Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P11684 (Uteroglobin)
114 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs induce proteins that inhibit phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)), including uteroglobin and lipocortin-1 (annexin I). Uteroglobin and lipocortin-1 retain several conserved sequences. Based on these sequences, several nonapeptides (antiflammins) were synthesized. These nonapeptides were shown to have anti-inflammatory effects in vitro and in vivo, possibly by inhibiting PLA(2). Subsequent research showed that PLA(2) is activated by transglutaminase 2 (TGase 2). We hypothesize here that TGase 2 inhibitors may increase the anti-inflammatory efficacy of inhibiting PLA(2) activity. To test this theory, we constructed recombinant peptides containing sequences from pro-elafin (for inhibition of TGase 2), and from lipocortin-1, lipocortin-5, and uteroglobin (for inhibition of PLA(2)). The recombinant peptides, which had dual inhibitory effects on purified TGase 2 and PLA(2), reversed the inflammation of allergic conjunctivitis to ragweed in a guinea pig model. The present work suggests that novel recombinant peptides may be safe and effective agents for the treatment of various inflammatory diseases.
...
PMID:Novel transglutaminase inhibitors reverse the inflammation of allergic conjunctivitis. 1251 81

Uteroglobin is a secretory protein synthesized by most epithelia, including the respiratory tract. It has strong anti-inflammatory properties that appear to be related to the inhibition of phospholipase A2. Recent experimental evidence indicates that uteroglobin has an inhibitory effect on the proliferation and invasion of cancer cells. We investigated the effects of the adenovirus-uteroglobin (ad-UG) transduction on the growth of lung cancer cell lines, which did not express the uteroglobin gene. Upon transduction of ad-UG, the rate of cell growth and the ability to produce colonies in soft agar were evaluated. Cell cycle analysis, Western blot for cell cycle-related proteins and annexin V staining for apoptosis were carried out to see if they were associated with the changes in cell growth. All the tested lung cancer cell lines did not express the uteroglobin gene. The growth rates, and colony-forming ability of transformed cells, were significantly inhibited by the induction of uteroglobin gene expression. The DNA histogram showed that the cell fraction of the G2/M phase was increased, and this G2/M phase arrest was related to a decrease of cdk1 and cyclin A. However, a fraction of apoptotic cells were same as the control. From these results, uteroglobin is thought to have an inhibitory effect on the growth of lung cancer cells. This suggests a potential role for uteroglobin in gene therapy for lung cancer.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effect of adenovirus-uteroglobin transduction on the growth of lung cancer cell lines. 1267 1

Lipophilins A, B, C, mammaglobin, and uteroglobin are members of the secretoglobin family of small, secreted, proteins. The functions of these proteins are not well understood but uteroglobin has been implicated in the development of cancers. Uteroglobin is known to be highly expressed in normal lung and down-regulated in lung cancers but expression of the other secretoglobins in normal lung and lung neoplasms have not been investigated. Therefore, we developed quantitative real-time reverse transcription (RT-) PCR assays for the different secretoglobins and evaluated their expression in normal and neoplastic lung tissues. The secretoglobin transcript levels were quantitated by real-time RT-PCR in samples from three normal lungs, 24 lung tumors including six small cell lung carcinomas, seven adenocarcinomas, and five squamous cell carcinomas, and in cell lines from three small cell lung carcinomas and one mesothelioma. Uteroglobin was confirmed to be abundantly expressed in normal lung and the different lung tumors showed down-regulated uteroglobin expression. Of the other secretoglobins, only lipophilin C was detected in normal lung, albeit at low levels. The lung tumors, however, frequently showed neo- or up-regulation of lipophilins A, B, C, and mammaglobin. The results constitute the first quantitative evaluation of secretoglobin expression in normal and neoplastic human lung tissues and demonstrate dysregulation in various human lung cancers. These findings could have important biological and diagnostic implications.
...
PMID:Dysregulated secretoglobin expression in human lung cancers. 1282 12

Uteroglobin (UG) or Clara cell protein (CC16), the main secretory product of bronchiolar Clara cells, plays an important protective role in the respiratory tract against inflammatory processes. In the lung, protein secretion is regulated by glucocorticoids, but also proinflammatory cytokines, such as interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and TNF-alpha, have been found to modulate the expression of this peptide. We have previously demonstrated that the acute exposure to an organophosphoreted insecticide induces an enhanced production of UG/CC16 by Clara cells. In the present report, we worked with intact and adrenalectomised (ADX) animals to study the mechanism involved in the UG/CC16 increase caused by the insecticide and the role played by a glucocorticoid (dexamethasone; DEX). In intact rats we found that DEX treatment could not reproduce such an increase of UG/CC16 synthesis with pharmacological doses. In ADX rats, even though glucocorticoid deprivation provoked a strong inhibition of UG/CC16 synthesis, the exposure to the organophosphoreted insecticide stimulated the synthesis of the protein, shown by the great accumulation of secretory granules in the cytoplasm of Clara cells and the increase of UG/CC16 detected by immunocytochemistry and western blot. These results imply that glucocorticoids are not essential to trigger the increase of UG/CC16 in response to an injury, and they also suggest an involvement of other molecules associated with inflammation. In coincidence with these observations, we have found that IFN-gamma, a proinflammatory cytokine, increased after insecticide exposition in both groups, intact and ADX, mainly in ADX rats. The stimulation of UG/CC16 synthesis occurring during inflammatory processes of the respiratory tract caused by acute inhalation of a toxicant appears to be functional without the intervention of glucocorticoids and mediated by IFN-gamma as a mechanism for local control of the inflammatory response.
...
PMID:Regulation of uteroglobin/Clara cell protein expression after acute lung exposure to an organophosphoreted insecticide. 1283 27

