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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (
pertussis
)
19,595
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) is required for the proliferation, differentiation, and activation of monocytes. High-affinity receptors for M-CSF are encoded by the c-fms proto-oncogene. In the present study, we show that c-fms transcripts are detectable in human
THP
-1 myeloid leukemia cells. Furthermore, radiolabeled 125I-M-CSF is rapidly internalized into
THP
-1 cells and then degraded intracellularly. The results also show that treatment of
THP
-1 cells with M-CSF is associated with the activation of protein kinase C (PKC) and the induction of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) gene expression. TNF transcript levels were low to undetectable in uninduced
THP
-1 cells, reached maximal levels by 1 hour of exposure to M-CSF, and returned to those of control cells by 24 hours. Transcriptional run-on analysis showed that a low level of TNF transcription is detectable in untreated
THP
-1 cells, and M-CSF treatment increased the rate of TNF transcription. Pretreatment of
THP
-1 cells with
pertussis
toxin inhibited the increase in PKC activity but not the induction of TNF transcripts by M-CSF. Moreover, exposure of
THP
-1 cells to inhibitors of protein kinase activity blocked the increase in TNF messenger RNA. These findings suggest that at least two M-CSF-mediated signaling pathways exist in
THP
-1 cells and that the induction of TNF may be regulated by a protein kinase-dependent mechanism distinct from PKC.
...
PMID:Functional expression of the macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor in human THP-1 monocytic leukemia cells. 153 7
Using an in vitro monolayer invasion assay (MIA), we analyzed the interaction of human myeloid cell lines representing different maturation stages with murine fibroblastic monolayers. After 24 h of coculture, only promonocytic U937 cells invaded the monolayer to an appreciable extent in contrast to less-differentiated KG1a, KG1, and HL-60 cells and more mature
THP
-1 cells. Human interferon-gamma (HuIFN-gamma) treatment was found to induce maturation in the U937 line and resulted in a considerable reduction of interaction with the monolayer. Thus, the capacity of myeloid cells to interact with a fibroblastic monolayer is restricted to a specific maturation stage. Interaction of U937 cells was also abolished when they were treated with
pertussis
toxin (PT), an agent known to induce monocytosis in vivo, indicating that the MIA may serve as an in vitro simulation of the extravasation of blood borne cells. Finally, although both HuIFN-gamma and PT are able to block cell spreading in the MIA, no effect could be seen on the capacity of U937 cells to phagocytose.
...
PMID:The in vitro invasive behavior of human myelomonocytic cell lines is modulated by HuIFN-gamma and pertussis toxin. 249 15
Exposure of Chinese hamster ovary, mouse adrenal cortex tumor (Y-1),
THP
-1 and U-937 cells and human erythrocytes to adenylate-cyclase-containing urea extracts of Bordetella
pertussis
(strain 114) organisms promotes the formation of large concentrations of intracellular cAMP. Accumulation is dependent on dose and temperature, with significant accumulation occurring at 4 degrees C, and is virtually instantaneous, with a doubling at 1 min. There is an absolute Ca2+ requirement but external calmodulin (the activator of cyclase activity) has no effect except in erythrocytes and U-937 cells, where it reduces cAMP accumulation. However, calmodulin antagonists inhibit cAMP accumulation. In Y-1 adrenal cells the urea-extract adenylate cyclase stimulates steroidogenesis. Anti-(B.
pertussis
) antibodies inhibit cyclase activity and prevent further cAMP accumulation after 10 min in cells previously exposed to urea extract. The same effect is obtained by washing. This suggests that a portion of the cyclase is associated with cells in a form not accessible to antibody or washing but accessible to substrate, which we interpret as internalized enzyme with a short lifetime. Continuing cAMP accumulation thus appears to need a continuing source of external cyclase. Inhibitors of the effect of diphtheria toxin, such as NH4Cl, methylamine, chloroquine or monensin, have no inhibitory effect on the accumulation of intracellular cAMP promoted by the internalized adenylate cyclase of urea extracts of B.
pertussis
organisms. We conclude that entry of the cyclase into cells is not by receptor-mediated endocytosis.
...
