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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The orientation of
cytochrome
b6 in the thylakoid membrane and the question of whether the number of membrane spanning helices is an even or odd number was tested through the relative trypsin susceptibility of epitopes (Asp-5 to Gln-14) and (Ile-205 to Leu-214) at the NH2 and COOH termini, respectively, of the 214-residue
cytochrome
b6 polypeptide. A structure of the
cytochrome
with an even number of helices and the NH2 and COOH termini on the stromal side of the membrane was inferred from the following: 1) cleavage of
cytochrome
b6 by trypsin added to thylakoids occurs by removal of both of the exposed NH2- and COOH-terminal epitopes. The epitopes at the termini were more sensitive to trypsin after prior treatment of thylakoids with
carboxypeptidase A
, indicating that these epitopes are shielded on the stromal side of the membrane by the COOH termini of other proteins. 2) Both epitopes were more trypsin-sensitive in thylakoid membranes than was
cytochrome
f that is only sensitive to trypsin acting on the lumen side of the membrane. 3) The NH2- and COOH-terminal epitopes of
cytochrome
b6 were also more sensitive to trypsin added to thylakoid membranes than were the oxygen-evolving complex 16- and 33-kDa proteins that are completely located on the lumen side. 4) The order of trypsin susceptibility was reversed in inside-out membranes, where the
cytochrome
NH2- and COOH-terminal epitopes were less sensitive than the 16- and 33-kDa proteins. The decreased relative sensitivity of the
cytochrome
b6 epitopes occurs in spite of a greater absolute sensitivity of these epitopes to trypsin in inside-out membranes. 5) The greater absolute sensitivity can be explained by a 4-helix model that includes trypsin-sensitive sites on the lumen side.
...
PMID:Thylakoid membrane protein topography. Location of the termini of the chloroplast cytochrome b6 on the stromal side of the membrane. 169 78
The topography of chloroplast cytochromes f and b6 was probed with proteases
carboxypeptidase A
(
CpA
), trypsin, and Staph, aureus V8. The
cytochrome
and its proteolytic products were detected by heme stain and, in most experiments, by immunoreaction. In thylakoids, the only protease that significantly affected the intactness of
cytochrome
f was
CpA
that caused a small (delta Mr = -1-2000) decrease in the apparent molecular weight. In SDS-treated thylakoids, both trypsin and V8 degraded
cytochrome
f. The inferred topography of
cytochrome
f., with the COOH-terminus on the stromal (n) side, one membrane-spanning alpha-elix near the COOH-terminus, and most of the Cyt f mass on the lumen (p) side, is consistent with that previously inferred by others. Cytochrome b6 was not sensitive to
CpA
, but was more sensitive to trypsin and V8 protease than
cytochrome
f, cytochrome b-559, or the 17 kDa OEC extrinsic protein. Trypsin caused a small decrease in size of
cytochrome
b6, which was observed using whole protein antibody as a single smaller band (delta Mr approximately 2000) or two smaller discrete bands (delta Mr = -1000 and 2500, respectively) which, unlike the untreated protein, did not react with antibody generated to a peptide mimicking Asp-5-Gln-14 near the NH2-terminus. These shortened tryptic fragments were attributed to cleavage after R-10 and K-23 near the NH2-terminus, implying an orientation with the NH2-terminus on the stromal side of the membrane. The sensitivity of
cytochrome
b6 toward this trypsin cleavage was increased if the membranes were first incubated with
CpA
, showing that the NH2-terminal region of
cytochrome
b6 is masked by the COOH-terminal domain of one or more thylakoid proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Topography of the chloroplast cytochrome b6: orientation of the cytochrome and accessibility of the lumen-side interhelix loops. 276 55
Synthetic lysinoalanine (LAL) may be a more effective inhibitor of the zinc-containing enzyme
carboxypeptidase A
than is ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA). The enzyme is also inactivated by alkali-treated, lysinoalanine-containing food proteins such as casein, high-lysine corn protein, lactalbumin, soy protein isolate, and wheat gluten, and by alkali-treated zein, which contains no lysinoalanine. Zinc sulfate regenerates only part of the enzymatic activity after exposure to the treated proteins. The extent of inhibition increases with protein concentration and time of treatment. Any inhibition due to phytate is distinct from that due to the treatment. Phenylethylaminoalanine (PEAA), derived from biogenic phenylethylamine, inhibited enzymatic activity of the metalloenzyme
