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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the murine cell line LBRM-331A5, phytohemagglutinin (PHA) induces secretion of the T cell growth factor interleukin 2 (IL2). IL1 augments PHA-induced IL2 production. In this cell line, PHA stimulates a number of biochemical changes including phospholipid hydrolysis, increases in cytosolic free calcium [( Ca2+]i), membrane hyperpolarization, cytosolic alkalinization, and
tyrosine
phosphorylation of specific substrates. Using LBRM cells, we have studied the interrelationship between these events and the secretion of IL2. Increases in [Ca2+]i triggered by PHA or following addition of ionomycin result in membrane hyperpolarization but are not required for PHA-induced cytosolic alkalinization or
tyrosine
phosphorylation. Addition of IL1 to PHA-stimulated cells did not affect any of the biochemical parameters, although it significantly augmented PHA-induced IL2 secretion. Increasing [Ca2+]i with ionomycin did not trigger IL2 secretion, increases in cytosolic pH, or
tyrosine
phosphorylation in the presence or absence of IL1. Preventing increases in cytosolic pH did not alter PHA-induced changes in [Ca2+]i or membrane potential. These data are compatible with PHA including activation of phospholipase C and production of inositol phosphates resulting in both release of Ca2+ from internal stores and transmembrane uptake of Ca2+ as well as activation of protein kinase C. However, unlike other growth factor or mitogen-stimulated systems, the changes stimulated by PHA and IL1 in LBRM cells including IL2 secretion are not regulated by a
pertussis
toxin-sensitive G protein.
...
PMID:Interrelationship between signals transduced by phytohemagglutinin and interleukin 1. 169 Feb 13
Activation of T lymphocytes leads to the production of the T cell growth factor IL-2 that regulates T cell proliferation. This activation is associated with several potential intracellular signalling events including increased activity of phospholipase C (PLC) and resultant increases in production of inositol phosphates and diacylglycerols. In addition, phosphorylation of specific intracellular proteins on serine, threonine, and
tyrosine
residues increases. The role of each of these events in IL-2 production is unclear. Using Western blotting with antiphosphotyrosine antibodies, we demonstrate that activation of murine T cells with mitogenic lectins or anti-CD3 antibodies leads to a rapid increase in
tyrosine
phosphorylation of proteins of 120, 72, 62, 55, and 40 kDa. Similar patterns of antiphosphotyrosine antibodies reactivity were observed in splenocytes, a T cell hybridoma, and a T lymphoma.
Tyrosine
phosphorylation was detectable within minutes of addition of mitogenic lectins and persisted for at least 6 h. Pretreatment of the cells with
pertussis
toxin did not inhibit
tyrosine
phosphorylation indicating that a
pertussis
toxin-sensitive G protein is not involved in signal transduction. Neither increasing cytosolic-free calcium nor activating protein kinase C mimicked the effects of mitogenic lectins suggesting that
tyrosine
phosphorylation was not a consequence of activation of PLC. This was confirmed by demonstrating that mitogenic lectins induced similar patterns of
tyrosine
phosphorylation in cells in which activation of the TCR leads to increased PLC activity and in cells in which PLC is not stimulated. To test whether
tyrosine
phosphorylation is linked to IL-2 secretion, we determined the effect of three specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors (tyrphostins) on
tyrosine
phosphorylation, IL-2 secretion, and cellular proliferation. The concentration dependence of inhibition of
tyrosine
phosphorylation and IL-2 production were similar. However, higher concentrations of the tyrphostins were required to inhibit constitutive proliferation of the T cell line indicating that inhibition of IL-2 secretion was not secondary to nonspecific toxic effects of the tyrphostins. Addition of the tyrphostins after mitogenic lectin decreased the amount of
tyrosine
phosphorylation and IL-2 secretion in parallel. This indicates that both
tyrosine
kinases and phosphatases are activated and that continuous
tyrosine
phosphorylation is likely required for IL-2 secretion. Therefore,
tyrosine
phosphorylation appears to represent an obligatory event in the transmembrane signaling processes that lead to IL-2 secretion.
...
