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)

A human receptor that is selective for the CXC chemokines IP10 and Mig was cloned and characterized. The receptor cDNA has an open reading frame of 1104-bp encoding a protein of 368 amino acids with a molecular mass of 40,659 dalton. The sequence includes seven putative transmembrane segments characteristic of G-protein coupled receptors. It shares 40.9 and 40.3% identical amino acids with the two IL-8 receptors, and 34.2-36.9% identity with the five known CC chemokine receptors. The IP10/Mig receptor is highly expressed in IL-2-activated T lymphocytes, but is not detectable in resting T lymphocytes. B lymphocytes, monocytes and granulocytes. It mediates Ca2+ mobilization and chemotaxis in response to IP10 and Mig, but does not recognize the CXC-chemokines IL-8, GRO alpha, NAP-2, GCP-2. ENA78, PF4, the CC-chemokines MCP-1, MCP-2, MCP-3, MCP-4, MIP-1 alpha, MIP-1 beta. RANTES, 1309, eotaxin, nor lymphotactin. The exclusive expression in activated T-lymphocytes is of high interest since the receptors for chemokines which have been shown so far to attract lymphocytes, e.g., MCP-1, MCP-2, MCP-3, MIP-1 alpha, MIP-1 beta, and RANTES, are also found in monocytes and granulocytes. The present observations suggest that the IP10/Mig receptor is involved in the selective recruitment of effector T cells.
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PMID:Chemokine receptor specific for IP10 and mig: structure, function, and expression in activated T-lymphocytes. 906 39

Herpesvirus saimiri (HVS), strain 488-77, was used to derive continuously growing transformed human CD8+ T cell lines that can suppress HIV replication in CD4+ cells via the production of an antiviral factor(s). Transformed CD8+ cell lines were obtained by HVS infection of peripheral blood mononuclear cells or purified CD8- T cells from HIV-infected or uninfected individuals. Suppression of primary or laboratory isolates of HIV was mediated by factor permeation of a transwell membrane or by cell-free culture supernatants. Suppressing and nonsuppressing cell lines were IL-2-dependent for good growth and showed a similar activated cell surface phenotype. The cell lines produced varying amounts of the cytokines IL-8, IL-10, TNF-alpha, TNF-beta, RANTES, MIP-1 alpha, and MIP-1 beta, but not IFN-alpha. No correlation was observed between the level of any of these cytokines and the presence or absence of antiviral activity in cell line culture supernatants. These cell lines have become an important resource for studying antiviral factors produced by CD8+ T cells from HIV-infected individuals.
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PMID:Derivation of herpesvirus saimiri-transformed CD8+ T cell lines with noncytotoxic anti-HIV activity. 907 51

Cytokines are a heterogenous group of polypeptide mediators that have been associated with activation of numerous functions, including the immune system and inflammatory responses. The cytokine families include, but are not limited to, interleukins (IL-I alpha, IL-I beta, ILIra and IL-2-IL-15), chemokines (IL-8/ NAP-I, NAP-2, MIP-I alpha and beta, MCAF/MCP-1, MGSA and RANTES), tumor necrosis factors (TNF-alpha and TNF-beta), interferons (INF-alpha, beta and gamma), colony stimulating factors (G-CSF, M-CSF, GM-CSF, IL-3 and some of the other ILs), growth factors (EGF, FGF, PDGF, TGF alpha, TGF beta and ECGF), neuropoietins (LIF, CNTF, OM and IL-6), and neurotrophins (BDNF, NGF, NT-3-NT-6 and GDNF). The neurotrophins represent a family of survival and differentiation factors that exert profound effects in the central and peripheral nervous system (PNS). The neurotrophins are currently under investigation as therapeutic agents for the treatment of neurodegenerative disorders and nerve injury either individually or in combination with other trophic factors such as ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) or fibroblast growth factor (FGF). Responsiveness of neurons to a given neurotrophin is governed by the expression of two classes of cell surface receptor. For nerve growth factor (NGF), these are p75NTR (p75) and p140trk (referred to as trk or trkA), which binds both BDNF and neurotrophin (NT)-4/5, and trkC receptor, which binds only NT-3. After binding ligand, the neurotrophin-receptor complex is internalized and retrogradely transported in the axon to the soma. Both receptors undergo ligand-induced dimerization, which activates multiple signal transduction pathways. These include the ras-dependent pathway utilized by trk to mediate neurotrophin effects such as survival and differentiation. Indeed, cellular diversity in the nervous system evolves from the concerted processes of cell proliferation, differentiation, migration, survival, and synapse formation. Neural adhesion and extracellular matrix molecules have been shown to play crucial roles in axonal migration, guidance, and growth cone targeting. Proinflammatory cytokines, released by activated macrophages and monocytes during infection, can act on neural targets that control thermogenesis, behavior, and mood. In addition to induction of fever, cytokines induce other biological functions associated with the acute phase response, including hypophagia and sleep. Cytokine production has been detected within the central nervous system as a result of brain injury, following stab wound to the brain, during viral and bacterial infections (AIDS and meningitis), and in neurodegenerative processes (multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer's disease). Novel cytokine therapies, such as anticytokine antibodies or specific receptor antagonists acting on the cytokine network may provide an optimistic feature for treatment of multiple sclerosis and other diseases in which cytokines have been implicated.
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PMID:Neurotrophins and their receptors in nerve injury and repair. 910 50

