Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P08758 (annexin V)
9,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) production by adipocytes is elevated in obesity, as shown by increased adipose tissue TNF-alpha mRNA and protein levels and by increased circulating concentrations of the cytokine. Furthermore, TNF-alpha has distinct effects on adipose tissue including induction of insulin resistance, induction of leptin production, stimulation of lipolysis, suppression of lipogenesis, induction of adipocyte dedifferentiation, and impairment of preadipocyte differentiation in vitro. Taken together, these effects all tend to decrease adipocyte volume and number and suggest a role for TNF-alpha in limiting increase in fat mass. The aim of the present study was to determine if TNF-alpha could induce apoptosis in human adipose cells, hence delineating another mechanism by which the cytokine could act to limit the development of, or extent of, obesity. Cultured human preadipocytes and mature adipocytes in explant cultures were exposed in vitro to human TNF-alpha at varying concentrations for up to 24 h. Apoptosis was assessed using morphological (histology, nuclear morphology following acridine orange staining, electron microscopy) and biochemical (demonstration of internucleosomal DNA cleavage by gel electrophoresis and of annexin V staining using immunocytochemistry) criteria. In control cultures, apoptotic indexes were between 0 and 2.3% in all experiments. In the experimental systems, TNF-alpha induced apoptosis in both preadipocytes and adipocytes, with indexes between 5 and 25%. Therefore, TNF-alpha induces apoptosis of human preadipocytes and adipocytes in vitro. In view of the major metabolic role of TNF-alpha in human adipose tissue, and the knowledge that adipose tissue is dynamic (with cell acquisition via preadipocyte replication/differentiation and cell loss via apoptosis), these findings describe a further mechanism whereby adipose tissue mass may be modified by TNF-alpha.
Diabetes 1997 Dec
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha induces apoptosis of human adipose cells. 939 77

Annexin V, VI and VII-core (delta1-107) are members of the annexin protein family and bind to acidic phospholipid membranes in a calcium dependent manner. They also show ion channel activity under certain conditions. As annexins bind peripherally to lipid membranes, ion channel formation must consist of at least two steps: An adsorption reaction regulating the binding of annexin to the membrane surface and the opening and closing of the active species controlling the channel activity. By using the baseline current through the patch clamp seal as a probe for unoccupied binding sites at the membrane, we show that the adsorption of annexins to membranes is not only calcium dependent but also strongly voltage dependent. Whereas the free transfer energies at low calcium concentrations are similar for all three annexins, the binding of annexin V becomes much tighter with higher calcium levels, compared to annexin VI and VII-core. This correlates with the finding that annexin VI and VII-core display channel activity much more often than annexin V if one assumes that a high coverage of the membrane surface with annexins stabilizes the bilayer. At higher protein concentrations weaker binding is observed in agreement with the previously reported anti-cooperativity of membrane binding.
Biochim Biophys Acta 1997 Dec 04
PMID:Voltage dependent binding of annexin V, annexin VI and annexin VII-core to acidic phospholipid membranes. 940 79

A recently described mitochondrial membrane protein-specific monoclonal antibody, APO2.7, was examined for monitoring early apoptotic responses in anti-CD95 (7C11)-induced Jurkat cells. Jurkat cells were harvested at 1.5, 3, 4.5, 6, 12, and 18 h after induction of apoptosis, and APO2.7 antibody monitored in unprocessed (no permeabilization agent used prior to staining) and processed (permeabilized prior to staining) cells. Light-scatter changes (decreased forward-scatter and increased side-scatter) by flow cytometry were observed after 3 h, and detection of cell permeability in unprocessed cells, as measured by light microscopic examination of Trypan blue-stained cells and flow cytometric detection of tubulin, showed little change until after 6 h. In addition, unprocessed cells stained with APO2.7 antibody showed little increase in staining until after 6 h following induction of apoptosis, when DNA fragmentation was demonstrated by flow cytometry and gel electrophoresis; however, processed cells stained with APO2.7 antibody showed significant increase in staining after 1.5 h. Detection, using annexin V and flow cytometry, of phospholipid membrane asymmetry from exposure of phosphatidylserine showed greater, apparent nonspecific staining in noninduced cells as compared to the other markers of apoptosis, but nearly paralleled the results of APO2.7 staining in processed cells from 3-18 h following CD95 induction of apoptosis. The data presented herein indicate that the mitochondrial membrane protein-specific antibody, APO2.7, is useful as a marker for the detection of apoptotic cells.
Cytometry 1997 Dec 01
PMID:Monitoring early cellular responses in apoptosis is aided by the mitochondrial membrane protein-specific monoclonal antibody APO2.7. 941 13