carboxypeptidase A
(
CPA
). The inhibition was maximal at pH 7.0 in the pH range 7 to 8.5. The extent of inhibition increased with time of treatment and PEAA concentration. N-acetyl-PEAA did not inhibit the enzyme, suggesting that the free alpha-NH2 group is required for inhibition. PEAA, LAL, sodium phytate, and cysteine also inactivated the copper enzyme, polyphenol, oxidase (tyrosinase) which plays a major role in enzymatic (oxidative) browning of foods. Analogous comparative studies with LAL, EDTA, and sodium phytate suggest that the potency of PEAA as an inhibitor of
CPA
is similar to that of sodium phytate, and that of the four compounds tested, PEAA is least effective against tyrosinase. Related studies of the iron and copper containing enzyme
cytochrome
C oxidase showed that EDTA was not inhibitory, PEAA was slightly inhibitory, and LAL and sodium phytate were stronger inhibitors. Mechanistic explanations are offered to account for some of these observations. The possible relevance of these findings to in vivo protein digestion, enzymatic (oxidative) browning of foods, and the mechanism of the lysinoalanine effect on kidney cells are also discussed.
...
PMID:Inactivation of metalloenzymes by lysinoalanine, phenylethylaminoalanine, alkali-treated food proteins, and sulfur amino acids. 302 44
The amino acid sequence of cytochrome c from Nigella damascena L. was determined on 0.2mumol of protein. Peptides from a single chymotryptic digest were analysed by the dansyl-Edman procedure. These peptides were ordered by reference to the sequences of other plant cytochromes c, assuming that the Nigella
cytochrome
is homologous with the other cytochromes. Many of the Nigella peptides were one or two residues short when compared with the corresponding chymotryptic peptides from other plant cytochromes c. These residues are assumed to have been removed by an endogenous carboxypeptidase, and the identification and placing of these residues is entirely based on homology. These residues are numbered 3, 18, 42, 43, 44, 54, 67, 72, 73, 82 and 105. A number of other positions are almost entirely placed by homology. These are positions which could not be placed definitely by dansyl-Edman analysis or by dansylation after digestion with
carboxypeptidase A
, and are numbered 14, 15, 16, 39, 40, 85, 86, 87 and 88. Except for residue 15, all residues based entirely, or nearly so, on homology have been previously found invariant in sequences of plant cytochromes c. Experimental details are given in a supplementary paper that has been deposited as Supplementary Publication SUP 50017, at the National Lending Library for Science and Technology, Boston Spa, Yorks. LS23 7BQ, U.K., from whom copies can be obtained on the terms indicated in Biochem. J. (1973) 131, 5.
...
PMID:The amino acid sequence of cytochrome c from Nigella damascena L. (love-in-a-mist). 435 34
Methylene hydroxylation by cytochrome P-450(cam) (
cytochrome
m) can be resolved into four distinct steps: substrate addition, m(o) --> m(os); reduction, m(os) --> m(rs); dioxygen addition, m(rs) --> m(O2) (rs); followed by a second putidaredoxin (Pseudomonas putida ferredoxin)-mediated reduction and product formation. The isolated ferrous oxy-substrate complex exhibits first-order decay kinetics with the relatively slow rate constant of k [unk] 0.01 sec(-1), at 25 degrees , without product release. Putidaredoxin addition accelerates the decomposition with second-order kinetics, k [unk] 51,000 M(-1) sec(-1), and initiation of product formation. Cytochrome m forms a complex with putidaredoxin with dissociation constant of K(D) = 3 muM. In the complete three-protein hydroxylase system, consisting of
cytochrome
m, putidaredoxin, and the reductase (a DPNH-specific flavo-protein), camphor hydroxylation occurs with a stoichiometry of 1 mole each of DPNH and O(2) used per mole of product formed; the K(M) for putidaredoxin is about 4.2 muM.Putidaredoxin, on treatment with
carboxypeptidase A
, loses one molecule each of tryptophan and glutamine sequentially from the carboxy terminus to expose a terminal arginine. The tryptophan-free product has been separated from native putidaredoxin and other impurities, and retains the visible and electron paramagnetic resonance spectra and the redox potential of the active center of native putidaredoxin. This modified redoxin binds less tightly to
cytochrome
m, K(D) [unk] 150 muM, and is 50 times less effective in stimulation of the m(O2) (rs) decay rate. A similar decrease in specific activity is observed in the complete hydroxylase system.
