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Query: UNIPROT:O95477 (
membrane-bound
)
29,236
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
5'-Nucleotidase is purified from lymphocyte plasma membranes by two affinity chromatographies. The first one, on Lens culinaris
lectin
-Sepharose 4B yields a fraction of twelve
lectin
-binding glycoproteins (
lectin
-receptor fraction). The second one on 5'-AMP-Sepharose 4B leads to pure enzyme. This enzyme is a glycoprotein with a molecular weight of 130 000; it gives a single band in polyacrylamide/dodecylsulfate electrophoresis and displays a very high specific activity (2500-3000 mumol Pih-1mg-1). Some properties of purified 5'-nucleotidase are similar to those of
membrane-bound
enzyme: substrate specificity, temperature dependence, effects of ions and SH-blocking reagents. Others are completely different for the two systems and these differences result from an interaction between the enzyme molecule and other Lens culinaris
lectin
binding proteins.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of 5'-nucleotidase from lymphocyte plasma membranes. 2 25
Preliminary characterization of two mouse thymus-dependent (T) lymphocyte xenoantigens, T25 and T200, which are selectively labelled by lactoperoxidase-catalysed iodination of T-cells, is described. Both molecules are
membrane-bound
glycoproteins. Fractionation of membrane vesicles prepared from BW5147 lymphoma cells by sedimentation through sucrose density gradients show that antigens T25 and T200 are in fractions enriched with plasma membrane. Moreover antigen T200 is partially degraded when viable cells are treated briefly with low concentrations of trypsin. Both molecules are efficiently solubilized in buffers containing sodium deoxycholate or Nonidet P-40, as measured by failure to sediment at 100000g for 60min. However, gel filtration on Sepharose 6B showed the presence of aggregated material in Nonidet P-40 extracts which was not found in deoxycholate-solubilized membranes. After solubilization in detergent, antigens T25 and T200 bind to, and may be specifically eluted from, columns of pea
lectin
--Sepharose or concanavalin A--Sepharose. Both molecules are heterogeneous when examined by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulphate. As judged by its binding to columns of pea
lectin
, at least part of the heterogeneity of mouse thymocyte antigen T25 resides in its carbohydrate moiety.
...
PMID:Preliminary characterization of two thymus-dependent xenoantigens from mouse lymphocytes. 6 76
For the first time, the biological role of a
lectin
in the process of reaggregation of single cells from the same species (marine sponge: Geodia cydonium Jam.) is described. The galactose-specific lectin does not promote aggregation, but prevents the antiaggregation receptor from disaggregating cell clumps. Competition experiments showed that the
lectin
inactivates the antiaggregation receptor by binding to it, most likely via its terminal galactose residues. The
lectin
converts reversibly aggregation-deficient cells (carrying functional cell
membrane-bound
antiaggregation receptor molecules) to aggregation-susceptible cells.
...
PMID:Aggregation of sponge cells. Function of a lectin in its homologous biological system. 11 94
The effect of concanavalin A (Con A) and colchicine on the prostaglandin E1 (PGE1)-mediated cyclic AMP generation in rat peritoneal macrophages have been studied. Although Con A and colchicine by themselves did not affect cyclic AMP levels, they greatly enhanced cyclic AMP production induced by PGE1. There was not only augmentation of cyclic AMP levels at maximally active concentrations of PGE1, but also an increased sensitivity to low (inactive) concentrations of PGE1. Except for lentil
lectin
, none of the other lectins affected PGE1 sensitivity whereas lumicolchicine was as effective as colchicine. In addition, both Con A and colchicine raised the sensitivity to isoproterenol and choleraenterotoxin. Although details of the mechanisms by which Con A or colchicine influenced the
membrane-bound
adenyl cyclase and PGE1 receptors remain unclear, these observations suggest that certain alterations of the cell membrane may render macrophages more susceptible to the regulating effects of prostaglandins.
...
PMID:Enhancement of the PGE1 response of macrophages by concanavalin A and colchicine. 19 24
In the cellular slime mould Dictyostelium, a
membrane-bound
cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase undergoes a tenfold increase in activity when amoebae reach the aggregation stage of development. Our previous studies had shown that when non-aggregating cells, which produce extracellular and intracellular forms of the enzyme, are treated with the
lectin
Concanavalin A (Con A), they exhibit prematurely high levels of the membrane bound enzyme. The present results indicate that this effect may be largely due not to the induction of the enzyme by Con A but rather to the binding of the intracellular form of the enzyme to membranes by Con A. This conclusion is based on the findings that: a) the enzyme activity associated with membranes from Con A treated cells can be decreased by treatment with the haptenic sugar alpha-methyl mannoside: b) mambranes from untreated cells having only low
membrane-bound
phosphodiesterase activity can acquire increased activity after incubation with Con A and intracellular phosphodiesterase; c) the intracellular phosphodiesterase binds to Sepharose-Con A and is eluted with alpha-methyl mannoside. These results raise the possibility that some of the effects attributed to Con A in the literature may not be due directly to Con A but to glycoproteins attached to membranes by Con A.
...
