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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rat basophilic
leukemia
(RBL) cells have receptors for immunoglobulin E (IgE). We previously showed that unlike some other ligands, the binding of monomeric rat or mouse IgE to RBL cells does not induce endocytosis. However, aggregation of the cell-bound, monomeric mouse IgE anti-dinitrophenyl (DNP) with DNP-protein conjugates leads to endocytosis of the aggregated mouse IgE and to the co-endocytosis of some unaggregated monomeric rat IgE. In this study we analyzed and compared the fate of co-endocytosed and endocytosed IgE. We found that co-endocytosed rat IgE recycled back to the cell surface within 3 to 4 hr. In contrast, endocytosed, immunochemically cross-linked, receptor-bound mouse IgE anti-DNP was partially degraded and was released into the medium, with no observable recycling of receptors, by 3 hr. However, addition of the hapten, DNP-
lysine
, resulted in rapid recycling (t1/2 10 min) of the endocytosed receptor-bound IgE to the plasma membrane and blocked additional endocytosis. Recycling of the endocytosed mouse IgE was more pronounced when the hapten was added to cells within 20 min of the initiation of endocytosis. When the hapten was added to the cells at later times (60 to 180 min), progressively less IgE recycled to the surface. This may reflect shuttling of the internalized IgE from a 'prelysosomal' to a 'lysosomal' compartment. Thus we provide evidence for recycling of monomeric IgE receptor complexes, sorting between cross-linked and non-cross-linked IgE receptor complexes, the freeing of receptor-bound monomeric IgE from the endocytosed immune-complexed IgE, and the apparent dependence of the recycling efficiency upon intracellular localization.
...
PMID:Recycling of receptor-bound IgE by rat basophilic leukemia cells. 293 76
The segmental flexibility of mouse immunoglobulin E (IgE) bound to its high-affinity receptor on membrane vesicles from rat basophilic
leukemia
cells was compared to that of IgE in solution by measuring the steady-state anisotropy as a function of temperature and viscosity. A monoclonal IgE was used to bind the fluorescent probe N-[5-(dimethylamino)naphthalene-1-sulfonyl]-L-
lysine
(DNS-
Lys
) rigidly and specifically in the antigen combining site at the tip of the Fab region. The average rotational correlation time, phi, of 74-89 ns for the receptor-bound IgE is only slightly longer than that for IgE in solution where phi = 54 ns. Another mouse monoclonal IgE was covalently labeled in the Fab region with N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide. Anisotropy measurements with this derivative yielded results that are very similar to those found with anti-DNS IgE and DNS-
Lys
. These findings are strikingly different from that expected for a rigid IgE bound to its receptor since in this case phi is likely to be very much larger. Evidently, the segmental flexibility of IgE is not greatly altered upon binding to its receptor.
...
PMID:Segmental flexibility of receptor-bound immunoglobulin E. 293 92
We have developed a method for use in investigating factors controlling the binding and cross-linking by bivalent haptens of immunoglobulin E (IgE) bound to receptors on rat basophilic
leukemia
(RBL) cells. This method employs monoclonal anti-2,4-dinitrophenyl (DNP) IgE that is labeled with fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate (FITC), and it measures FITC quenching that accompanies DNP occupation of the antibody combining sites in a titration experiment. The validity of this approach is demonstrated using the monovalent hapten DNP-L-
lysine
. The affinity constant for this ligand obtained by the FITC quenching method is compared with those obtained with previously established methods: equilibrium dialysis and quenching of endogenous tryptophan for IgE in solution and [3H]-DNP-L-
lysine
binding to IgE on cells. The FITC quenching method has been used to carry out a detailed study of the binding of monovalent DNP-aminocapryol-L-tyrosine (DCT) and bivalent (DCT)2-cystine to FITC-IgE and its Fab fragments in solution. Intrinsic (K) and cross-linking (Kx) affinity constants are obtained by analyzing the binding curves in terms of simple equilibrium equations. With these DCT haptens the ability of this method to assess hapten binding and cross-linking of IgE bound to receptors on RBL cells is shown.
...
PMID:Cross-linking of IgE-receptor complexes at the cell surface: a fluorescence method for studying the binding of monovalent and bivalent haptens to IgE. 294 10
The nucleotide sequence of the long terminal repeat sequence (LTR) of the human T-cell
leukemia
(lymphotropic) virus type III (HTLV-III) was determined. This virus is associated etiologically with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. The LTR was found to be 634 base pairs in length with U3, R, and U5 regions of 453, 98, and 83 bp, respectively. The proviral DNA is flanked by a 7-base-pair direct repeat. The promoter and polyadenylation signals are situated 27 and 24 base pairs upstream from the respective transcriptional initiation and polyadenylation sites. The primer binding site is complementary to transfer RNA-
lysine
. The LTR of HTLV-III, like that of HTLV-I, showed a limited homology to enhancer-like sequences within two genes expressed specifically in T lymphocytes, T-cell growth factor, and gamma-interferon. Structural comparisons revealed that the LTR of HTLV-III is distantly related to those of HTLV-I, HTLV-II, and bovine leukemia virus.
