Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P10145 (IL-8)
23,849 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To date no hematopoietic progenitors of dendritic Langerhans' cells (DLC), which represent an highly efficient class of antigen presenting cells, have been identified or the cytokines they elaborate have been defined. Here we describe an acute leukemia patient whose blasts (90-96% in peripheral blood and bone marrow) had a phenotype consistent with putative progenitors of DLC. The patient was treated with ara-C and VP-16 but did not achieve remission. The blasts had lobulated nuclei, no cytoplasmic vacuolation or Auer rods and were weakly positive for acid phosphatase and non-specific esterase and negative for PAS, granzyme A, dipeptidyl aminopeptidase IV, ATPase/ADPase and lysozyme production. The blasts were positive for CD1a, CD4, CD16, CD35, HLADR, HLADQ, CD11b, CD11c, CD14, CD33, CD34, CD11a, CD71, CD19, CD25, IL-2R beta and negative for CD2, CD7, CD8, CD10, CD22, CD56, CD57, surface or cytoplasmic CD3, TCR delta and TCR beta, HTLV-1p19 and P-glycoprotein. On liquid culture with or without 5 x 10(-9) M 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) for 3 days, the blasts formed aggregates of proliferating and elongating cells on the wall of the flasks with a decline in CD34, numerous dendritic processes appeared on the cells and there was strong positivity for ATPase/ADPase, but no other changes in phenotype. No macrophages were observed, indicating derivation from separate DLCs. Cytogenetic analysis showed chromosomal abnormalities and electron microscopy showed Birbeck granules. Southern blotting of DNA showed rearrangement of one allele for both JH and TCR beta but no HTLV-1 related sequences. Culture supernatants from blasts cultured with or without TPA showed the production of large amounts of IL-8, IL-6, TNF-alpha, MIP-1 alpha, IL-10 and interferon gamma and modest amounts of IL-1 alpha, GM-CSF and stem cell factor. The presence not only of CD1a, HLADR, HLADQ and many other characteristics including Birbeck granules, but also differentiation along the lines of DLC with appearance of dendritic processes on the cells and expression of ATPase/ADPase activity, indicate that the leukemic blasts in our patient represented a leukemic counterpart of normal progenitors of DLC and the leukemia a new entity which could possibly be classified as AML-M8. Lastly, many pro-inflammatory cytokines produced by DLC could contribute to inflammation and IL-10 to immunosuppression.
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PMID:Phenotype, genotype and cytokine production in acute leukemia involving progenitors of dendritic Langerhans' cells. 791 55

The responses of cloned human NK cells (ERNK57) to seven CC chemokines (monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1), MCP-2, MCP-3, RANTES (regulated on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted), macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha (MIP-1 alpha), MIP-1 beta, and 1309) and two CXC chemokines (IL-8 and IP-10) were studied. Except for 1309, all CC chemokines induced chemotaxis of the NK cells in vitro, whereas the CXC chemokines were inactive. Maximal activity was obtained at 1 nM for MCP-1 and 10 to 100 nM for the other CC chemokines. The response showed a typically bimodal concentration dependence in all cases, except for RANTES, which induced a linear increase of migration over the concentration range of 0.1 to 1000 nM. A transient rise of the cytosolic-free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), which is characteristic for chemokine-stimulated leukocytes, was observed in NK cells after stimulation with all six active chemokines. Since granule exocytosis is required for NK cell-dependent target killing, the effect of CC chemokines on exocytosis was tested. All CC chemokines that induced chemotaxis and [Ca2+]i changes also induced the release of granzyme A and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase from cloned and blood NK cells, as well as CD8+ T cells after pretreatment with cytochalasin B. Maximum release was obtained from NK cells, and amounted to 35% and 13% of the total content of granzyme A and N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase, respectively. The capacity of cloned NK cells and CD8+ T cells to respond to chemokines depended on the time in culture after stimulation with PHA in the presence of irradiated feeder cells, and maximum responses were observed after 10 to 16 days. Our results demonstrate that CC chemokines activate NK cells, and are, therefore, not only attractants for monocytes, T lymphocytes, and eosinophil and basophil granulocytes.
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PMID:Activation of NK cells by CC chemokines. Chemotaxis, Ca2+ mobilization, and enzyme release. 859 80

Situated in secretory granules of cytotoxic cells, granzymes are essential for induction of target cell apoptosis with perforin. However, since cytotoxic cells constitutively secrete a portion of their synthesized granzymes, these proteases could mediate extracellular functions independently of their role in the lytic event. Thrombin has been shown to function as an activation molecule by cleaving its receptor. We hypothesize that granzymes may act similarly. In this report, we show that purified human granzyme A can induce human lung fibroblasts to produce IL6 and IL8. Cytokine induction is abrogated by treating the serine protease with the suicide serine protease inhibitor 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin. Other fibroblast lines as well as epithelial cells produced cytokines in response to granzyme A. Our data suggest that granzyme A can function as an activation molecule with potentially important immunoregulatory functions.
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PMID:Extracellular Activities of Human Granzymes 866 Aug 52

