Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034067 (emphysema)
11,506 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Alpha1-antitrypsin (alpha1AT) therapy is used as a treatment for alpha1AT deficiency. It has also been proposed as a therapy for cigarette smoke-induced emphysema, although the efficacy of such therapy is as yet unproven. Moreover, the optimal route of delivery of alpha1AT to the lung interstitium, the crucial locus of action, is unknown. We created transgenic mice with expression of the human alpha1AT gene directed by a human surfactant protein C (SpC) promoter fragment or a rat Clara cell 10-kDa protein (CC10) promoter fragment in order to examine the ability of pulmonary epithelial cell expression of alpha1AT to deliver protein to the interstitium, and to produce a model that would allow studies on the efficacy of alpha1AT in preventing lung damage after cigarette smoke exposure. Four transgenic lines were studied. In situ hybridization and light microscopic immunohistochemistry showed that two CC10 driven lines expressed human alpha1AT in type 11 alveolar cells and airway epithelial cells; alpha1AT expression was seen in the alveolar parenchyma in two SpC driven lines, and in small airway epithelium in one of the SpC lines. Electron microscopic immunochemistry showed the presence of the human alpha1AT protein in the interstitium in all lines. Mean levels of human protein varied from 0.37 to 2.9 microg/g lung protein and serum levels from 0.72 to 1.3 microg/ml, compared to normal human serum alpha1AT levels of 2-5 mg/ml. We conclude that transgene-mediated expression of alpha1AT in pulmonary epithelial cells results in diffuse expression of the transgene in the alveolar parenchyma and reproducibly leads to transfer of protein to the interstitium. The present model is, however, limited by low levels of protein production; limited protein production may be a problem in other forms of gene therapy in which relatively large amounts of extracellular protein are needed in the lung for a therapeutic effect.
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PMID:Pulmonary epithelial expression of human alpha1-antitrypsin in transgenic mice results in delivery of alpha1-antitrypsin protein to the interstitium. 1035 39

Macrophage elastase (MMP-12) is a member of the family of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and is active against multiple extracellular protein substrates such as elastin. Its effect on elastin is central to emphysema in the lung and photoaging of skin. Its expression in the skin increases on photodamaged skin and upon aging. Detecting and characterizing peptides cleaved in elastin, therefore, helps to understand such degradative disease processes in the skin and is also needed to assist in the rational design of agents that specifically inhibit the degradation. In this study, cleavage sites of MMP-12 in human skin elastin were extensively investigated. The peptides formed as a result of cleavages by this enzyme in the human skin elastin were characterized using mass spectrometry. A total of 41 peptides ranging from 4 to 41 amino acids were identified and 36 cleavage sites were determined. Amino acids encoded by exons 5, 6, 26, 28-31 were particularly susceptible to cleavages by MMP-12 and none or very few cleavages were detected from domains encoded by the remaining exons. The amino acid preferences of the different subsites on the catalytic domain of MMP-12 were analyzed.
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PMID:Mapping of macrophage elastase cleavage sites in insoluble human skin elastin. 1833 88