Uteroglobin, first reported in 1968 as a steroid secreted in rabbit uterine fluid during early pregnancy, is a progesterone-regulated and progesterone-binding protein. There is evidence that indicates that uteroglobin is inversely correlated to neoplastic growth but its role to endometrial carcinogenesis is not known. Therefore we analyzed the expression of uteroglobin in 13 normal endometrium, 19 hyperplasia and 21 endometrial carcinoma samples and the relation to estrogen receptor-alpha (ER-alpha) and progesterone receptor (PR) by immunohistochemistry and Western blotting. We also analyzed the expression of uteroglobin in 15 menopausal women who received hormone replacement therapy (HRT). The expression of uteroglobin was higher during the secretory phase than in the proliferative phase; however, it was detected in endometrial hyperplasia as weakly as in the proliferative phase and decreased according to the loss of differentiation in endometrial carcinoma. The results were basically in accord with those for PR; however, the expression of uteroglobin was weak, though PR was most detected in endometrial hyperplasia. In menopausal endometrium, the group treated with estrogen plus progesterone exhibited higher expression of uteroglobin than the group treated only with estrogen. The evidence suggests that uteroglobin expression is regulated by progesterone in the normal endometrium but that the regulation by PR is lost in endometrial hyperplasia and carcinoma according to acquirement of tumorigenesis and that estrogen plus progesterone therapy reduces the risk for endometrial carcinoma by restoring uteroglobin.
...
PMID:Expression of uteroglobin in normal and carcinogenic endometrium and influence of hormone replacement therapy. 1473 66

Currently, there are very few diagnostic or therapeutic strategies targeted at controlling tumor growth and progression towards metastasis. Uteroglobin (UG) is a naturally occurring, small, stable, secretory protein that is normally expressed by most cells of epithelial origin but is known to be lost during the progression of prostate, lung, and uterine cancers to invasive malignancy. Uteroglobin -/- knockout mice appear to be extremely cancer prone. Both pharmacological and transgenic reconstitution of recombinant human UG (rhUG) to prostate, lung, and endometrial tumor cell lines markedly inhibits their invasiveness and antagonizes the neoplastic phenotype. In preliminary studies, rhUG inhibited angiogenesis in the ex vivo rat aorta model and showed antitumor activity against human prostate tumor cells (PC-3) in the chick chorioallantoic membrane assay, reducing both tumor volume and vascularity. A recent in vivo pilot study showed that twice daily dosing with rhUG resulted in a statistically significant increase in survival without evidence of toxicity in severe combined immunodeficient mice challenged with a PC-3 cell metastasizing tumor. Thus, rhUG may slow the progression of cancer by inhibiting both tumor cell invasiveness and tumor angiogenesis. It therefore holds the potential to serve as a new weapon in the arsenal of cytostatic, antimetastatic, adjuvant treatment for cancer. In this paper, we will briefly discuss the therapeutic potential of uteroglobin-based strategies for managing prostate cancer.
...
PMID:Uteroglobin: a potential novel tumor suppressor and molecular therapeutic for prostate cancer. 1504 3

Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) is an important diagnostic source to investigate cellular and molecular changes in the course of lung disorders. The pattern of soluble proteins in BALF obtained from patients at different stages of respiratory disorders may provide deeper insights in the molecular mechanisms of the disease. We used surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MS) for differential protein display combined with reversed-phase chromatography and subsequent matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-MS or nanoliquid chromatography MS/MS analysis for protein identification to compare the protein pattern of BALF samples obtained from ten smokers suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), eight clinically asymptomatic smokers, and eight nonsmokers without pulmonary disease. In this context, we were able to identify small proteins and peptides, either differentially expressed or secreted in the course of COPD or in a direct response to cigarette smoke. The concentrations of neutrophil defensins 1 and 2, S100A8 (calgranulin A), and S100A9 (calgranulin B) were elevated in BALFs of smokers with COPD when compared to asymptomatic smokers. Increased concentrations in S100A8 (Calgranulin A), salivary proline-rich peptide P-C, and lysozyme C were detected in BALFs of asymptomatic smokers when compared to nonsmokers, whereas salivary proline-rich peptide P-D and Clara cell phospholipid-binding protein (CC10) were reduced in their concentration. The identified proteins and peptides might be useful in the future as diagnostic markers for smoke-induced lung irritations and COPD.
...
PMID:Proteomic study of human bronchoalveolar lavage fluids from smokers with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease by combining surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization-mass spectrometry profiling with mass spectrometric protein identification. 1607 19