PMID:Tyrosine phosphorylation is an obligatory event in IL-2 secretion. 169 78
We have shown previously that exposure of a non-transformed continuous line of rat liver epithelial (WB) cells to epidermal growth factor (EGF), adrenaline, angiotensin II or [Arg8]vasopressin results in an accumulation of the inositol phosphates InsP1, InsP2 and InsP3 [Hepler, Earp & Harden (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 7610-7619]. Studies were carried out with WB cells to determine whether the EGF receptor and other, non-tyrosine kinase, hormone receptors stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis by common, overlapping or separate pathways. The time courses for accumulation of inositol phosphates in response to angiotensin II and EGF were markedly different. Whereas angiotensin II stimulated a very rapid accumulation of inositol phosphates (maximal by 30 s), increases in the levels of inositol phosphates in response to EGF were measurable only following a 30 s lag period; maximal levels were attained by 7-8 min. Chelation of extracellular Ca2+ with EGTA did not modify this relative difference between angiotensin II and EGF in the time required to attain maximal phospholipase C activation. Under experimental conditions in which agonist-induced desensitization no longer occurred in these cells, the inositol phosphate responses to EGF and angiotensin II were additive, whereas those to angiotensin II and [Arg8]vasopressin were not additive. In crude WB lysates, angiotensin II, [Arg8]vasopressin and adrenaline each stimulated inositol phosphate formation in a guanine-nucleotide-dependent manner. In contrast, EGF failed to stimulate inositol phosphate formation in WB lysates in the presence or absence of guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate (GTP[S]), even though EGF retained the capacity to bind to and stimulate
tyrosine
phosphorylation of its own receptor.
Pertussis
toxin, at concentrations that fully ADP-ribosylate and functionally inactivate the inhibitory guanine-nucleotide regulatory protein of adenylate cyclase (Gi), had no effect on the capacity of EGF or hormones to stimulate inositol phosphate accumulation. In intact WB cells, the capacity of EGF, but not angiotensin II, to stimulate inositol phosphate accumulation was correlated with its capacity to stimulate
tyrosine
phosphorylation of the 148 kDa isoenzyme of phospholipase C. Taken together, these findings suggest that, whereas angiotensin II, [Arg8]vasopressin and alpha 1-adrenergic receptors are linked to activation of one or more phospholipase(s) C by an unidentified G-protein(s), the EGF receptor stimulates phosphoinositide hydrolysis by a different pathway, perhaps as a result of its capacity to stimulate
tyrosine
phosphorylation of phospholipase C-gamma.
...
PMID:Evidence that the epidermal growth factor receptor and non-tyrosine kinase hormone receptors stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis by independent pathways. 169 55
The involvement of G-proteins in the insulin signal transduction system has been studied in detail using the murine BC3H-1 myocyte system.
Pertussis
toxin (PT) treatment, previously shown to attenuate some of the metabolic effects of insulin in this cell line (Luttrell, L.M., Hewlett, E.L., Romero, G., and Rogol, A.D. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 6134-6141), abolished insulin-induced generation of diacylglycerol and inositolglycan mediators with no effects on either the autophosphorylation of the insulin receptor or the phosphorylation of the major endogenous substrates for insulin-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity (pp185 and pp42-45). In vitro ADP-ribosylation and immunoblotting studies suggest that the major PT substrate is a 40-kDa protein of the G alpha family. This protein band did not exhibit detectable
tyrosine
phosphorylation upon stimulation of either intact cells or cell membranes with insulin. In the presence of low concentrations of GTP, insulin treatment of isolated myocyte plasma membranes resulted in a small (30-40%) but significant stimulation of GTP hydrolysis. This effect was best observed in the presence of small concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The rate of guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) binding to BC3H-1 membranes was also significantly increased in the presence of insulin. The effects of insulin on GTP hydrolysis and GTP gamma S binding were found to be dependent on the concentration of insulin. These effects were not detected in plasma membranes prepared from PT-pretreated BC3H-1 myocytes. In contrast, pretreatment with the B (inactive) subunit of PT did not alter the response of myocyte membranes to insulin. High affinity binding of [125I]iodoinsulin to myocyte plasma membranes was reduced by 60-70% in the presence of guanine nucleotides. Similar effects on insulin binding were produced by PT pretreatment of the cells. In contrast, adenine nucleotides had no effect on insulin binding. Scatchard analysis of the binding data showed that the observed effects of guanine nucleotides and PT on insulin binding resulted either from a reduction in the number of high affinity insulin binding sites or from a significant reduction of the affinity of insulin for its receptor. Low affinity binding sites did not appear to be affected by either guanine nucleotides nor PT pretreatment. These results provide substantial evidence suggestive of a noncovalent interaction between the insulin receptor and a regulatory G-protein system during the process of insulin signaling.
...