...
PMID:Characterization of long terminal repeat sequences of HTLV-III. 298 38
The internal structural proteins of avian sarcoma and
leukemia
viruses are derived from a precursor polypeptide that is the product of the viral gag gene. The N-terminal domain of the precursor gives rise to p19, a protein that interacts with the lipid envelope of the virus and that may also interact with viral RNA. The C terminus of p19 from the Prague C strain of Rous sarcoma virus was previously assigned to a tyrosine residue 175 amino acids from the N terminus. We have used metabolic labeling and carboxypeptidase digestion to show that the C terminus of p19 is actually tyrosine 155. This implies the existence of a sixth gag protein 22 amino acids in length and located between p19 and p10 on the gag precursor. The p19 species of some recombinant avian sarcoma viruses and of the defective endogenous virus derived from the ev-1 locus migrate on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as if they were about 4,000 daltons smaller than p19. We have elucidated the structure of these forms, called p19 beta, by analysis of the proteins and determination of the DNA sequence of the p19 region of the gag gene from ev-1 and ev-2. Esterification of carboxyl groups completely suppressed the differences in migration of p19 and p19 beta. Peptide mapping showed the altered mobility to be determined by sequences in the C-terminal cyanogen bromide fragment of the proteins. We conclude from the DNA sequence that a single glutamate-
lysine
alteration is responsible for the altered electrophoretic mobility.
...
PMID:Primary structure of p19 species of avian sarcoma and leukemia viruses. 299 59
Bovine leukemia virus protease was purified to homogeneity and assayed by using murine
leukemia
virus Pr65gag, a polyprotein precursor of the viral core structural proteins, as the substrate. A chemical analysis of the protease, including an amino acid composition and NH2- and COOH-terminal amino acid sequence analysis, revealed that it has an Mr of 14,000 and is encoded by a segment of the viral RNA located between the gag gene and the putative reverse transcriptase gene. As expected from the nucleotide sequence data (Rice et al., Virology 142:357-377, 1985), the reading frame for the protease is different from both the gag and reverse transcriptase reading frames. The 5' end of the protease open reading frame extends 38 codons upstream from the codon for the NH2-terminal residue of the mature viral protease and overlaps the gag open reading frame by 7 codons. The 3' end of the protease open reading frame extends 26 codons beyond the codon for the COOH-terminal residue of the mature protease and overlaps 8 codons of the reverse transcriptase open reading frame. Several lines of evidence, such as protein mapping of the gag polyprotein precursor, the characteristic structure of the mRNA, and promotion of the synthesis of a gag polyprotein precursor by
lysine
tRNA in vitro, suggest that the protease could be translated by frameshift suppression of the gag termination codon. In vitro synthesized bovine leukemia virus gag-related polyproteins were cleaved by the protease into fragments which were the same size as the known components of bovine leukemia virus, suggesting that the specificity of cleavage catalyzed in vitro by the purified protease is the same as the specificity of cleavage found in the virus.
...
PMID:Bovine leukemia virus protease: purification, chemical analysis, and in vitro processing of gag precursor polyproteins. 300 29
The humoral immune response of cats that were naturally infected with the feline
leukemia
virus (FeLV) was examined after antigenic stimulation with the synthetic antigen poly(L-Tyr, L-Glu)-poly(DL-Ala)-poly(
L-Lys
). The primary humoral antibody response in FeLV-infected cats was both delayed and greatly reduced, compared with that seen in uninfected control cats. A similar discordance was observed after secondary stimulation with the antigen, in the FeLV-infected cats had both a delayed response and a reduced response, compared with uninfected cats. The levels of total immunoglobulins of the immunoglobulin G and immunoglobulin M classes in the sera of FeLV-infected cats were significantly higher (two- and threefold, respectively) than were those of the uninfected control animals. The presence of an impaired humoral immune response to newly presented antigens in the presence of elevated immunoglobulin levels has been thoroughly documented in the case of people with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. This further emphasizes the potential value of FeLV-infected cats as a model for human acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
...