Apoptosis is of paramount importance during embryonic development. This insight stems from early studies which correlated cell death to normal developmental processes and now has been confirmed by linking aberrant cell death patterns to aberrant development. Linking apoptosis to the phenotype of a developing organism requires spatial information on the localization of the dying cells, making in situ detection essential This prerequisite limits the tools available for such studies (1) to vital dyes, which can be detected at the whole mount level only; (2) to detection based upon apoptotic morphology by routine light microscopy and electron microscopy; and (3) to staining for apoptosis associated DNA fragmentation via, e.g., the TUNEL procedure, which marks cells in a relative late phase of apoptosis. New apoptosis markers need to be specific and should preferably detect cells early during this process. In the present study we show that the recently discovered in vitro marker of apoptosis, Annexin V meets these requirements for in vivo detection. Through intracardiac injections of biotin labeled Annexin V, a Ca2+ dependent phosphatidylserine binding protein, we were able to visualize apoptotic cells derived from each germ layer in the developing mouse embryo from the whole mount level up to the ultrastructural level. Double-labeling on paraffin sections for both this method and TUNEL revealed that cells become Annexin V-biotin labeled early during the process of apoptosis.
Cytometry 1997 Dec 01
PMID:In situ detection of apoptosis during embryogenesis with annexin V: from whole mount to ultrastructure. 941 14

The BCR/ABL fusion protein transforms myeloid stem cells. Both chronic myelogenous leukemias (CML) and a subset of acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALL) are associated with the expression of BCR/ABL proteins. This knowledge has not yet been translated into any specific tool to control ABL driven neoplastic cells growth. CGP57148B is an ATP-competitive inhibitor of the ABL protein kinase; it has been shown to inhibit the kinase activity of ABL both in vitro and in vivo and to inhibit the growth of v-abl and bcr/abl transfectants, as well as the in vitro formation of bone marrow (BM)-derived colonies in the presence of growth factors in some CML patients. These studies were performed to investigate the activity of CGP57148B on the spontaneous proliferation of both fresh and cultured, leukemic and normal, BCR/ABL positive and negative cells, and to study its mechanism of action. Six cell lines derived from BCR/ABL+ leukemias (K562, BV173, KCL22, KU812, MC3, LAMA84), thirteen BCR/ABL negative lines, both neoplastic (KG1, SU-DHL-1, U937, Daudi, NB4, NB4.306) and derived from normal cells (PHA blasts, LAK, fibroblasts, LCL, renal epithelial cells, endothelial cells, CD34(+) cells), and 14 fresh leukemic samples were tested using a tritiated thymidine uptake assay. The in vivo phosphorylation of the BCR/ABL protein was evaluated by western blot, while apoptosis was detected by the annexin V/propidium binding test. The induction of differentiation was assayed by immunofluorescence using multiple antibodies. All six BCR/ABL+ lines showed a dose dependent inhibition of their spontaneous proliferative rate, which was not accompanied by differentiation. The treatment caused, within minutes, dephosphorylation of the BCR/ABL protein, followed in 16-24 hours by a decrease in cycling cells and induction of apoptosis. No significant inhibition of DNA synthesis was observed in any BCR/ABL negative normal or neoplastic line at concentrations </=3 microM, with the exception of fibroblasts and CD34 cells. Proliferation inhibition was observed also when using fresh samples obtained from two Ph+ ALL and 12 consecutive CML patients. Induction of apoptosis was observed in these samples too. The activity of CGP57148B can be monitored in ex vivo isolated or cultured cells using a simple and reproducible assay, without the need for exogenously added growth factors. This molecule possibly exerts its effects through the inhibition of the kinase activity of BCR/ABL and the subsequent initiation of apoptosis, without inducing cell differentiation. Some normal cells are also affected. These data support the use of CGP57148B in initial clinical studies; possible toxic effects on BM and fibroblast-derived cells will have to be closely monitored. The in vivo monitoring of patients will have to be focused on the induction of apoptosis in leukemic cells.
Blood Cells Mol Dis 1997 Dec
PMID:Inhibition of the ABL kinase activity blocks the proliferation of BCR/ABL+ leukemic cells and induces apoptosis. 944 52