PMID:Bordetella pertussis adenylate cyclase. Penetration into host cells. 290 Jul 63
Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1 (MCP-1), a member of the Cys-Cys branch of the chemokine superfamily, induced a mepacrine- and manoalide-sensitive increase in the release of [3H]arachidonic acid from prelabeled human monocytes and monocytic
THP
-1 leukemic cells. The effect was rapid (<30 s), reached maximum at optimal chemotactic concentrations, and was completely blocked by pretreatment of monocytes with Bordetella
pertussis
toxin. A specific antiserum and heat inactivation blocked the induction of arachidonic release by MCP-1. No [3H]arachidonic acid release was observed in the absence of Ca2+ influx (5 mM EGTA or 5 mM Ni2+) or in monocytes loaded with a Ca(2+)-buffering agent. However, using ionophore-permeabilized monocytes and controlled intracellular Ca2+ concentration it was possible to dissociate MCP-1-induced Ca2+ influx from [3H]arachidonic acid release. Thus, the MCP-1-induced increase in [Ca2+]i is necessary but not sufficient for arachidonic acid accumulation. Phospholipase A2 inhibitors (mepacrine, p-bromophenacyl bromide, and manoalide) blocked monocyte polarization and chemotaxis induced by MCP-1. The related Cys-Cys chemokines RANTES and LD78/MIP1 alpha also induced a rapid release of [3H]arachidonic acid, and their chemotactic activity was blocked by phospholipase A2 inhibitors. Brief (5 min) pretreatment of monocytes with platelet-activating factor amplified MCP-1-induced arachidonic acid release and, at MCP-1 suboptimal concentrations, synergized in inducing monocyte migration. Since MCP-1 and platelet-activating factor are induced concomitantly by inflammatory cytokines in monocytes and endothelial cells, we speculate that the observed synergism may have in vivo relevance. The results presented here show that the Cys-Cys chemokines MCP-1, LD78/MIP1 alpha, and RANTES cause rapid release of arachidonic acid in monocytes and that this may be important in inducing monocyte chemotaxis.
...
PMID:Rapid induction of arachidonic acid release by monocyte chemotactic protein-1 and related chemokines. Role of Ca2+ influx, synergism with platelet-activating factor and significance for chemotaxis. 810 42
Stimulation of monocytic
THP
-1 cells by a lectin, concanavalin A (Con A), resulted in protein-tyrosine phosphorylation and association of some of the thus phosphorylated proteins with the 85 kDa regulatory subunit of PtdIns 3-kinase. Both actions of Con A were not inhibited by wortmannin, a PtdIns 3-kinase inhibitor, or by prior exposure of cells to
pertussis
toxin which uncouples certain G-proteins from receptors. The binding of PtdIns 3-kinase to the tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins increased upon Con A stimulation; there was a marked increase in the enzymic activity in the anti-phosphotyrosine immuno-precipitates from Con A-treated cells. The increase was abolished by wortmannin but not affected by
pertussis
toxin. The incorporation of 32P into PtdInsP3 also increased during incubation of [32P]P(i)-prelabelled cells with Con A, reflecting activation of whole-cell PtdIns 3-kinase which could not be accounted for solely by the increase in the phosphotyrosine-bound enzyme activity from the following aspects: (1) different concentration dependencies for Con A; and (2) almost total susceptibility of the incorporation to
pertussis
toxin. This notion appears to be supported by different time courses between increases in PtdInsP3 production and the phosphotyrosine-bound activity. The susceptibility to the toxin may reflect involvement of the toxin-sensitive G-proteins. In contrast, insulin-induced increases in PtdInsP3 production, as well as increases in phosphotyrosine-bound PtdIns 3-kinase activity, were blocked by wortmannin, but never affected by prior exposure of cells to
pertussis
toxin, excluding a possible involvement of G-proteins in the insulin-induced activation. Con-A-induced O2- production was almost inhibited by either
pertussis
toxin or wortmannin. These results suggest that oligomerization of cell-surface glycoproteins with Con A gives rise to activation of G-protein(s) and certain tyrosine kinase(s), both of which were responsible for PtdIns 3-kinase activation; the G-protein-mediated activation led to the respiratory burst.
...