PMID:A pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein mediates some aspects of insulin action in BC3H-1 murine myocytes. 169 70
In neutrophils, receptor-mediated activation of the respiratory burst requires ATP, possibly for phosphotransferase reactions. The oxidative response is only partially inhibited by blockers of protein kinase C, suggesting the involvement of other kinases. Recent evidence has demonstrated activation of
tyrosine
phosphorylation in chemoattractant-stimulated cells. This effect is likely mediated by G proteins because it is obliterated by pretreatment with
pertussis
toxin. In this report we have attempted to correlate the respiratory burst and phosphotyrosine accumulation induced by activation of G proteins, accomplished by treatment of electroporated cells with nonhydrolyzable analogues of GTP. In cells stimulated with guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) both responses displayed similar time course and concentration dependence. The guanine nucleotide selectivity sequence and the divalent cation requirements were also similar for both responses. These similarities suggest a relationship between
tyrosine
phosphorylation and the activation of the NADPH oxidase. GTP gamma S-induced phosphotyrosine accumulation was found to be inhibited by pretreatment of the cells with phorbol esters, underlining the existence of regulatory interactions between different signal transduction pathways in neutrophils.
...
PMID:Tyrosine phosphorylation and oxygen consumption induced by G proteins in neutrophils. 170 84
Epitopes defined by monoclonal antibodies (mAb) specific for the Bordetella
pertussis
outer membrane protein P.69 (pertactin) were mapped using a series of amino- and carboxy-terminal deletion mutants expressed in Escherichia coli. mAb were found to bind predominantly to a region of pertactin spanning a (Pro-Gln-Pro)5 repeat motif and one mAb was found to bind to another region spanning a (Gly-Gly-Xaa-Xaa-Pro)5 repeat motif. To localize further the mAb-binding sites, a panel of synthetic peptides, a series of 94 overlapping hexameric peptides, and a P.69 30-amino acid fusion to a hepatitis B core protein (HBcAg-69), were synthesized. This combined approach has identified the binding site for the mAb BBO5: Pro-Gly-Pro-Gln-Pro-Pro; mAb BBO7, E4A8 and E4D7: Ala-Pro-Gln-Pro-Pro-Ala-Gly-Arg; and mAb BPE3: Thr-Leu-Trp-
Tyr
-Ala-Glu-Ser-Asn-Ala-Leu-Ser-Lys-Arg. We have used a non-lethal murine respiratory model of B.
pertussis
infection to investigate the ability of a peptide containing the epitope of the mAb BBO5 to elicit protective immunity. Immunization of mice with the HBcAg-69 protein prevented growth of B.
pertussis
in the lungs compared to mice receiving HBcAg alone, and protection correlated with high titers of anti-P.69 antibodies.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of a protective immunodominant B cell epitope of pertactin (P.69) from Bordetella pertussis. 170 65
Treatment of BC3H1 myocytes or 3T3-L1 fibroblasts with fluoroaluminate (AlF4-), a direct activator of G proteins, increased the
tyrosine
phosphorylation of a 42-kDa cytosolic protein. AlF4- induced a parallel increase in protein kinase activity toward myelin basic protein (MBP) in partially purified cell extracts. To test whether AlF4- was activating the 42-kDa MAP (mitogen-activated protein) kinase, extracts from AlF4--treated cells were taken through the chromatographic steps routinely used to purify MAP kinase from growth factor-stimulated cells. Following phenyl-Superose chromatography, a peak of MBP kinase activity eluted at a position characteristic of MAP kinase. Immunoblotting of the active fractions with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies revealed a single reactive protein band of Mr 42,000. Stimulation of MAP kinase by AlF4- was rapid, peaking within 15 min and persisting for at least 1 h. In contrast, the activation of MAP kinase by insulin was transient, characteristic of its activation by growth factors in other cell types. Although concentrations of sodium fluoride greater than 1 mM also activated MAP kinase, this effect was shown to be dependent upon the simultaneous presence of aluminum ions in the medium. Activation of MAP kinase by AlF4- was not affected by either cellular depletion of protein kinase C or pretreatment of cells with
pertussis
toxin. Potential sites of action of AlF4- are discussed. These findings suggest that activation of a G protein(s) in intact cells can initiate events that result in
tyrosine
phosphorylation and activation of MAP kinase.
...
PMID:Activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase in BC3H1 myocytes by fluoroaluminate. 170 25
Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase is a 42-kDa serine/threonine-specific protein kinase that requires phosphorylation on both
tyrosine
and threonine residues for activity. This enzyme is rapidly and transiently activated in quiescent cells after addition of various agonists, including insulin, epidermal growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, and phorbol esters. We show here that addition of the growth factors thrombin or basic fibroblast growth factor to CCL39 fibroblasts rapidly induces
tyrosine
phosphorylation of the p42 MAP kinase protein and concomitantly stimulates MAP kinase enzymatic activity. To elucidate the signaling pathways utilized in this activation, we took advantage of the sensitivity of CCL39 cells to the toxin of bordetella
pertussis
, which ADP-ribosylates two Gi proteins in this cell system. We show that pretreatment of cells with the toxin inhibited thrombin stimulation of MAP kinase by greater than 75% but had no detectable effect on the stimulation induced by basic fibroblast growth factor. We also demonstrate that these two growth factors that synergize for mitogenicity are able to cooperate in activation of MAP kinase and that this synergism is partially sensitive to
pertussis
toxin. Finally, we describe a 44-kDa protein, the
tyrosine
phosphorylation of which appears to be coregulated with p42 MAP kinase. We conclude that p42 MAP kinase (and the pp44 protein) are at or are downstream from a point of convergence of two different receptor-induced signaling pathways and might well play a key role in integrating those signals.
