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Query: UNIPROT:P04141 (
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
)
6,790
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Colony-stimulating factor
, which specifically stimulates mouse bone marrow cells to proliferate in vitro and generate colonies of granulocytes, or macrophages, or both, was purified 3500-fold from mouse lung-conditioned medium. Analysis by discontinuous polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence and absence of sodium dodecyl sulfate indicated that there was a single protein component. All of the colony-stimulating activity was coincident with the protein band. The molecular weight of colony-stimulating factor estimated by gel filtration was approximately 29,000 and by electrophoresis approximately 23,000. The specific activity of purified colony-stimulating factor from mouse lung-conditioned medium bound to concanavalin A-Sapharose, indicating that it is a glycoprotein. The small percentage of colony-stimulating factor in mouse lung-conditioned medium which did not bind to concanavalin A-Sepharose appeared to represent molecules which lacked the carbohydrate moieties required for binding to this lectin. It was necessary to include low concentrations (less than 0.01%, v/v) of polymers such as gelatin and polyethylene glycol, or nonionic detergents such as
Triton X-100
, in all of the buffers used throughout the purification scheme, otherwise colony-stimulating factor was lost from solution. At high concentrations (greater than 20 mug/ml) the factor stimulated the formation of granulocytic, macrophage, and mixed colonies from C57BL mouse bone marrow cells. As the concentration of purified colony-stimulating factor was decreased, the frequency of colonies containing granulocytes also decreased. At low concentrations of colony-stimulating factor (less than 70 pg/ml) only macrophage colonies were stimulated.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of colony-stimulating factor from mouse lung-conditioned medium. 30 Mar 77
Human neutrophils treated with chemotactic peptides or phorbol esters demonstrate tyrosine phosphorylation of a subset of proteins.
Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
GM-CSF
) induced a time- and concentration-dependent increase in the tyrosine phosphorylation of at least seven proteins. Three of these proteins with approximate molecular weights of 150, 95, and 70 Kd were unique to neutrophils treated with
GM-CSF
, and were not seen to be phosphorylated on tyrosine in neutrophils treated with the agonists FMLP or PMA, or the cytokines G-CSF and tumor necrosis factor. We found the 150-Kd protein to be localized within the cell particulate fraction and the 95-Kd protein within the cell cytosol. The 70-Kd phosphotyrosine protein was found in both fractions. When the neutrophils were treated with
Triton X-100
(Sigma Chemical Co, St Louis, MO) to evaluate cytoskeletal associations of proteins, the 150 phosphotyrosine protein partitioned with the
Triton X-100
insoluble cytoskeleton (TICS), and the 70-Kd protein partitioned with both the TICS and
Triton X-100
soluble proteins. The
GM-CSF
-induced tyrosine phosphorylation was inhibited by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor ST638. This was not seen with the putative C-kinase inhibitor, H-7. However, staurosporine was seen to inhibit tyrosine phosphorylation of neutrophil proteins by
GM-CSF
and in vitro tyrosine kinase activity of isolated neutrophil cytosol and particulate fractions. These data indicate that the three unique
GM-CSF
-induced phosphotyrosine-containing proteins may be responsible for the unique actions of
GM-CSF
and that staurosporine inhibits a tyrosine kinase responsible for the phosphorylation of these proteins.
...
PMID:Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor induces a staurosporine inhibitable tyrosine phosphorylation of unique neutrophil proteins. 157 55
The human
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
GM-CSF
) receptor (GM-R) is expressed on both hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic tissues. Although the receptor has been identified by cross-linking studies as an 84,000-dalton protein, very little is known about its biochemistry. In this report, we describe a soluble binding assay for the human GM-R which allowed us to characterize the receptor complex from various sources, including plasma membranes of placenta, neutrophils, and human myeloid leukemia cell lines. Preparation of membranes as well as solubilization by
Triton X-100
and N-octylglucoside resulted in a 5-10-fold lower affinity of the receptor for
GM-CSF
. The Kd decreased from 20 to 80 pM in intact cells to 200-500 pM in both intact and solubilized membranes. Binding in solution was rapid, specific for
GM-CSF
, and best fit a "one-site" model with an approximate Kd of 500 pM. The dissociation rate constant for the soluble GM-R was very similar to that of intact cells (k2 = 0.013 min-1 versus 0.017 min-1, respectively). As expected, solubilized membranes obtained from those cells expressing the highest number of GM-R (neutrophils and dimethyl sulfoxide-induced HL-60 cells; approximately 500-800 sites/cell) possessed the highest concentration of soluble GM-R (approximately 2-3 x 10(8) GM-R/micrograms). Cross-linking of 125I-
GM-CSF
to soluble GM-R resulted in the appearance of two specifically labeled complexes. A major 110-kDa receptor-ligand complex is found when cross-linking is performed with intact cells; both 110- and 200-kDa species are seen when cross-linking is performed with either intact membranes or soluble GM-R. These studies define methods by which intact GM-R can be solubilized and measured in solution, permitting a more complete biochemical characterization of the intact GM-R complex.
...
PMID:Characterization of the soluble human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor complex. 182 96
Colony-stimulating factor
1 (CSF-1) regulates the survival, proliferation, and differentiation of mononuclear phagocytes. The CSF-1 receptor was purified from cell membranes of the J774.2 mouse macrophage cell line by solubilization with
Triton X-100
, CSF-1 affinity chromatography, and gel filtration. The purified receptor is a protein or glycoprotein of 165 kDa comprising a single polypeptide chain that is not covalently associated, either as a homopolymer, or with any other protein. CSF-1 stimulated autophosphorylation of the purified receptor in tyrosine residues. Casein but not histone was shown to act as a substrate for the tyrosine protein kinase activity of purified receptor.
...
PMID:Purification of the colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor and demonstration of its tyrosine kinase activity. 302 75
Secretion of a
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
GM-CSF
) was accomplished by L-P3 cells in culture with a serum-free medium. Cell proliferation per se was not requisite for the production of
GM-CSF
; the cells continued secreting
GM-CSF
even after their growth had been suspended. The amount of
GM-CSF
accumulated in the conditioned medium was reasonably accounted by the daily rate of production, and the addition of a proteinase inhibitor such as leupeptin and pepstatin did not result in greater accumulation of
GM-CSF
in the culture. It is thus postulated that there is no significant proteolytic inactivation of the secreted
GM-CSF
in the culture. However, when partially purified
GM-CSF
preparation was chromatographed on a gel-filtration column in the presence of 0.1%
Triton X-100
, a derivative of the
GM-CSF
was yielded which had been diminished in the molecular weight and altered in the isoelectric point. On the other hand, when leupeptin was included in the solution during production and isolation of the factor, the yielded
GM-CSF
did not manifest such a detergent-induced transformation and maintained its isoelectric point at pH 3.5. It is thus assumed that, in the presence of the detergent,
GM-CSF
suffers deterioration by an endogenous proteinase and releases a sialoglycopeptide fragment without loosing its colony-stimulating activity.
...
PMID:Secretion and partial degradation of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) of mouse L-P3 cells. 644 68