PMID:Activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase by concanavalin A through dual signaling pathways, G-protein-coupled and phosphotyrosine-related, and an essential role of the G-protein-coupled signals for the lectin-induced respiratory burst in human monocytic THP-1 cells. 861 21
We have previously reported that cytokines such as IL-9, IL-4, and IL-6 protect murine thymic lymphoma cell lines against dexamethasone-induced apoptosis. A similar activity, which could not be ascribed to any of these factors, was found in a number of human T cell supernatants that enabled mouse BW5147 thymic lymphoma not only to escape apoptosis but also to maintain proliferation. The protein responsible for this activity was purified to homogeneity from the culture medium of activated leukemic T cells and was found to be identical with the I-309 chemokine. Half-maximal anti-apoptotic activity was obtained with approximately 1 ng/ml, a concentration considerably lower than that required for the monocyte chemotactic activity of this molecule, as measured on
THP
-1 cells. The purified I-309 also improved the survival of two other mouse thymic lymphoma cell lines. This activity was as potent as that of IL-9, which was the strongest anti-apoptotic factor found to date for these cells. Similar results were obtained for BW5147 cells with recombinant I-309 and with T cell activation gene-3, the murine homologue of I-309, but not with other members of the chemokine family, including IL-8, neutrophil-activating peptide-2, granulocyte chemotactic protein-2, macrophage inflammatory protein-1a, RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted), monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1), and MCP-2. MCP-3, however, showed a minor, but significant effect in this model. Unlike that of IL-9, the activity of I-309 was completely inhibited in the presence of
pertussis
toxin, indicating the involvement of a G protein in this process.
...
PMID:I-309/T cell activation gene-3 chemokine protects murine T cell lymphomas against dexamethasone-induced apoptosis. 880 59
Lipoxins (LX) are bioactive eicosanoids that activate human monocytes and inhibit neutrophils. LXA4 is rapidly converted by monocytes to inactive products, and to resist metabolism, synthetic analogs of LXA4 were designed. Here, we examined the bioactivity of several LXA4 analogs in monocytes and found, for chemotaxis, 15(R/S)-methyl-LXA4 and 15-epi-LXA4 were equal in activity, and 16-phenoxy-LXA4 was more potent than native LXA4. Both 15(R/S)-methyl-LXA4 and 16-phenoxy-LXA4 were approximately 1 log molar more potent than LXA4 in stimulating
THP
-1 cell adherence (EC50 approximately 1 x 10(-10) M). Dimethylamide derivatives of the LXA4 analogs also possessed agonist rather than antagonist properties for monocytes. Neither LXA4 nor 16-phenoxy-LXA4 affected monocyte-mediated cytotoxicity. We cloned an LXA4 receptor from
THP
-1 cells identical to that found in PMN. Evidence of receptor-mediated function of LXA4 and the stable analogs in monocytes included desensitization of intracellular calcium mobilization to a second challenge by equimolar concentrations of these analogs, but not to LTB4. Increases in [Ca2+]i by LXA4 and the analogs were specifically inhibited by an antipeptide antibody to the LXA4 receptor; and both LXA4- and analog-induced adherence and increments in Ca2+ were sensitive to
pertussis
toxin. Together, these results indicate that the LXA4 stable analogs are potent monocyte chemoattractants and are more potent than native LXA4 in stimulating
THP
-1 cell adherence, at subnanomolar concentrations. Moreover, they provide additional evidence that the LXA4 stable analogs retain selective bioactivity in monocytes and are valuable instruments for examining the functions and modes of action of LXA4.
...
PMID:Lipoxin A4 stable analogs are potent mimetics that stimulate human monocytes and THP-1 cells via a G-protein-linked lipoxin A4 receptor. 905 86
The proinflammatory cytokine, interleukin-1 (IL-1) is elevated in the Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain. Studies from our laboratory have demonstrated that beta-amyloid (A beta) 1-42, fibrillar A beta 1-40 and A beta 25-35 induce the release of IL-1 beta from activated
THP
-1 cells, a human monocyte cell line. A beta also is chemotactic for primary rodent microglia and peritoneal macrophages. We hypothesize that A beta is a chemokine and induces these responses by interaction with chemotactic receptors. If this is true, then these A beta-induced responses should be calcium-dependent and require activation of
pertussis
toxin-sensitive G-proteins. To test this hypothesis,
THP
-1 cells were grown in culture with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and incubated with A beta 1-42 (5 muM) in the presence and absence of a calcium chelator, an inhibitor of intracellular calcium mobilization, a calcium channel blocker, or
pertussis
toxin, a bacterial endotoxin which uncouples G proteins from receptors by catalyzing the ADP ribosylation of cysteine near the carboxy-terminus of the alpha subunit. The media was collected and IL-1 beta present in the media was measured using an ELISA. Treatment of LPS-activated
THP
-1 cells with A beta 1-42 significantly elevated IL-1 beta released into the media as previously shown. Addition or ethylene glycol-bis (beta-aminothyl ether) N,N,N'N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) (0.5 mM), a calcium chelator, to the media blocked A beta-induced IL-1 beta release, but had no effect on LPS-activated
THP
-1 cell release of IL-1 beta. The presence of 3,4,5-trimethoxybenzoic acid 8-(diethyl amino)-octyl ester (TMB-8), an inhibitor of intracellular calcium mobilization, as well as nickel chloride, a non-specific calcium channel blocker, in the media also inhibited A beta-induced IL-1 release from LPS-activated
THP
-1 cells. IL- 1 beta release from activated
THP
-1 monocytes incubated with TMB-8 and nickel chloride without A beta remained at baseline values. Pretreatment of
THP
-1 monocytes with
pertussis
toxin for 4 h, followed by LPS activation and incubation with A beta, antagonized the release of IL-1 beta from these cells, but did not alter IL-1 beta release from activated
THP
-1 monocytes. These data suggest that A beta-induced IL-1 beta release from these cells is calcium-dependent and requires the activation of specific G-proteins. These findings are consistent with known second messengers that are activated following stimulation of chemotactic receptors.