PMID:Concanavalin-mediated attachment to membranes of a cellular slime mould cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase. 20 15
The adsorption to human erythrocytes of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide treated by mild alkaline hydrolysis (h-LPS) stimulated an increase in the intracellular Na+ concentration and a decrease in the intracellular K+ concentration of the erythrocytes. Erythrocytes treated by h-LPS remained responsive to the membrane adenosine triphosphatase inhibitors ouabain and ethacrynic acid, indicating that hLPS did not alter erythrocyte cations be depleting energy intermediates or uncoupling energy metabolism from active cation transport. The h-LPS-treated erythrocytes became non-agglutinable by the
lectin
concanavalin A prior to the development of changes in intracellular cations. In addition, h-LPS-treated erythrocytes demonstrated a three-fold greater cation response to ethacrynic acid than the untreated erythrocytes; this greater response was probably due to local membrane effects by h-LPS on the ethacrynic acid-sensitive adenosine triphosphatase. It is suggested that the h-LPS-induced alteration of erythrocyte cation content was secondary to an increase in ion permeability localized to the concanavalin A receptor regions of the erythrocyte membrane, possibly combined with indirect effects of
membrane-bound
h-LPS on ethacrynic acid-sensitive adenosine triphosphatase.
...
PMID:Effect of alkali-treated lipopolysaccharide on the intracellular cations of human erythrocytes. 33 Apr 8
A theoretical framework is proposed for the analysis of adhesion between cells or of cells to surfaces when the adhesion is mediated by reversible bonds between specific molecules such as antigen and antibody,
lectin
and carbohydrate, or enzyme and substrate. From a knowledge of the reaction rates for reactants in solution and of their diffusion constants both in solution and on membranes, it is possible to estimate reaction rates for
membrane-bound
reactants. Two models are developed for predicting the rate of bond formation between cells and are compared with experiments. The force required to separate two cells is shown to be greater than the expected electrical forces between cells, and of the same order of magnitude as the forces required to pull gangliosides and perhaps some integral membrane proteins out of the cell membrane.
...
PMID:Models for the specific adhesion of cells to cells. 34 75
We have examined the polypeptide chain composition of
membrane-bound
and detergent-solubilized Ia antigens using the chemical cross-linking reagent dimethyl 3,3'-dithiobispropionimidate (DTBP). Products of the I-E/C subregion of the major histocompatibility complex, which were solubilized from spleen cells with the detergent NP-40 and partially purified by affinity chromatography on lentil
lectin
-agarose, could be almost completely cross-linked by DTBP. Thus, the characteristic 33,000 m.v. (alpha) and 28,000 (beta) polypeptide chains seen on sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gels disappeared and a major new species of 60,000 m.w. appeared after cross-linking. When isolated and reduced with 2-mercaptoethanol, the 60,000 m.w. peak was found to be comprised to alpha and beta chains. Similar results were obtained when I-E/C, as well as I-A, alpha and beta chains were crosslinked on the cell surface. These data demonstrate that the alpha and beta chains of the Ia antigens exist primarily in the form of a dimer both in detergent solution and in situ.
...
PMID:Chemical cross-linking of Ia alloantigen alpha and beta chains with dimethyl 3,3'-dithiobispropionimidate. 45 56
The topology of the human erythrocyte membrane anion-transport protein (band 3) has been investigated by isolation and peptide 'mapping' of the major and minor fragments derived from proteolytic cleavage of the lactoperoxidase 125I-labelled protein in erythrocytes and erythrocyte membranes. The content, in each fragment, of lactoperoxidase 125I-labelled sites (which have a known location in the extracellular or cytoplasmic domain of the protein), together with the location of the sites of proteolytic cleavage yielding the fragments, has allowed us to determine the alignment of the fragments on the linear amino acid sequence and to infer the topology of the polypeptide in the membrane. The results suggest that a region in the C-terminal portion of the polypeptide forms part of the cytoplasmic domain of the protein in addition to a large N-terminal segment. The
membrane-bound
regions of the protein are located in the C-terminal two-thirds of the molecule. In this region the polypeptide chain traverses the membrane at least four times and an additional loop of polypeptide is either embedded in the membrane or also penetrates through it to the other surface. The location of the
lectin
receptors on the protein and the site of binding of an anion-transport inhibitor have also been studied.
...
PMID:Structure of the anion-transport protein of the human erythrocyte membrane. Further studies on the fragments produced by proteolytic digestion. 49 95
The cells of the mononuclear phagocyte system are critical elements in host defense. They are essential to many specific immune processes in addition to their well-recognized role in nonspecific resistance. In this report we describe studies of the influence of the maturation of this system of cells on the capacity of the neonatal rat to generate specific immune responses. In addition, studies of human cord blood monocyte function are presented along with data demonstrating a previously unrecognized synergistic action between monocytes and a heat labile, nonantibody, serum factor which may play an important role in host defense. Finally, data are presented demonstrating that one of the recognition processes used by monocytes for cellular interaction is dependent upon a system of natural
lectin
-like receptors on the monocyte cell surface which recognize
membrane-bound
oligosaccharides on other cells.
...
PMID:The mononuclear phagocyte system: role in expression of immunocompetence in neonatal and adult life. 50
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