Situated in secretory granules of cytotoxic cells, granzymes are essential for induction of target cell apoptosis with perforin. However, since cytotoxic cells constitutively secrete a portion of their synthesized granzymes, these proteases could mediate extracellular functions independently of their role in the lytic event. Thrombin has been shown to function as an activation molecule by cleaving its receptor. We hypothesize that granzymes may act similarly. In this report, we show that purified human granzyme A can induce human lung fibroblasts to produce IL6 and IL8. Cytokine induction is abrogated by treating the serine protease with the suicide serine protease inhibitor 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin. Other fibroblast lines as well as epithelial cells produced cytokines in response to granzyme A. Our data suggest that granzyme A can function as an activation molecule with potentially important immunoregulatory functions.
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PMID:Extracellular activities of human granzymes. I. Granzyme A induces IL6 and IL8 production in fibroblast and epithelial cell lines. 875 61

Granzymes, serine proteases located in the granules of cytotoxic T cel ls and NK cells, are essential for induction of target cell apoptosis. However, since cytotoxic cells constitutively secrete a portion of their synthesized granzymes, these proteases could mediate extracellular functions independent of their role in the lytic event. Thrombin, another serine protease, can induce cytokine production in a number of different cell types. In this study, we test the hypothesis that granzymes, like thrombin, can regulate cell-mediated immunity by inducing the production of different cytokines. We show that granzyme A (GA) stimulates IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-alpha production by human PBMC and purified monocytes. In contrast, monocytes exposed to thrombin had enhanced IL-8 production with no induction of IL-6 or TNF-alpha production. However, monocytes exposed to either GA or thrombin had enhanced phagocytic activity. The enzymatic activity of GA and thrombin was required for the induction of cytokine production and for the enhancement of phagocytic activity. The induction of different cytokine profiles by GA vs thrombin suggested that GA activates monocytes via a receptor that was different from the thrombin receptor. This conclusion was strengthened by the fact that GA was incapable of inducing Ca2+ mobilization in insect cells transfected with the thrombin receptor. These results suggest that enzymatically active GA mediates important immunoregulatory functions through signaling pathways that does not involve thrombin receptor activation.
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PMID:Extracellular activities of human granzyme A. Monocyte activation by granzyme A versus alpha-thrombin. 878 23

In renal transplant, patients, the number of T cells expressing high levels of LFA-1 (LFA-1-bright) and of T cells expressing CD57 increases in response to viral infection, even if the latter is asymptomatic. Their role in long-term renal transplant patients with cytomegalovirus (CMV) antigenemia and concomitant transplant dysfunction was investigated. For this purpose, this study used triple-color flow cytometry, fluorescence-activated cell sorting of peripheral blood T cells (CD3+/LFA-1-dim or -bright and CD8+/CD57+ or CD57- subsets), and subsequent semiquantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Cytokine mRNA levels for interleukin (IL)-1 beta, IL-2, IL-4, IL-8, IL-10, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and interferon-gamma, as well as Granzyme A and IL-2R p55 and p75 transcripts were determined and compared in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and in separated T cell subsets. Although in patients with CMV infection and/or rejection, cytokine transcripts were readily detected and the levels in the CD3+/LFA-1-bright subsets were, by orders of magnitudes, higher than in the LFA-1-dim subset, hardly any cytokine message was found in patients without CMV infection or rejection episodes or in control subjects. The expression of Granzyme A, which is involved in cytotoxic T lymphocyte-mediated cytotoxicity, was not upregulated in LFA-1-bright T cells, which is in discordance with cytokine levels. Differences between CD57+ and CD57- T cells were limited to the IL-2R p55 mRNA, of which the former expressed significantly less than the latter. It is concluded that upon virus-induced activation of peripheral blood T cells, an effector type that is marked by high inflammatory but small cytotoxic potential is produced. The results of this study propose that these cells represent a correlate of persistent immune activation and are liable to produce graft dysfunction, although they are unable to clear the organism from virus infection because of their lack of cytotoxic potential.
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PMID:Peripheral T cell activation in long-term renal transplant patients: concordant upregulation of adhesion molecules and cytokine gene transcription. 895 42

The functional properties, regarding parasite growth inhibition in vitro, the cytotoxic potential and cytokine profiles of human gammadelta+ and alphabeta+ T cells, T-cell lines and clones stimulated with Plasmodium falciparum-antigen-or T-cell mitogen in vitro were investigated. Using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and specific primers, mRNA for the cytolytic molecules perforin, granzyme A and B, Fas and Fas ligand (FasL) were detected in both the gammadelta- and the alphabetaT cells. Despite this fact, only gammadeltaT cells inhibited, both Vdelta1+ and Vdelta2+, the in vitro growth of the asexual blood stages in a dose dependent manner. The inhibition required cell-to-cell contact and was not observed until the second parasite replication implied that the likely gammadeltaT-cell target was the extracellular merozoite or schizont. The failure of alphabetaT cells to inhibit the growth of the parasite suggests requirement of additional cytolytic molecules/signals or different receptor specificities exhibited by the gammadeltaT cells. Both the gammadelta- and alphabetaT cells expressed mRNA for a large number of cytokines. Interferon (IFN)-gamma, interleukin (IL) IL-5, IL-6, IL-8, tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha), tumour necrosis factor beta (TNF-beta)/lymphotoxin (LT) and T-cell growth factor beta-1 (TGF-beta1) were observed in all activated clones tested. No IL-3 was detected, while IL-1beta, IL-2, IL-4, IL-10 and GM-CSF were variably expressed. In conclusion, our data show that gammadeltaT cells in malaria nonimmune individuals inhibit the asexual blood stages of P. falciparum malaria, while similarly activated alphabetaT cells do not. Thus, it is likely that the gammadeltaT cells could play a mandatory role in the elimination of parasites and/or the regulation of the early immune response to malaria infection.
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PMID:Human gamma delta T cells that inhibit the in vitro growth of the asexual blood stages of the Plasmodium falciparum parasite express cytolytic and proinflammatory molecules. 1060 13