The C-X-C chemokines of the IL-8 family possess potent chemotactic activity for neutrophils, but their in vivo role in inflammatory responses is not well understood. In the IgG immune complex-induced model of acute lung inflammatory injury in the rat we have evaluated the roles of two rat chemokines, macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2) and cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant (CINC). Both mRNA and protein for MIP-2 and CINC appeared in a time-dependent manner after initiation of IgG immune complex deposition in lung. There exists a 69% homology between the amino acid sequences for these proteins, and we found cross-reactivity between polyclonal Abs raised to these chemokines. By purifying the blocking Abs using double affinity methods (with Ag-immobilized beads), this cross-reactivity was removed. Individually, anti-MIP-2 and anti-CINC Ab significantly reduced lung injury (as measured by 125I-labeled albumin leakage from the pulmonary vasculature) and reduced neutrophil accumulation in the lung (as determined by myeloperoxidase (MPO content) and neutrophil counts in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluids); however, no change in TNF-alpha levels in BAL fluids was found. Chemotactic activity in BAL fluids collected 2 h after injury from animals undergoing immune complex deposition could be shown to be chiefly due to the combined contributions of MIP-2 (39%), CINC (28%), and C5a (21%). When either MIP-2 or CINC was blocked in vivo, up-regulation of Mac-1 expression on neutrophils obtained from BAL fluids was significantly reduced. These data suggest that, in the model studied, both MIP-2 and CINC contribute significantly to the influx of neutrophils and their activation.
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PMID:Requirement for C-X-C chemokines (macrophage inflammatory protein-2 and cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant) in IgG immune complex-induced lung injury. 912 Mar 5

In two lines of transgenic rats (pX rats) from WKAH and F344 strains and carrying the HTLV-I pX gene under control of the mouse H-2Kd promoter, mammary carcinomas developed predominantly in females starting at about 5 months of age. The incidence of the tumor reached about 40% when the rats were 12 months old. Histology of the tumor was undifferentiated carcinoma with massive infiltration of granulocytes into the tumor tissue. Systemic granulocytosis and hepato-splenomegaly due to extramedullary granulocytopoiesis were seen in pX rats and nude mice bearing pX mammary tumor. mRNAs of both pX and host genes, Gro and MIP-2, which are granulocyte chemoattractants of the IL-8 family, were highly expressed in the tumor tissue. Since expression and point mutation of several oncogenes and anti-oncogene, related with mammary carcinomas, were not demonstrated, hitherto unidentified novel oncogenic pathways may be transactivated by the pX transgene in these pX rats. pX mammary carcinoma cell lines, which have similar characteristics to the primary tumor, were established and the cells underwent apoptosis under the serum deprived conditions. The pX rats and the pX mammary carcinomas appear to be suitable models for analyses of HTLV-I pX oncogenesis and immune pathogenesis in vivo and in vitro.
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PMID:HTLV-I pX transgenic rats: development of cytokine-producing mammary carcinomas and establishment of the pX mammary carcinoma cell lines. 920 2