Oxygen-derived free radical injury has been associated with several cytopathic conditions. Oxygen radicals produced by chondrocytes is an important mechanism by which chondrocytes induce matrix degradation. In the present study, we extend these observations by studying oxidative processes against osteoblasts. Osteoblasts were mixed in in vitro culture with 200 microM menadione. The cytotoxic effect of menadione-induced oxidative stress was monitored by lucigenin- or luminol-amplified chemiluminescence, tetrazolium assay and immunocytochemical study. Results showed that adding menadione induces an oxidative stress on osteoblasts, via superoxide and hydrogen peroxide production, that can be eradicated by superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase in a dose-dependent manner. Catalase and the appropriate concentration of dimethyl sulfoxide have a protective effect on cytotoxicity induced by menadione, whereas SOD does not. Menadione-treated osteoblasts have a strong affinity for annexin V, and the nuclei are strongly stained by TUNEL (TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labelling). The results suggest that menadione-triggered production of reactive oxygen species leads to apoptosis of osteoblasts.
Cell Mol Life Sci 1997 Dec
PMID:Menadione-induced cytotoxicity to rat osteoblasts. 944 50

The present article compares the reliability of four previously described cytofluorometric methods of apoptosis quantification for phenotyping apoptotic human lymphocytes. Each of these assays detects distinct cellular alterations of the apoptotic process. Alteration in plasma membrane integrity can be evaluated following 7-AAD incorporation and the translocation of phosphatidylserine from the inner to the outer layer of the plasma membrane can be detected through the FITC annexin V staining. DNA strand breaks in apoptotic nuclei can be evidenced by the ISNT assay and finally morphological modifications can be followed with FSC/SSC criteria. Comparative analysis of apoptosis in cultured PBMC from HIV-infected patients considering the FSC/SSC parameters, 7-AAD stainability and annexin V fixation revealed that the latter identifies early apoptotic cells, also characterized as 7-AAD(low) with a reduced FSC. Moreover these three methods proved to be reliable and gave statistically similar results when combined with cell surface detection of antigens such as CD4, CD8 and CD19 by specific mAbs. Importantly, the 7-AAD assay easily allowed the identification of debris/apoptotic bodies, which were still stained by anti-cell surface mAbs and might therefore significantly distort the apoptosis percentage in a given lymphocyte subset. In the present report we also point out that the ISNT assay is not appropriate for phenotyping apoptotic lymphocytes in PBMC. Indeed it can particularly underestimate the rate of apoptosis in the B-cell subset. This was found to be related to the apoptosis-associated decrease in cell surface antigen expression, which is dramatically exacerbated in the ISNT assay because of the stripper effect of ethanol used for cell permeabilization. Finally, we propose a three step analytical strategy to accurately phenotype apoptotic peripheral human lymphocytes. It includes two gating steps performed on FSC/SSC criteria and 7-AAD/FSC parameters to eliminate monocytes, granulocytes and debris-apoptotic bodies, the third step being the phenotyping step itself, performed in dual or triple staining experiments. Altogether these observations emphasize that it is essential to assess critically the ability of a cytofluorometric method to phenotype apoptotic cells in complex lymphoid populations and that inaccurate identification of cell subsets undergoing apoptosis can be readily overcome by gating properly the lymphoid population, and using assays which preserve cell surface structure.
J Immunol Methods 1997 Dec 01
PMID:Strategies for phenotyping apoptotic peripheral human lymphocytes comparing ISNT, annexin-V and 7-AAD cytofluorometric staining methods. 946 28

The translocation of phosphatidylserine from the cytosol to the external surface of the plasma membrane has been documented as a characteristic feature of apoptosis in a number of cell types. Annexin V is a calcium-dependent phospholipid binding protein that has high affinity for phosphatidylserine. To investigate whether Annexin V provides a marker of apoptosis in the central nervous system we carried out histochemical analysis of its binding in the 21-day-old rat brain at various time-points following a moderate unilateral hypoxic-ischemic (HI) insult. The CA1 pyramidal neurons, which are selectively vulnerable to HI injury and that die by an apoptotic mechanism showed an increase in Annexin V binding 48-168 hours post-insult.
Neuroreport 1997 Dec 22
PMID:Annexin V labels apoptotic neurons following hypoxia-ischemia. 946 58

