Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0043167 (pertussis)
19,595 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) envelope protein gp41 mediates viral fusion with human host cells. In this study we show that N36, a synthetic peptide derived from the N-terminus of gp41, induced directional migration and calcium mobilization in human monocytes and neutrophils. The activity of N36 on phagocytes was pertussis toxin sensitive, suggesting involvement of a Gi-coupled seven-transmembrane receptor(s). Since high concentrations of the bacterial chemotactic peptide fMet-Leu-Phe (fMLF) partially desensitized the calcium mobilizing activity of N36 in phagocytes, we postulated that N36 might use a low-affinity fMLF receptor. By using cells stably expressing fMLF receptor FPR or FPRL1, we demonstrate that N36 uses FPRL1 as a functional receptor. Our results suggest that HIV-1 gp41 may contain a fragment(s) that activates the innate host immune cells through FPRL1. Since the activation of FPRL1 in monocytes has been shown to heterologously desensitize chemokine receptors, the reduced phagocyte response to chemoattractants seen in AIDS patients may be attributed, at least in part, to heterologous desensitization.
...
PMID:N36, a synthetic N-terminal heptad repeat domain of the HIV-1 envelope protein gp41, is an activator of human phagocytes. 1096 42

Activation of astrocytes is important in the pathogenesis of a variety of diseases in the central nervous system, such as infection and neurodegeneration. We found that the bacterial chemotactic peptide, N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLF) induced potent migration and Ca(2+) mobilization in human astrocytoma cell lines. The effect of fMLF was pertussis toxin-sensitive, suggesting the involvement of seven transmembrane, G protein-coupled receptor(s) for fMLF. Scatchard analyses revealed that astrocytoma cell lines express both high- and low-affinity binding sites for [3H]fMLF. RT-PCR confirmed the expression of transcripts of fMLF receptors, the high-affinity FPR and the low-affinity FPRL1 by these cells. Both fMLF and F peptide, a synthetic peptide domain of HIV-1 envelope protein which specifically activates FPRL1, increased secretion of IL-6 by astrocytoma cells. Our study demonstrates for the first time that FPR and FPRL1 expressed by astrocytoma cell lines are functional, and suggests a molecular basis for the involvement of these receptors in host defense in the brain.
...
PMID:Expression of functional formyl peptide receptors by human astrocytoma cell lines. 1106 27

Amyloid-beta, the pathologic protein in Alzheimer's disease, induces chemotaxis and production of reactive oxygen species in phagocytic cells, but mechanisms have not been fully defined. Here we provide three lines of evidence that the phagocyte G protein-coupled receptor (N-formylpeptide receptor 2 (FPR2)) mediates these amyloid-beta-dependent functions in phagocytic cells. First, transfection of FPR2, but not related receptors, including the other known N-formylpeptide receptor FPR, reconstituted amyloid-beta-dependent chemotaxis and calcium flux in HEK 293 cells. Second, amyloid-beta induced both calcium flux and chemotaxis in mouse neutrophils (which express endogenous FPR2) with similar potency as in FPR2-transfected HEK 293 cells. This activity could be specifically desensitized in both cell types by preincubation with a specific FPR2 agonist, which desensitizes the receptor, or with pertussis toxin, which uncouples it from G(i)-dependent signaling. Third, specific and reciprocal desensitization of superoxide production was observed when N-formylpeptides and amyloid-beta were used to sequentially stimulate neutrophils from FPR -/- mice, which express FPR2 normally. Potential biological relevance of these results to the neuroinflammation associated with Alzheimer's disease was suggested by two additional findings: first, FPR2 mRNA could be detected by PCR in mouse brain; second, induction of FPR2 expression correlated with induction of calcium flux and chemotaxis by amyloid-beta in the mouse microglial cell line N9. Further, in sequential stimulation experiments with N9 cells, N-formylpeptides and amyloid-beta were able to reciprocally cross-desensitize each other. Amyloid-beta was also a specific agonist at the human counterpart of FPR2, the FPR-like 1 receptor. These results suggest a unified signaling mechanism for linking amyloid-beta to phagocyte chemotaxis and oxidant stress in the brain.
...
PMID:Amyloid-beta induces chemotaxis and oxidant stress by acting at formylpeptide receptor 2, a G protein-coupled receptor expressed in phagocytes and brain. 1131 6