Chemokines are small proteins that selectively activate and recruit leukocytes to sites of inflammation. Several of them, including the CC chemokines RANTES, MIP-1 alpha, MIP-1 beta, MCP-1, and the CXC chemokines IL-8, GRO-alpha, ENA-78 have been identified in rheumatoid synovium, implicating a potential role for these molecules in rheumatoid arthritis. We have investigated the expression patterns of CC chemokine receptors in the joints of mice with collagen-induced arthritis, a model for human rheumatoid arthritis. In addition, we have investigated the incidence and severity of arthritis in mice receiving administration of MetRANTES, a modified chemokine which is a nanomolar antagonist of certain CC chemokine receptors. The mRNA expression pattern of the chemokines and their receptors in the joints of arthritic mice was investigated using reverse transcriptase-PCR and in situ hybridization. An upregulation of the CC chemokine receptors mCCR1, mCCR2; mCCR3 and mCCR5 was found in the joints from arthritic mice, compared to control animals. In addition, injections of MetRANTES reduced the incidence of disease in a dose dependent manner. Furthermore, in MetRANTES-treated mice that did develop arthritis a significantly lower severity of disease was observed compared with control animals. Our data clearly demonstrate a role for CC chemokines and their receptors in inflammatory joint destruction and support the use of chemokine receptor antagonists as potential tools to control inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis.
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PMID:Effect of a CC chemokine receptor antagonist on collagen induced arthritis in DBA/1 mice. 923 36

To determine if amniotic fluid interleukin-10 (IL-10) concentrations are elevated in women with labor, either at term or preterm, and in the setting of infection-associated preterm labor, amniotic fluid samples were collected from women: (1) at term, not in labor (n = 42); at term, in labor (n = 56), preterm contractions, undelivered within 1 week (n = 22), and preterm labor, delivered within 1 week (n = 31). IL-10 concentrations were assayed in each sample via ELISA (Pharmingen, San Diego, CA). In a subsequent analysis, 8 women with preterm labor associated with chorioamnionitis were matched for gestational age with women experiencing preterm contractions (undelivered within 7 days) and preterm labor (delivered within 7 days) and amniotic fluid IL-10 concentrations compared. Approximately 40-70% of amniotic fluid samples obtained from women in each group had detectable IL-10. However, there were no significant differences in amniotic fluid IL-10 concentrations among the patients. While 1 of 8 patients with chorioamnionitis had amniotic fluid IL-10 concentrations greater than 300 pg/ml, there were no statistically significant differences among the matched samples. Amniotic fluid IL-10 concentrations were not elevated in women with term labor, preterm labor, or chorioamnionitis. This finding contrasts with the elevated concentrations of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines such as interleukin-1, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, IL-6, IL-8, MIP-1 alpha, and GRO alpha reported in previous studies. Because we did not detect elevations of the key anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in amniotic fluid of women with infection-associated preterm labor, we suggest that anti-inflammatory processes in this setting may be attenuated.
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PMID:Amniotic fluid interleukin-10 (IL-10) concentrations during pregnancy and with labor. 923 13

Murine macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2), a member of the alpha-chemokine family, is one of several proteins secreted by cells in response to lipopolysaccharide. Many of the alpha-chemokines, such as interleukin-8, gro-alpha/MGSA, and neutrophil activating peptide-2 (NAP-2), are associated with neutrophil activation and chemotaxis. We describe the expression, purification, and characterization of murine MIP-2 from Pichia pastoris. Circular dichroism spectroscopy reveals that MIP-2 exhibits a highly ordered secondary structure consistent with the alpha/beta structures of other chemokines. Recombinant MIP-2 is chemotactic for human and murine neutrophils and up-regulates cell surface expression of Mac-1. MIP-2 binds to human and murine neutrophils with dissociation constants of 6.4 nM and 2.9 nM, respectively. We further characterize the binding of MIP-2 to the human types A and B IL-8 receptors and the murine homologue of the IL-8 receptor. MIP-2 displays low-affinity binding to the type A IL-8 receptor (Kd > 120 nM) and high-affinity binding to the type B IL-8 receptor (Kd 5.7 nM) and the murine receptor (Kd 6.8 nM). The three-dimensional structure of IL-8 and sequence analysis of six chemokines (IL-8, gro-alpha, NAP-2, ENA-78, KC, and MIP-2) that display high-affinity binding to the IL-8 type B receptor are used to identify an extended N-terminal surface that interacts with this receptor. Two mutants of MIP-2 establish that this region is also involved in binding and activating the murine homologue of the IL-8 receptor. Differences in the sequence between IL-8 and related chemokines identify a unique hydrophobic/aromatic region surrounded by charged residues that is likely to impart specificity to IL-8 for binding to the type A receptor.
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PMID:Functional and receptor binding characterization of recombinant murine macrophage inflammatory protein 2: sequence analysis and mutagenesis identify receptor binding epitopes. 926 Feb 77

