), is a cell surface protein belonging to the tumour necrosis factor/nerve growth factor receptor family, and mediates apoptosis. The Fas antigen messenger RNA is expressed in the thymus, liver, heart, lung and ovary. We prepared a monoclonal antibody against mouse Fas antigen, which immunoprecipitated the antigen (M(r) 45K) and had cytolytic activity against cell lines expressing mouse Fas antigen. We report here that staining of mouse thymocytes with the antibody indicated that thymocytes from the wild-type and lprcg mice expressed the Fas antigen, whereas little expression of the Fas antigen was found in lpr mice. Intraperitoneal administration of the anti-Fas antibody into mice rapidly killed the wild-type mice but neither lpr nor lprcg mice. Biochemical, histological and electron microscope analyses indicated severe damage of the liver by apoptosis. These findings suggest that the Fas antigen is important in programmed cell death in the liver, and may be involved in fulminant hepatitis in some cases.
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PMID:Lethal effect of the anti-Fas antibody in mice. 768 76

Fas (Apo1/CD95) is a member of the tumour necrosis factor/nerve growth factor receptor superfamily and mediates apoptosis in various cell types (for review sec [1]). Although this apoptotic activity has been clearly related to homeostasis in the immune system and pathological situations in non-lymphoid organs, the Fas signaling pathway remains mostly elusive. We and others previously showed that Fas-induced apoptosis of primary culture hepatocytes requires either an inhibitor of translation or a protein kinase inhibitor, suggesting that two distinct pathways of Fas signaling exist in hepatocytes. We report here that activation of ICE-like and CPP32-like cysteine proteases are required for Fas-mediated apoptosis, but that these pathways involve different subclasses of serine proteases and are selectively modulated by inhibitors of protein tyrosine kinases. These results confirm that distinct pathways can lead to Fas-induced apoptosis in hepatocytes. Further understanding of these pathways could facilitate the rational design of anti-apoptotic drugs in liver diseases associated with massive Fas-mediated hepatocyte apoptosis, including fulminant hepatitis.
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PMID:Multiple pathways of Fas-induced apoptosis in primary culture of hepatocytes. 895 79

Gene therapy of many genetic diseases requires permanent gene transfer into self-renewing stem cells and restriction of transgene expression to specific progenies. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-derived lentiviral vectors are very effective in transducing rare, nondividing stem cell populations (e.g., hematopoietic stem cells) without altering their long-term repopulation and differentiation capacities. We developed a strategy for transcriptional targeting of lentiviral vectors based on replacing the viral long terminal repeat (LTR) enhancer with cell lineage-specific, genomic control elements. An upstream enhancer (HS2) of the erythroid-specific GATA-1 gene was used to replace most of the U3 region of the LTR, immediately upstream of the HIV type 1 (HIV-1) promoter. The modified LTR was used to drive the expression of a reporter gene (the green fluorescent protein [GFP] gene), while a second gene (a truncated form of the p75 nerve growth factor receptor [DeltaLNGFR]) was placed under the control of an internal constitutive promoter to monitor cell transduction, or to immunoselect transduced cells, independently from the expression of the targeted promoter. The transcriptionally targeted vectors were used to transduce cell lines, human CD34+ hematopoietic stem-progenitor cells, and murine bone marrow (BM)-repopulating stem cells. Gene expression was analyzed in the stem cell progeny in vitro and in vivo after xenotransplantation into nonobese diabetic-SCID mice or BM transplantation in coisogenic mice. The modified LTR directed high levels of transgene expression specifically in mature erythroblasts, in a TAT-independent fashion and with no alteration in titer, infectivity, and genomic stability of the lentiviral vector. Expression from the modified LTR was higher, better restricted, and showed less position-effect variegation than that obtained by the same combination of enhancer-promoter elements placed in a conventional, internal position. Cloning of the woodchuck hepatitis virus posttranscriptional regulatory element at a defined position in the targeted vector allowed selective accumulation of the genomic transcripts with respect to the internal RNA transcript, with no loss of cell-type restriction. A critical advantage of this targeting strategy is the use of a spliced, major viral transcript to express a therapeutic gene and that of an internal, independently regulated promoter to express an additional gene for either cell marking or in vivo selection purposes.
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PMID:Transcriptional targeting of lentiviral vectors by long terminal repeat enhancer replacement. 1190 39