We investigated in IMR90 cells the effects of N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe (N-fMLP) and WKYMVm (W peptide) on activation of the NADPH oxidase-like enzyme. In serum-deprived human fibroblasts, exposure to 100 microM N-fMLP or 10 microM peptide W for 1 min induced both p47phox translocation and NADPH-dependent superoxide generation. These effects were in large part mediated by prevention of the rapid activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) by preincubation with the MEK1 inhibitor PD098059. Furthermore, responses to N-fMLP or W peptide were inhibited by pertussis toxin, suggesting the involvement of a seven-transmembrane G protein-coupled receptor(s) for peptides. RT-PCR experiments demonstrated the expression in these cells of the low-affinity receptor FPRL1, but not the high-affinity receptor FPR. Incubation with radiolabeled WKYMVm, which had a higher efficiency on FPRL1, revealed that human fibroblasts express binding sites for 125I-WKYMVm that are specifically displaced by increasing concentrations of unlabeled ligand. Analysis of the binding data predicted a Kd of 155.99 nM and a receptor density of about 16,200 molecules/cell. HEK293 cells, which express a NADPH oxidase-like enzyme but not formyl peptide receptors, transiently transfected with FPRL1 cDNA produced superoxide on stimulation with N-fMLP or W peptide, demonstrating that this receptor is biologically functional.
...
PMID:Low-affinity receptor-mediated induction of superoxide by N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine and WKYMVm in IMR90 human fibroblasts. 1474 31

Formyl peptide receptor-like 1 (FPRL1) is a G protein-coupled receptor that binds natural and synthetic peptides as well as lipoxin A(4) and mediates important biological functions. To facilitate its pharmacological characterization, we screened a compound library and identified a substituted quinazolinone (Quin-C1, 4-butoxy-N-[2-(4-methoxy-phenyl)-4-oxo-1,4-dihydro-2H-quinazolin-3-yl]-benzamide) as a ligand for FPRL1. Quin-C1 induces chemotaxis and secretion of beta-glucuronidase in peripheral blood neutrophils with a potency of approximately 1/1000 of that of the peptide agonist WKYMVm. In studies using transfected rat basophilic leukemia (RBL) cell lines expressing either formyl peptide receptor or FPRL1, Quin-C1 induced enzyme release from RBL-FPRL1 but not RBL-FPR cells. Likewise, Quin-C1 selectively stimulates calcium mobilization in RBL-FPRL1 cells, a response that was markedly inhibited by pertussis toxin. Quin-C1 also stimulates phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases 1 and 2 and induces internalization of an FPRL1 fused to green fluorescent protein. In degranulation assays, both the FPRL1-selective peptide agonist MMK1 and Quin-C1 exhibited lower efficacy and potency than WKYMVm, with EC(50) values of 7.17 x 10(-8) M and 1.88 x 10(-6) M, respectively, compared with the EC(50) value for WKYMVm (2.29 x 10(-8) M). However, Quin-C1 did not induce neutrophil superoxide generation at up to 100 microM. Based on these results, we conclude that Quin-C1 is a novel nonpeptide ligand that binds to FPRL1 and selectively stimulates FPRL1-mediated functions. Quin-C1 is a prototype of substituted quinazolinones based on which further structural modifications may be made to improve its efficacy and potency for FPRL1.
...
PMID:A novel nonpeptide ligand for formyl peptide receptor-like 1. 1530 62

The urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) receptor (uPAR) functions in concert with co-receptors, including integrins, FPR-like receptor-1/lipoxin A4 receptor, and the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), to initiate cell signaling. uPAR co-receptors may be dynamically organized into a multiprotein signaling receptor complex. In Chinese hamster ovary-K1 (CHO-K1) cells, uPA-binding to uPAR activates ERK/MAP kinase, even though these cells do not express the EGFR; however, when CHO-K1 cells are transfected to express the EGFR, ERK activation becomes EGFR-dependent. In this study, we demonstrate that ERK activation in response to uPA follows equivalent biphasic kinetics in EGFR-expressing and -deficient CHO-K1 cells. In both cell types, the response is pertussis toxin-sensitive; however, uPA promotes cell proliferation exclusively in the EGFR-expressing cells. uPA-induced mitogenic activity requires activation of both STAT5b and ERK. STAT5b was tyrosine-phosphorylated, in response to uPA, only in EGFR-expressing cells. uPA-induced cell proliferation was blocked by dominant-negative MEK1, dominant-negative STAT5b, and by expression of an EGFR that is mutated at Tyr-845, which is essential for STAT5b activation. In two cell culture models of uPA-stimulated breast cancer growth, MDA-MB 468 cells treated with uPA and MCF-7 cells treated with uPA-plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 complex, proliferation was completely inhibited when EGFR expression or activity was blocked. We conclude that expression and assembly of uPAR co-receptors in a specific cell type determines the response to uPA. The EGFR selectively cooperates with uPAR to mediate mitogenesis.
...
PMID:Dynamic assembly of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator signaling receptor complex determines the mitogenic activity of urokinase-type plasminogen activator. 1572 76

We screened a chemolibrary of drug-like molecules for their ability to activate reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in murine phagocytes, and we identified 26 novel compounds with potent neutrophil activating properties. We used substructure screening, fragment-focusing, and structure-activity relationship analyses to further probe the parent library and defined at least two groups of activators of ROS production in murine neutrophils: t-butyl benzene and thiophene-2-amide-3-carboxylic ester derivatives. Further studies of the active compounds revealed 11 compounds that activated ROS production in human neutrophils, and six of these compounds also activated intercellular Ca(2+) mobilization and chemotaxis in human neutrophils. Of the latter compounds, compound 14 (1,3-benzodioxolane-5-carboxylic acid 4'-benzyloxy-3'-methoxybenzylidene-hydrazide) activated neutrophils at nanomolar concentrations, and Ca(2+) mobilization was inhibited by pertussis toxin and N-t-butoxycarbonyl-Phe-Leu-Phe-Leu-Phe (Boc-2), an antagonist of formyl peptide receptors (FPR/FPRL1). Likewise, activation by compound 14 was desensitized after N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe pretreatment. Similar biological activities were found for compound 104 (1,3-benzodioxolane-5-carboxylic acid 3'-bromo-5'-ethoxy-4'-hydroxybenzylidene-hydrazide), an analog of compound 14. Furthermore, conformational analysis of the activators of chemotaxis and Ca(2+) mobilization showed a high degree of similarity in distances between pharmacophore points of compounds 14 and 104 with a model of FPR published by Edwards et al. (Mol Pharmacol 68:1301-1310, 2005), indicating that conformational features of the agonists identified here are structurally compatible with steric constraints of the ligand-binding pocket of the receptor. Based on these results, we conclude that compounds 14 and 104 represent novel small-molecule agonists of FPR. These studies enhance our understanding of FPR ligand/receptor interactions and structure/activity relationships of phagocyte agonists.
...
PMID:High-throughput screening for small-molecule activators of neutrophils: identification of novel N-formyl peptide receptor agonists. 1722 69

N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP) is a major chemotactic factor produced by Escherichia coli and other Gram-negative bacteria. The prototypal human fMLP receptor 1 (FPR1) was cloned in 1990 from a differentiated HL-60 myeloid leukemia cell cDNA library. In transfected cells, FPR1 binds fMLP with high affinity and is activated by picomolar to low nanomolar concentrations of fMLP in chemotaxis and calcium ion mobilization assays. Two additional human genes, designated FPR-like 1 (FPRL1) and FPR-like 2 (FPRL2), were later isolated by low-stringency hybridization using FPR1 cDNA as a probe, and these were shown to cluster with FPR1 on chromosome 19q13.3. In avian models the fMLP effects and the possible expression of FPRs have been poorly investigated. In this study we demonstrated that stimulation with fMLP of cultured cells isolated from the 10-day chick embryo brain causes superoxide anion and nitric oxide release and protein phosphorylation at serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues. These effects were abrogated by pretreatment with pertussis toxin, suggesting the involvement of a G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Although specific N-formyl peptide receptors have so far been demonstrated only in mammals, a specific polyclonal antihuman-FPR1 antibody proved to bind to the membrane of both neurons and glial cells isolated from the chick brain. Immunoblot analysis revealed a single band corresponding to 60 kDa ca. A BLAST search and aa sequence alignments demonstrated that a number of avian 7-transmembrane (7TM) GPCRs share some homologies with the human FPR1. Furthermore, the CXCR4 ligand, SDF-1alpha, seems to compete with the antihuman-FPR1 polyclonal antibody used in our experiments. We thus advance the hypothesis that in birds one (or more) of the expressed 7TM GPCRs, most probably chemokine receptors belonging to the CXCR4 subfamily, also may act as fMLP receptors.
...
PMID:Formyl peptide receptor expression in birds. 1746 63