PMID:Humoral immune response of asymptomatic cats naturally infected with feline leukemia virus. 302
The binding of 125I-labeled human hemopexin to human
leukemia
HL60 cell at 4 degrees C was saturable with time and with increasing concentrations of 125I-hemopexin. Scatchard analysis of the binding data revealed the presence of approximately 42,000 binding sites/cell with an apparent dissociation constant (Kd) of 1.0 X 10(-9) M. When cells were incubated with radioactive hemopexin at 37 degrees C, 125I-hemopexin was rapidly bound and then was dissociated after the release of heme. Treatment of surface-bound 125I-hemopexin with divalent
lysine
-directed cross-linking disuccinimidyl suberate revealed a membrane polypeptide of about 80,000 Da, to which hemopexin is cross-linked. To examine the fate of the internalized heme, lysates from the cells previously incubated with [59Fe]heme-hemopexin complex were analyzed by CM-cellulose and Sephacryl S-200 column chromatography. A considerable amount of the radioactivity was present in the fraction which co-eluted with the myeloperoxidase activity. When myeloperoxidase was isolated from the cells incubated with [59Fe]heme-hemopexin complex by immunoprecipitation with anti-myeloperoxidase antibody, radiolabeled iron associated with myeloperoxidase increased with time, and more than 30% of the radioactivity in the cells was present in the myeloperoxidase. These results indicate that the binding of hemopexin to the surface receptors triggers a release of heme and that this heme is incorporated into the intracellular myeloperoxidase.
...
PMID:Cell surface receptor for hemopexin in human leukemia HL60 cells. Specific binding, affinity labeling, and fate of heme. 303 Oct 28
We have isolated and sequenced cDNA clones of bovine and murine p11 mRNAs. The nonpolyadenylated mRNAs are predicted to be 614 and 600 nucleotides, respectively. The p11 mRNAs both contain a 291 nucleotide open reading frame, preceded by a 5'-untranslated region of 73 nucleotides in bovine p11 mRNA and of 68 nucleotides in murine p11 mRNA. The deduced bovine p11 amino acid sequence is identical to the previously published partial bovine and complete porcine p11 protein sequence except for an additional COOH-terminal
lysine
residue. The bovine and murine p11 proteins are 92% homologous, whereas at the nucleotide level the conservation is 89% in the coding region and 75% in the 3'-untranslated region. Southern analysis of murine genomic DNA detected a single p11 gene, less than 10 kilobase pairs in size, containing as many as three introns. The p11 gene has been assigned to mouse chromosome 3 by analysis of interspecific hybrid cell panels and recombinant inbred mouse strains. The p11 gene is closely linked to the Xmmv-65 endogenous
leukemia
virus env gene and the guanylate binding protein-1 gene. Northern analyses of RNAs from mouse tissues and cell lines indicated that p11 mRNA levels vary widely. They are very low in liver, heart, and testes, moderate in brain, spleen, and thymus, and high in kidney, intestine, and lung. Analysis of the same RNA samples for p36 mRNA levels showed that expression of p11 and p36 mRNAs is not always coordinated. Brain and the mouse embryonal carcinoma cell line F9 contain moderate to high levels of p11 mRNA with very low levels of p36 mRNA. Sequence homology between p11 and the S100 proteins, and the serum-induced 2A9 gene product, as well as possible functions of p11 are discussed.
...
PMID:cDNA sequence and tissue distribution of the mRNA for bovine and murine p11, the S100-related light chain of the protein-tyrosine kinase substrate p36 (calpactin I). 303 91
The murine
leukemia
virus envelope protein is synthesized as a precursor molecule, Pr85env, which is proteolytically cleaved at an arginine residue to produce two mature envelope proteins, gp70 and p15(E). The results presented here indicate that mutation to
lysine
of the arginine found at the envelope precursor cleavage site results in a precursor which is cleaved with an efficiency at least 10-fold lower than the efficiency with which the wild-type protein is cleaved. This mutation has been used to investigate the requirement for envelope protein processing in various aspects of retroviral infection. Viruses produced by cells transfected with mutant proviral clones are approximately 10-fold less infectious than wild-type viruses. Mutant viruses are incapable of inducing XC cell syncytium formation and are 100-fold less efficient than wild-type viruses at rendering cells resistant to superinfection. Envelope glycoproteins bearing the
lysine
mutation are found in reduced amounts on the surface of infected cells, and as a result mutant virions contain significantly less envelope protein than do wild-type virions. The phenotypic effects of the processing mutation described here are most likely the result of this paucity of envelope glycoproteins in virions carrying the mutation.
...
PMID:The role of envelope glycoprotein processing in murine leukemia virus infection. 303 73
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