Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (
neuroblastoma
)
27,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Leukemia-inhibitory factor (LIF) is a neuropoietin able to regulate the differentiation and the survival of many cell types, which include some neuronal populations. The present study describes the genetic construction, expression, purification and properties of a diphtheria-toxin-related LIF gene fusion in which the native receptor-binding domain of diphtheria toxin was replaced with a gene encoding human LIF. The fusion protein expressed from the chimeric tox gene was designated DT-(1-389)-LIF-(2-184)-peptide. This fusion protein has a deduced molecular mass of 65980 Da and is formed by fusion of the first 389 amino acids of diphtheria toxin to amino acids 2-184 of mature human LIF, using a linker of 34 amino acids that includes six consecutive histidine residues. The latter span allows for single-step purification of the fusion protein by Ni(2+)-resin affinity chromatography. This linker provides a high degree of flexibility between the diphtheria toxin and LIF domains, thereby permitting aggregation-free refolding of the chimeric protein while bound to the affinity column. Both LIF and DT-(1-389)-LIF-(2-184)-peptide induced the phosphorylation of CLIP1 and
CLIP2
in LIF-responsive
neuroblastoma
SH-N-BE cells. DT-(1-389)-LIF-(2-184)-peptide was selectively cytotoxic for cultured
neuroblastoma
cells bearing the LIF receptor, and for sympathetic neurons. The cytotoxic action of DT-(1-389)-LIF-(2-184)-peptide, like that of native diphtheria toxin, required receptor-mediated endocytosis, passage through an acidic compartment, and delivery of an ADP-ribosyltransferase to the cytosol of target cells. The latter point was confirmed by the fact that, while both LIF and DT-(1-389)-LIF-(2-184)-peptide increased c-fos mRNA expression in SH-N-BE cells, only LIF induced proenkephalin and c-fos promoter activities in cells transiently transfected with c-fos-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase and proenkephalin-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase fusion genes. Mutational analysis suggested that the C-terminal helix (helix D) of human LIF may, in part, constitute or contribute to the active site for LIF receptor binding and cell activation. The cytotoxic properties of DT-(1-389)-LIF-(2-184)-peptide may be useful in selectively depleting neuronal and immune cell populations that express the LIF beta receptor.
...
PMID:Synthesis, cytotoxic properties and effects on early and late gene induction of a chimeric diphtheria toxin-leukemia-inhibitory factor protein. 891 49
In Chinese hamster ovary cells, microtubules originate at the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) and grow persistently toward the cell edge, where they undergo catastrophe. In axons, microtubule dynamics must be regulated differently because microtubules grow parallel to the plasma membrane and there is no MTOC. GFP-tagged microtubule plus end tracking proteins (+TIPs) mark the ends of growing neuronal microtubules. Their fluorescent "comet-like" pattern reflects turnover of +TIP binding sites. Using GFP-tagged +TIPs and fluorescence-based segmentation and tracking tools, we show that axonal microtubules grow with a constant average velocity and that they undergo catastrophes at random positions, yet in a programmed fashion. Using protein depletion approaches, we find that the +TIPs
CLIP-115
and CLIP-170 affect average microtubule growth rate and growth distance in neurons but not the duration of a microtubule growth event. In N1E-115
neuroblastoma
cells, we find that EB1, the core +TIP, regulates microtubule growth rate, growth distance, and duration, consistent with in vitro data. Combined, our data suggest that CLIPs influence the axonal microtubule/tubulin ratio, whereas EB1 stimulates microtubule growth and structural transitions at microtubule ends, thereby regulating microtubule catastrophes and the turnover of +TIP binding sites.
...
PMID:History-dependent catastrophes regulate axonal microtubule behavior. 2047 Dec 67