The N-formyl peptide receptor-like 1 (FPRL1) is a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) that transmits intracellular signals in response to a variety of agonists, many of them being clearly implicated in human pathology. beta-arrestins are adaptor proteins that uncouple GPCRs from G protein and regulate receptor internalization. They can also function as signal transducers through the scaffolding of signaling molecules, such as components of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) cascade. We investigated the role of beta-arrestins in ligand-induced FPRL1 internalization and signaling. In HEK293 cells expressing FPRL1, fluorescence microscopy revealed that agonist-stimulated FPRL1 remained co-localized with beta-arrestins during endocytosis. Internalization of FPRL1, expressed in a mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cell line lacking endogenous beta-arrestins, was highly compromised. This distinguishes FPRL1 from the prototypical formyl peptide receptor FPR that is efficiently internalized in the absence of beta-arrestins. In both HEK293 and MEF cells, FPRL1-mediated ERK1/2 activation was a rapid and transient event. The kinetics and extent of ERK1/2 activation were not significantly modified by beta-arrestin overexpression. The pattern of FPRL1-mediated ERK1/2 activation was similar whether cells express or not beta-arrestins. Furthermore, treatment of the FPRL1 expressing cells with pertussis toxin inhibited ERK1/2 activation in MEF and in HEK293 cells. These results led us to conclude that activation of ERK1/2 mediated by FPRL1 occurs primarily through G protein signaling. Since beta-arrestin-mediated signaling has been observed essentially for receptors coupled to G proteins other than G(i), this may be a characteristic of G(i) protein-coupled chemoattractant receptors.
...
PMID:The role of beta-arrestins in the formyl peptide receptor-like 1 internalization and signaling. 1759 11

Development of immunomodulatory agents that enhance innate immune responses represents a promising strategy for combating infectious diseases. In the present studies, we screened a series of 71 arylcarboxylic acid hydrazide derivatives for their ability to induce macrophage tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) production and identified six such compounds, including one compound previously shown to be a formyl peptide receptor (FPR/FPRL1) agonist. The two most potent compounds [compound 1, nicotinic acid [5-(3-bromophenyl)-2-furyl]methylene-hydrazide; compound 2, 4-fluoro-benzoic acid [5-(3-trifluoromethyl-phenyl)-2-furyl]-methylene-hydrazide] were selected for further analysis. These compounds induced de novo production of TNF-alpha in a dose- and time-dependent manner in human and murine monocyte/macrophage cell lines and in primary macrophages. These compounds also induced mobilization of intracellular Ca(2+), production of reactive oxygen species, and chemotaxis in human and murine phagocytes. Induction of macrophage TNF-alpha production was pertussis toxin-sensitive, and analysis of the cellular target of these compounds showed that they were FPRL1-specific agonists and that this response was blocked by FPR/FPRL1 and FPRL1-specific antagonists. In addition, pharmacophore modeling showed a high degree of similarity for low-energy conformations of these two compounds to the current pharmacophore model for FPR ligands ( Mol Pharmacol 68: 1301-1310, 2005 ). Overall, these compounds represent novel FPRL1 agonists that induce TNF-alpha, a response distinct from those induced by other known FPR and FPRL1 agonists.
...
PMID:Identification of novel formyl peptide receptor-like 1 agonists that induce macrophage tumor necrosis factor alpha production. 1845 54


1 2 Next >>