The focus of this investigation was to examine the effects of low concentrations of organic mercuric compounds on human monocyte function and to relate these effects to apoptosis. Following exposure of monocytes to 0-5 microM MeHgCl, phagocytic function and capacity to generate a respiratory burst, following PMA activation, were determined. We found that the mercury-treated cells exhibited reduced phagocytic activity. Exposure to the same mercury concentration range, also caused a marked increase in cell death. To ascertain if monocyte death was due to apoptosis, a number of flow cytometric studies were performed. Mercury-treated cells exhibited increased Hoechst 33258 fluorescence, while maintaining their ability to exclude the vital dye 7-aminoactinomycin D. Furthermore, monocytes exhibited changes in light scatter patterns that were consistent with apoptosis; these included decreased forward light scatter and increased side scatter. The percentage of cells undergoing apoptosis was dependent upon the mercury content of the medium, regardless of whether the metal was present as methyl, ethyl or phenyl mercury. Mercury-treated cells also exhibited changes in lipid organization within the plasma membrane as evidenced by increased uptake of the fluorescent probe, merocyanine 540, and by elevated annexin V binding to phosphatidylserine. Using the fluorescent probes DiOC6(3) and rhodamine 123 we noted that within 1 h of exposure to mercury, monocytes exhibited a decrease in mitochondrial transmembrane potential (psi m). Since a decreased psi m is associated with altered mitochondrial function, the hypothesis that mercury potentiated reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and that these species promoted apoptosis was tested. We noted that treated cells generated ROS, as evidenced by oxidation of hydroethidine and the generation of the fluorescent product, ethidium. Finally, since ROS would also lower monocyte reductive reserve, we also measured GSH levels in mercury-treated cells. Chemical measurement of GSH indicated that there was thiol depletion. We suggest that the low thiol reserve predisposes cells to ROS damage and at the same time activates death-signaling pathways.
Toxicology 1997 Dec 31
PMID:Mercuric compounds inhibit human monocyte function by inducing apoptosis: evidence for formation of reactive oxygen species, development of mitochondrial membrane permeability transition and loss of reductive reserve. 948 23

We have evaluated the uptake of a soluble protein antigen, denitrophenylated human serum albumin (DNP-HSA), and two different intracellular bacteria; Chlamydia trachomatis serovar L2 and Mycobacterium tuberculosis strain H37Ra, by immature human dendritic cells. These were generated by culturing progenitor cells from blood in the presence of cytokines (granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-4). Dendritic cells play a crucial part in antigen presentation for the induction of T-cell-dependent immune responses in various tissues. Recently, macropinocytic and phagocytic activity has been shown for immature dendritic cells of mouse, rat and human origin. In the present study, macropinocytosis characterized the uptake of the soluble protein-antigen DNP-HSA, whereas the C. trachomatis were ingested via receptor-mediated endocytosis in coated pits, and opsonized M. tuberculosis via phagocytosis. To follow the intracellular routes of the antigens, their positions were compared with the localization of annexins, a family of Ca(2+)-and phospholipid-binding proteins, involved in membrane fusion, aggregation and transport of different vesicles. To elucidate further the intracellular pathway of the antigens, two other proteins, lysosome-associated membrane protein-1 (LAMP-1) and cathepsin D, were labelled. They are known to colocalize with major histocompatibility complex class II compartments in the immature dendritic cells. We observed a distinct translocation of annexin V to DNP-HSA containing endosomes, and annexin III to vesicles with C. trachomatis. Furthermore, annexin III, IV and V redistributed to phagosomes with M. tuberculosis. Both LAMP-1 and cathepsin D colocalized with DNP-HSA endosomes, and with phagosomes with M. tuberculosis. Thus, immature human dendritic cells have the capacity to phagocytose. Moreover, the handling of these antigens by dendritic cells may represent three distinct intracellular pathways, albeit some properties and compartments are shared.
Immunology 1997 Dec
PMID:Role of annexins in endocytosis of antigens in immature human dendritic cells. 949 92


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