...
PMID:beta-Amyloid-induced IL-1 beta release from an activated human monocyte cell line is calcium- and G-protein-dependent. 914 72
The cell wall is a key inflammatory agent of gram-positive bacteria. Possible receptors mediating cell wall-induced inflammation include CD14 and platelet-activating factor (PAF) receptor. To delineate the conditions under which these various receptors might be used, human monocytic
THP
-1 cells and heparinized whole human blood were stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS), intact Streptococcus pneumoniae bacteria, or purified pneumococcal cell wall.
THP
-1 culture supernatant or cell-free plasma was analyzed for the presence of tumor necrosis factor, interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), and IL-6. For the cultured monocytes, anti-CD14 inhibited induction of the inflammatory cytokines by the cell wall and LPS but not by intact pneumococcal bacteria. Despite the difference in CD-14 usage, the intracellular pathways induced by the three agents demonstrated similarities, as revealed in the presence of specific signal transduction inhibitors such as cholera toxin,
pertussis
toxin, and genistein. Cytokine production in whole human blood indicated that anti-CD14 failed to block responses to cell wall and intact pneumococci, whereas while LPS-induced responses were inhibited. PAF receptor antagonist had no effect under any conditions in both assays. These results indicate that although cell walls bind to both CD14 and PAF receptor, only CD14 appears to engender a cytokine response under restricted conditions. Furthermore, host cell responses to intact pneumococci are consistently independent of CD14 and PAF receptor.
...
PMID:Coexistence of CD14-dependent and independent pathways for stimulation of human monocytes by gram-positive bacteria. 923 83
The beta-chemokines monocyte chemotactic protein 1 (MCP-1), macrophage inflammatory protein 1 alpha (MIP-1alpha), MIP-1beta and regulated on activation, normal T cells, expressed and secreted (RANTES) induced the in vitro migration of the monocytic cell line MonoMac-6. MCP-1 exhibits the most potent chemotactic effect on this cell line while MIP-1alpha, RANTES and to a lesser extent MIP-1beta were more moderate inducers of cell migration. MonoMac-6 migration in response to chemokines was shown to be a chemotactic and not a chemokinetic response, which was inhibited by
pertussis
and cholera toxins suggesting a role for G proteins in chemokine receptor-mediated signalling in these cells; chemotaxis of MonoMac-6 cells in response to MCP-1 was abrogated by the addition of anti-MCP-1 antibody. The response of MonoMac-6 cells to the alpha-chemokines IL-8, IP-10, growth-related peptide (Gro) alpha and MIP-2beta was substantially weaker than to the beta-chemokines. MCP-1 caused an alteration in cellular morphology by increasing ruffling at the cell membrane and the number of cells exhibiting extended pseudopodia. The chemotactic response of MonoMac-6 cells to beta-chemokines was compared with less well-differentiated myelomonocytic cell lines.
THP
-1 showed a similar, but weaker response to the beta-chemokines while both HL60 and U937 failed to respond to any member of this subfamily when tested under the same conditions. These results suggest that the differentiation status of cells of monocytic lineage may affect their response to beta-chemokines.
...
PMID:Migration responses of human monocytic cell lines to alpha- and beta-chemokines. 923 15
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