...
PMID:A role of the putidaredoxin COOH-terminus in P-450cam (cytochrome m) hydroxylations. 453 Feb 69
Nitric oxide (NO) synthesis inhibition causes neutrophil adhesion to endothelium via a
mast cell
- and oxidant-dependent mechanism. The objective of this study was to delineate the cascade of events in the
mast cell
- and oxidant-induced neutrophil-endothelium interactions after NO synthesis inhibition. Mast cells were isolated and purified from the rat peritoneal cavity and coadministered with neutrophils to wells of endothelium. This system was treated with an NO synthesis inhibitor (NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester; L-NAME) for 60 minutes. L-NAME did not induce neutrophil-endothelium interactions in the absence of mast cells, but the addition of mast cells in a ratio as low as 1:50 mast cells to neutrophils was sufficient to induce a large increase in neutrophil adhesion to endothelium within 20 to 25 minutes. L-arginine, NO donors, and 8-bromo-cGMP reversed the L-NAME effect, whereas NG-nitro-D-arginine methyl ester alone had no proadhesive effect. The adhesion was inhibited by an anti-CD18 or an anti-intracellular adhesion molecule-1 antibody and a platelet-activating factor-receptor antagonist. Inhibition of NO in isolated endothelial monolayers induced oxidant release (reduction of
cytochrome
C) into extracellular fluid. The endothelium-derived superoxide contributed to the
mast cell
-induced adhesion, inasmuch as the extracellular antioxidant superoxide dismutase reduced the neutrophil adhesion response as did disruption of endothelial function. There was some direct activation of mast cells with L-NAME (independent of endothelium) inasmuch as intracellular calcium and oxidative stress increased within mast cells after L-NAME treatment, and this translated into increased neutrophil adhesion to nonendothelial substrata. These data demonstrate that depletion of NO increases oxidative stress within mast cells and endothelium and together these events promote neutrophil adhesion within the vasculature.
...
PMID:A balance between nitric oxide and oxidants regulates mast cell-dependent neutrophil-endothelial cell interactions. 888 91
The PSC (peptide-sensitive Channel), a cationic channel of large conductance, has been characterized in yeast and mammalian mitochondria by three different methods, "tip-dip," patch clamp of giant liposomes, and planar bilayers. The yeast and mammalian PSC share the common property to be blocked by basic peptides such as pCyt OX IV (1-12)Y which contains the first 12 residues of the presequence of
cytochrome
C oxidase subunit IV. The electrophysiological data are consistent with a translocation of the peptide through the pore. Analysis of the frequency of observation of the PSC in different fractions indicates that the channel is located in the outer mitochondrial membrane. Uptake measurements of iodinated peptides by intact mitochondria from a porin-less mutant show that the peptides are translocated through the outer membrane, presumably at the level of PSC. Among the peptides active on PSC, several, such as pCyt OX IV (1-22) and the reduced form of the
mast cell
degranulating peptide, induce an alteration of the voltage dependence or of the inactivation rate subsisting after washing and which is eliminated only by proteolysis of the interacting peptide. These irreversible effects may account for the variability of the properties of the PSC which would interact with cytosolic or intermembrane cations, peptides, or proteins, thus modulating the channel permeability. Finally, several lines of evidence suggest the participation of the PSC in protein translocation and some interaction with the general insertion pore of the outer membrane translocation machinery.
...