Cellular migration and invasion are critical for important biological processes including cancer metastasis. We previously reported that uteroglobin (UG), a multifunctional secreted protein, binds to several cell types inhibiting migration and invasion [G.C. Kundu, A.K. Z. Zhang Mandal, G. Mantile-Selvaggi, A.B. Mukherjee (1998) Uteroglobin (UG) suppresses extracellular matrix invasion by normal and cancer cells that express the high affinity UG-binding proteins. J Biol Chem. 273: 22819-22824]. More recently, we reported that HTB-81 adenocarcinoma cells, which do not bind UG, are refractory to UG-mediated inhibition of migration and invasion [Z. Zhang, G.C. Kundu, D. Panda, A.K. Mandal et al. (1999) Loss of transformed phenotype in cancer cells by overexpression of the uteroglobin gene. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 96, 3963-3968]. Since UG shares several biological properties with lipocalin-1 that mediates some of its biological effects via its receptor (Lip-1R), we sought to determine whether UG might interact with Lip-1R and inhibit migration and invasion of HTB-81 cells. To address this question, we first transfected COS-1 cells, which do not bind UG, with a Lip-1R-cDNA construct and performed binding assays using 125I-human UG (hUG). The results show that hUG binds Lip-1R on these cells with high specificity. Further, transfection of HTB-81 cells with the same construct yielded 125I-hUG binding with high affinity (Kd=18 nM) and specificity. The hUG-Lip-1R interaction was further confirmed by transfecting HTB-81, HTB-30 and HTB-174 cells, which are refractory to UG-binding, with a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-Lip-1R-cDNA construct and testing for Lip-1R-hUG colocalization by fluorescence microscopy. Finally, we demonstrate that Lip-1R-hUG interaction on Lip-1R transfected HTB-81 cells renders them fully responsive to hUG-mediated inhibition of migration and invasion. Taken together, these results suggest that Lip-1R is at least one of the UG-binding proteins through which UG exerts anti-motility and anti-invasive effects.
...
PMID:Interaction of uteroglobin with lipocalin-1 receptor suppresses cancer cell motility and invasion. 1642 71

Uteroglobin (UG) is a conserved protein which is induced by progesterone and secreted by the epithelia of various mammalian reproductive and respiratory organs. Recombinant bovine uteroglobin (recbUG), consisting of 80 amino acids with a C-terminal His6 tag, was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The protein was crystallized in two geometric forms, rhomboid and cuneate (wedge-shaped), by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method at 295 K. The rhomboid crystals diffracted to a maximum resolution of 1.6 A using synchrotron radiation. These crystals belong to space group P2(1)2(1)2, with unit-cell parameters a = 81.42, b = 82.82, c = 45.26 A, and contain four monomers per asymmetric unit. The cuneate crystals diffracted to 2.35 A resolution using a rotating-anode generator. These crystals belong to space group C222(1), with unit-cell parameters a = 43.39, b = 93.94, c = 77.30 A, and contain two molecules per asymmetric unit.
...
PMID:Recombinant bovine uteroglobin at 1.6 A resolution: a preliminary X-ray crystallographic analysis. 1651 Oct 79

Previous studies have shown that the equine uterus produces many progesterone-dependent proteins throughout gestation. In particular, uterocalin and uteroferrin are detectable using electrophoresis or blot analyses but information regarding the immunohistochemical placental distribution of these two proteins is rare and information regarding uteroglobin is still lacking. The aim of the present study was to co-immunolocalise these three secretory proteins in the mare's uterus throughout gestation in an effort to understand their functional role in the maintenance of pregnancy. Therefore, endometrial biopsy samples were obtained from 20 pregnant mares between 16 and 309 days of gestation and labelled immunohistochemically for uteroglobin, uteroferrin and uterocalin. Uteroferrin remained detectable in almost every endometrial gland at all stages but with an increase in staining intensity as gestation advanced. The most progesterone-dependent protein, uterocalin, showed variable staining throughout gestation with the most intense labelling in early pregnancy and during the period of endometrial cup reaction. Uteroglobin secretion was only detectable in traces and only in individual glands throughout gestation. The results indicate that uterocalin and uteroferrin, but not uteroglobin, may play important roles in supplying nutrients for the conceptus, thereby contributing to the maintenance of pregnancy. However, further investigations are necessary to understand the role of uteroglobin during gestation.
...
PMID:Immunolocalisation of the uterine secretory proteins uterocalin, uteroferrin and uteroglobin in the mare's uterus and placenta throughout pregnancy. 1854 36


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>