Fc gamma RIII (CD16), a low affinity FcR which binds IgG-containing immune-complexes, exists under membrane-associated forms and under a soluble form (sFc gamma RIII). The latter, present in biological fluids (serum, saliva), is generated by proteolytic cleavage of the two membrane-associated Fc gamma RIII isoforms, Fc gamma RIII-A (expressed by macrophages and NK cells) and Fc gamma RIII-B (expressed exclusively by neutrophils). Herein we demonstrate that dendritic cells (DCs), generated by culturing monocytes with GM-CSF and IL-4, bind biotinylated recombinant sFc gamma RIII. This binding is specific and involves the complement receptor CR3 (CD11b/CD18) and CR4 (CD11c/CD18). Indeed, preincubation of DCs with anti-CD11b and anti-CD11c mAbs decreased by 52% and 62% respectively the binding with sFc gamma RIII. Moreover, electron microscopy showed that binding of gold-labeled sFc gamma RIII to DCs maintained at 4 degrees C occurred within clathrin-coated pits. Once internalized, at 37 degrees C, sFc gamma RIII entered the endocytic pathway and reached the MHC class II compartments. Furthermore, DCs incubated for 48 h with multivalent sFc gamma RIII expressed increased levels of CD40, CD80, CD86, CD54, CD58, HLA class I and class II molecules and decreased levels of CD23 and CD32. These effects result in an increased capacity of DCs to trigger proliferative responses by CD4+ CD45RA+ allogeneic T cells. RT-PCR amplification demonstrated that incubation of DCs for 20 h in the presence of multivalent sFc gamma RIII induced the appearance of GM-CSF and IL-12 p40 mRNA. Among the cytokines constitutively expressed, IL-1 beta and IL-8 were strongly up-regulated whereas IL-6 and IL-12 p35 mRNA were increased to a lesser extent and the expression of MIP-1 alpha mRNA remained constant. Finally, ELISA tests demonstrated that DCs incubated with multivalent sFc gamma RIII secreted the cytokines IL-1 beta, IL-6, IL-8, GM-CSF and IL-12 p75. Thus, while becoming internalized sFc gamma RIII could affect the capacity of DCs to present antigens and, via the induction of accessory molecules and the release of the IL-12 p75 protein, could initiate Th1 type immune response.
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PMID:Soluble CD16/Fc gamma RIII induces maturation of dendritic cells and production of several cytokines including IL-12. 928 84

Human alveolar macrophages (AMs) obtained from smokers and non-smokers by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) were subjected to various concentrations of NO2 in an inverted monolayer exposure model. Culture supernatants were collected 4 h after the exposure and assayed for secreted TNF-alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-8 and MIP-1 alpha. The steady state levels of the mRNAs for these cytokines were also analysed in the cells. The adherence of BAL cells to plastic prior to exposure to the gas elevated the steady state mRNA levels of all four cytokines tested in smoker's cells and that of TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta, but not IL-8 (MIP-1 alpha not tested), in non-smoker's cells. Interestingly, adherent cells from non-smokers released circa 15-, 3-, 1.5- and 3-fold the amounts of IL-1 beta, IL-8, TNF-alpha and MIP-1 alpha, respectively, than smoker's cells during control incubation or exposure to air. A 20 min exposure to NO2 (5 or 20 p.p.m.) did not increase the secretion of any of the cytokines from either cell type. In contrast, NO2 caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of the secretion of all cytokines except IL-1 beta from smoker's cells. Additionally, NO2 greatly diminished the release of all cytokines in response to further treatment with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In contrast, only the secretion of TNF-alpha from non-smoker's cells was inhibited by the gas in a concentration-dependent manner, whilst LPS-induced secretion of the cytokines was not affected by the gas. The steady state levels of the respective mRNAs for each of the cytokines were not significantly affected in smoker's cells by exposure to NO2, except for a negative, dose-dependent trend in the case of TNF-alpha. Nitrogen dioxide also failed to elevate the levels of the mRNAs in non-smoker's cells but, again, tended to diminish the levels, particularly of IL-1 beta mRNA. However, exposure to the gas inhibited LPS-induced accumulation of cytokine mRNAs in smoker's cells only. The data suggest that macrophage-derived cytokine mediators of the sepsis response may not play a role in the generation of NO2-induced inflammation in the human lung. Conversely, the gas seems to non-specifically inhibit the release and/or production of cytokines, particularly from smoker's cells, at the post-transcriptional level, and impairs the ability of the cells to increase the transcription and release of the cytokines in response to bacterial LPS. The fact that NO2 seriously impaired the already diminished capacity of smoker's cells to release several important pro-inflammatory cytokines, both under control conditions and in response to LPS, strongly suggest that the inhalation of NO2 in cigarette smoke may contribute to impairing host defence against infection in the lung.
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PMID:Differential inhibition of inflammatory cytokine release from cultured alveolar macrophages from smokers and non-smokers by NO2. 936 75


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