PMID:Characterization and function of the mitochondrial outer membrane peptide-sensitive channel. 913 7
In the adult rat brain mast cells reside selectively in the thalamus. We investigated thalamic mast cells stained by acidic toluidine blue or pinacyanol, and with histamine immunocytochemistry, focusing on their state of activity revealed by degranulation. Mast cells exhibited perivascular prevalence and high quantitative variability, between cases and in different sections, with no asymmetry or topographical selectivity in thalamic nuclei. Pinacyanol, alone or with erythrosine, stained mast cells with higher sensitivity than toluidine blue. However, toluidine blue was highly predictive of pinacyanol staining and provided the best resolution of
mast cell
cytoplasmic features. Histamine immunocytochemistry labeled 61% of pinacyanol-stained mast cells. Intensely toluidine blue-stained granulated cells, as well as cells exhibiting different degrees of degranulation that paralleled lighter staining, were observed. The response of thalamic mast cells to intracerebroventricular administration of nerve growth factor (NGF) and control
cytochrome
-c injections was evaluated after 2, 24, and 72 hours. No obvious changes in
mast cell
number or distribution were found after treatment, but massive degranulation was frequently observed after NGF administration. Significant decrease of staining intensity of mast cells, supporting enhanced degranulation, was documented in NGF-treated animals by quantitative image analysis. Ultrastructural features of
mast cell
degranulation, with granule coalescence and matrix dissolution, were detected in untreated and NGF-treated cases. The findings point out that mast cells are active in the thalamus in basal conditions and that NGF has the potential to elicit long-lasting degranulation of thalamic mast cells in vivo, exerting a direct effect and/or priming these cells to react to endogenous stimuli.
...
PMID:Degranulation, density, and distribution of mast cells in the rat thalamus: a light and electron microscopic study in basal conditions and after intracerebroventricular administration of nerve growth factor. 1093 87
Degranulated mast cells are present in the subendothelial space of eroded (de-endothelialized) coronary atheromas. Upon degranulation, mast cells secrete into the surrounding tissue an array of preformed and newly synthesized mediators, including proapoptotic molecules, such as chymase and TNF-alpha. In a co-culture system involving rat serosal mast cells and rat cardiac (microvascular) endothelial cells, we could show, by means of competitive RT-PCR, immunoblotting, immunocytochemistry, annexin staining, flow cytometry, and DNA-laddering, that stimulation of mast cells with ensuing degranulation rapidly (within 30 min) down-regulated the expression of both bcl-2 mRNA and protein, with subsequent induction of apoptosis in the endothelial cells. The major effect of bcl-2 down-regulation resided in the exocytosed granule remnants, a minor effect also being present in the granule remnant-free supernatant. No significant changes were observed in the expression levels of the pro-apoptotic protein, bax. The
mast cell
-mediated apoptotic effect was partially (70%) dependent on the presence of TNF-alpha and involved the translocation of
cytochrome
C from mitochondria into cytoplasm. These results are the first to show that one of the cell types present in the atherosclerotic plaques, namely the
mast cell
, by releasing both granule-remnant-bound and soluble TNF-alpha, may contribute to the erosion of atherosclerotic plaques by inducing apoptosis in adjacent endothelial cells. Published 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
...
PMID:Mast cell-mediated apoptosis of endothelial cells in vitro: a paracrine mechanism involving TNF-alpha-mediated down-regulation of bcl-2 expression. 1259 16
As diverse pruritic cutaneous diseases respond to ultraviolet treatment, we have examined whether ultraviolet light is capable of inducing apoptosis in mast cells. Human
mast cell
line 1 (HMC1) derived from a patient with malignant mastocytosis and purified skin mast cells were irradiated with single doses of ultraviolet B or ultraviolet A1, or pretreated with 8-methoxypsoralen prior to ultraviolet A1 exposure. After 0 to 48 h of incubation, the percentage of apoptotic and dead cells was assessed. In HMC1 cells, morphologic features of apoptosis were further evaluated by electron microscopy. All ultraviolet treatment induced apoptosis of HMC1 cells in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Apoptosis was associated with activation of caspase-3, release of
cytochrome
C, cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose)-polymerase, and nuclear accumulation of p53. In contrast, resting skin mast cells were resistant to ultraviolet light induced apoptosis. After incubation with stem cell factor and interleukin-4 for 2 wk, however, slowly proliferating skin mast cells also underwent apoptosis in response to ultraviolet light. In conclusion, these data demonstrate that ultraviolet light directly affects mast cells, but mainly aims at the proliferating mast cells as found in mastocytosis and
mast cell
dependent pruritic diseases, where increased numbers are observed due to the recruitment
mast cell
precursors from the blood.
...
PMID:Ultraviolet irradiation induces apoptosis in human immature, but not in skin mast cells. 1463 3
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