...
PMID:p42/mitogen-activated protein kinase as a converging target for different growth factor signaling pathways: use of pertussis toxin as a discrimination factor. 177 7
We have isolated 120 mutant strains producing
pertussis
toxin (PT) cross reacting materials (CRMs) from B.
pertussis
, strain Tohama, phase I by nitrosoguanidine treatment. Strains producing higher PT tend to show higher virulence in mice. No direct correlation between the virulence and other factors, such as filamentous hemagglutinin, adenylate cyclase or dermonecrotic heat labile toxin, was found. Most CRMs were less reactive to the anti-S1 monoclonal antibody, 1B7. When the PT CRMs produced by strains 69D, 74E or 79G, which were less or non-toxic, were mixed with A protomer purified from native PT, the PT activity assayed by clustering of CHO-cells increased significantly, but not when they were mixed with B oligomer. These CRMs may be composed of defective S1 and intact S2, S3, S4 and S5. Molecular sizes of PT CRMs outside and inside the cells were analysed by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The sizes of the CRMs were in the range of 10K to 210K, but the biological activity of PT was detected at only the same molecular size, 106 K, as native PT. The majority of the CRM was released into culture medium if all five subunits were assembled; otherwise they accumulated inside the cell without completion of assembly to form the hexamer in the PT-form. One of the non-toxic mutants named 79G showed one point mutation from G to A at the 730th base from the Eco R1 site of the PT gene. Replacement of Cys-41 with
Tyr
-41 in S1 must have resulted from this mutation. 79G PT composed of S234 (5) was accumulated both inside and outside the cells because the mutant S1 could not form the disulfide bond in the molecule to form the hexamer with the B oligomer, and also S1 must be degraded because of its instability in the cells. Nevertheless 79 GPT showed high immunoprotectivity in mice by active or passive immunization against ic or aerosol challenge with B.
pertussis
, strain 18323, respectively. It may have a proper conformational structure for protective immunogenicity and could become a good candidate strain for production of a safer and effective
pertussis
vaccine in the future.
...
PMID:Characterization of mutant strains producing pertussis toxin cross reacting materials. 177 39
The addition of platelet-activating factor (PAF) to human neutrophils increases the levels of the
tyrosine
phosphorylation in several proteins. These proteins have molecular weights of 41 (pp41), 54 (pp54), 66 (pp66), 104 (pp104), and 116 (pp116) kDa. The effect of PAF was dose-dependent and could be seen at concentrations as low as 1 nM. The nonmetabolizable bioactive PAF analog, C-PAF, caused an increase in the level of phosphorylation of the same proteins in a time- and dose-dependent manner. On the contrary, lyso-PAF, enantio-PAF, and L-beta,gamma-dihexadecyl-alpha-lecithin failed to stimulate the phosphorylation of any of the aforementioned proteins. The response to PAF was prevented by the PAF antagonist BN-52021. The PAF-induced increases in
tyrosine
phosphorylation in pp66, pp116, and pp104 were selectively inhibited by
pertussis
toxin. In contrast, the level of pp41 phosphorylation remained unchanged after the
pertussis
toxin treatment. The calcium chelator EGTA significantly inhibited the PAF-produced phosphorylation of the pp41 protein. The intracellular calcium chelator 1,2-bis-(O-aminophenoxil)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (BAPTA) potentiated the PAF-enhanced levels of
tyrosine
phosphorylation on the pp41 protein. On the other hand, the PAF-induced phosphorylations of pp66, pp104, and pp116 were inhibited in BAPTA-treated cells. The calcium ionophore A23187 selectively potentiated the phosphorylation of the pp41 protein and reduced the phosphorylation in the pp54 protein. This phosphorylation was dependent on the extracellular calcium and was inhibited in toxin-treated cells. The results suggest that PAF is able to affect either directly or indirectly tyrosine kinase and/or phosphotyrosine phosphatase activities. The phosphorylation of the high and low molecular weight proteins are mediated by two different sets of kinases and/or phosphatases.
...
PMID:Platelet-activating factor induces tyrosine phosphorylation in human neutrophils. 190 Oct 60
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