Accumulation and activation of inflammatory cells in the lung characterize the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). However, the precise mechanism for lung epithelial and endothelial cell damage remains unknown. Based on evidence that rapid apoptosis caused by CD8(+) cytolytic T cells can induce pathological cell death, we hypothesized that this mechanism may also participate in the acute lung injury, and attempted to evaluate apoptosis-related factors in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) from ARDS patients. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis revealed that the messenger ribonucleic acids (mRNAs) for several apoptosis molecules, such as perforin, granzyme A, granzyme B, FasL, and Fas were highly upregulated in the acute phase of ARDS following sepsis. In contrast, low or negligible mRNA expression of these molecules was detected in patients with normal lung function, in septic patients without lung injury (septic non-ARDS), and in patients in the late phase of septic ARDS (late ARDS). While the genes of the classic proinflammatory cytokines interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), IL-6, and IL-8, and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) were upregulated in septic non-ARDS or late ARDS patients, expressions of these genes in the acute phase of septic ARDS were most distinct. The immunofluorescence flow cytometry showed that only the lymphocyte population in BALF from acute phase of septic ARDS patients expressed perforin and granzyme. The level of soluble FasL in the BALF increased only in the acute ARDS patients. These results thus suggested that the dual apoptosis pathway, perforin/granzyme and FasL/Fas system, is likely to be another participant for the pathogenesis of acute lung injury.
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PMID:Upregulation of two death pathways of perforin/granzyme and FasL/Fas in septic acute respiratory distress syndrome. 1137 24

Altered angiogenesis response is observed in patients with cervical cancer. In this study we examined whether Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) positive epithelial cells are able to produce angiogenic modulators. When added to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) the media conditioned by HPV-16 positive cells was able to induce proliferation, whereas a contrary effect was observed for media derived from non-tumorigenic keratinocytes. The analyses of angiogenesis modulator's mRNA levels result in a decrease of the antiangiogenic factors TSP-1 and 2 in HPV-16 positive cells. In contrast the expression of the pro-angiogenic molecules: bFGF, IL-8, TGF-beta, TNFalpha, and VEGF were higher in these cells as compared to control keratinocytes. Furthermore the pattern of VEGF isoforms observed in the cells positive for the viral genome point to a preferential induction of the VEGF(189) isoform. We therefore conclude that cervical cancer cells expressing HPV-16 genome are able to contribute to the pro-angiogenic response that might support tumor growth and invasion of the surrounding tissues.
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PMID:Angiogenesis modulators expression in culture cell lines positives for HPV-16 oncoproteins. 1102 39

To study the early stages of development from stem cells of the CD56+ cell population [which includes natural killer (NK) cells], granulocyte-colony stimulating factor-mobilized peripheral blood CD34+ cells from healthy donors were sorted to >99% purity and cultured in the presence of stem cell factor and interleukin (IL)-2. After 3 weeks in culture, the majority of cells acquired CD33, with or without human leukocyte antigen-DR and CD14. In 20 stem cell donors tested, 8.7 +/- 8.8% of cells were CD56+. Two major CD56+ subsets were identified: CD56(bright), mainly CD33- cells (7+/-10%, n=11) with large, granular lymphocyte morphology, and CD56dim, mainly CD33+ (2.5+/-2, n=11) cells with macrophage morphology. The CD56bright population had cytoplasmic granzyme A but lacked killer inhibitory receptor, suggesting they were immature NK cells. The CD56dim, CD33+, population lacked NK markers. They may represent a minor subset of normal monocytes at a developmental stage comparable with the rare CD56+ CD33+ hybrid myeloid/NK cell leukemia. Consistent with a monocyte nature, CD56dimCD33+ proliferated and produced a variety of cytokines upon lipopolysaccharide stimulation, including IL-8, IL-6, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, and macrophage-derived chemokine but not interferon-gamma. In a short-term cytotoxicity assay, they failed to kill but powerfully inhibited the proliferation of the NK-resistant cell line P815. The generation of CD56+ cells was negatively regulated by hyaluronic acid and IL-4, indicating that extracellular matrix may play an important role in the commitment of CD34+ cells into CD56 myeloid and lymphoid lineages.
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PMID:G-CSF-mobilized CD34+ cells cultured in interleukin-2 and stem cell factor generate a phenotypically novel monocyte. 1534 23


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