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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (
lipopolysaccharide
)
62,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We cloned the 5' upstream region of IL-15 genomic DNA and examined promoter activity in macrophages stimulated with
lipopolysaccharide
(LPS). The 1.2 kilobase (kb) fragment of the 5' upstream region contained binding elements for LPS-inducible transcription factors such as NFIL-6 or NF-kappaB. Determined by luciferase assay following transient transfection in the J774A.1 macrophage cell line, the 1.2 kb of the 5' upstream region exhibited high promoter activity in response to LPS, while promoter activity was significantly reduced by the 5' deletion of 313 base pairs containing the NF-kappaB binding motif. Nuclear protein prepared from LPS-stimulated macrophages formed a complex with the NF-kappaB binding sequence of the IL-15 promoter. Taken together, the binding of
nuclear protein
to the NF-kappaB binding site is required for transcriptional activation of the IL-15 gene in LPS-stimulated macrophages.
...
PMID:The NF-kappaB binding site is essential for transcriptional activation of the IL-15 gene. 960 37
There is evidence that mediators of inflammation including components of the cytokine system are present in human and experimental diabetic kidney disease. CCAAT/enhancer-binding proteins (C/EBPs) represent a family of cytokine-inducible transcription factors. C/EBPs themselves regulate cytokine expression and also the expression of acute-phase reactants and connective tissue proteins. At least three C/EBP isoforms (alpha, beta, delta) are known. Upon stimulation with cytokines or bacterial
lipopolysaccharide
, the expression of the alpha isoform typically decreases, and the expression of the beta and/or delta isoforms increases. In view of the fact that components of the inflammatory response are present in diabetic kidney disease, there is a potential that the expression and activity of renal C/EBPs are altered in the diabetic state. In this study we sought to examine the status of C/EBP proteins in kidneys of rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus. Diabetes was induced in 5 male Sprague-Dawley rats. Eight weight-matched non-diabetic rats were used as controls. Animals were sacrificed after 4 weeks, and the whole kidney
nuclear protein
was extracted. An electrophoretic mobility shift assay showed that DNA-binding activity was present in all five kidney nuclear extracts of the diabetic animals, but in only 2 out of 8 control samples (p < 0.05). A supershift assay showed that the DNA-bound protein complex consisted mainly of the C/EBPbeta isoform. Western analysis showed an increase of the C/EBPbeta protein in renal nuclear extracts of the diabetic animals compared to controls (p < 0.05). There was a decrease of the C/EBPalpha protein in the kidney nuclear extracts of the diabetic animals compared to controls (p < 0.05). We conclude that renal C/EBP dynamics are altered in experimental diabetes mellitus and that the patterns of C/EBP changes resemble those observed after cytokine or
lipopolysaccharide
stimulation.
...
PMID:Renal CCAAT/enhancer-binding proteins in experimental diabetes mellitus. 967 32
The spin-trapping compound phenyl N-tert-butylnitrone (PBN) affords protection from the lethality of septic shock in rodents. Previous studies have shown that PBN elicits its protection by inhibiting inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) induction. In the present study, using the
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) rat septic shock model, we determined the expression of various cytokine genes (tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, TNF-beta, interferon (IFN)-gamma, interleukin (IL)-1alpha, IL-1beta, IL-2, IL-3, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, and IL-10) and the activation of transcription factors nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) and activator protein-1 (AP-1) in the liver tissue, 30 min and 3 h after
LPS
administration. The effects of PBN preadministration on the production levels were also investigated. The results show that
LPS
(4 mg/kg, ip) induced the production of the cytokine genes and increased the
nuclear protein
level of NF-kappaB within 30 min after
LPS
administration. Preadministration of PBN (150 mg/kg, ip) significantly down-regulated the production of cytokine genes (TNF-alpha by 94%, IL-1 by 63%, and IL-1 by 70%) and reduced the
nuclear protein
level of NF-kappaB by 75% and AP-1 by 72% at 3 h after
LPS
injection. These results demonstrate that PBN, in addition to its iNOS induction inhibition, also has multiple anti-inflammatory effects in septic shock, via modulation of the production of the key inflammatory mediators.
...
PMID:Expression of cytokines and activation of transcription factors in lipopolysaccharide-administered rats and their inhibition by phenyl N-tert-butylnitrone (PBN). 1006 57
Treatment of rat aortic smooth muscle cells (RASMC) with 1 or 100 microg ml-1
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) for 20-24 h led to expression of the inducible form of nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) as detected by Western blotting for iNOS protein, and by determination of increased cellular nitrite formation.
LPS
-induced nitrite production was inhibited almost completely by concomitant treatment of cells with
LPS
and either (a) pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC, 25 microm), an antioxidant inhibitor of NF-kappaB activation; (b) N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone (TPCK, 20 and 40 microm), a proteasomal inhibitor which prevents NF-kappaB activation; (c) nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA, 10 and 50 microm), a lipoxygenase inhibitor; or (d) apocynin (2, 3.5 and 5 m m), an inhibitor of NADPH oxidase. Gel-shift assays using
nuclear protein
extracts incubated with a 32P-labelled DNA binding probe for NF-kappaB detected two electrophoretically separable complexes containing NF-kappaB. A faster migrating complex obtained when using both
LPS
-treated and untreated cells appeared to represent a basal or constitutive NF-kappaB activity, whereas a slower band was found only after
LPS
-treatment. The latter band was abolished when using cells treated for 1 h with
LPS
in the presence of PDTC (25 microm) or TPCK (20 microm), but was not inhibited by NDGA (50 microm) or apocynin (3.5 m m). The basal band was unaffected by any of the cell signalling inhibitors. Densitometry of Western blots indicated that
LPS
-induced iNOS protein expression was inhibited to a similar extent (between 74 and 87%) by the latter concentrations of PDTC, TPCK, NDGA and apocynin. The ability of PDTC and TPCK to abolish
LPS
-specific NF-kappaB activation, while also producing considerable inhibition of iNOS protein expression and nitrite formation, suggests that induction of iNOS by
LPS
in RASMC involves NF-kappaB-dependent transcription. However, the failure of NDGA and apocynin to prevent NF-kappaB activation, at least during early stages (up to 1 h) of its nuclear accumulation, suggests that these agents may affect cell signalling pathways which regulate iNOS induction by another mechanism to be determined.
...
PMID:Differential effects of some cell signalling inhibitors upon nitric oxide synthase expression and nuclear factor-kappaB activation induced by lipopolysaccharide in rat aortic smooth muscle cells. 1032 94
Activation of the transcription factor nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) is one of the important responses of cells to an external stress such as ionizing radiation. We studied radiation-induced NF-kappaB activation in vivo in male BALB/c mice. After the mice were exposed to 8.5 Gy total-body gamma irradiation, the spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes, thymus, liver, lung, colon, brain and bone marrow were harvested 1, 2.5, 5, 10 and 20 h postirradiation. NF-kappaB DNA-binding activity was analyzed in the
nuclear protein
extracts by a gel shift assay. When compared to the levels in untreated control mice, radiation induced activation of NF-kappaB in spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes and bone marrow but not in the other tissues examined. In contrast, an i.p. injection of a lethal dose (3 mg/kg) of
lipopolysaccharide
also increased activity of NF-kappaB in the liver and lung. The gel supershift assay with Nfkb1, Rela and/or Rel antibodies revealed that the specific molecular forms of NF-kappaB activated by radiation in the spleen were Nfkb1 homodimers and Nfkb1/Rela heterodimers. In mesenteric lymph nodes, the heterodimerized Rel/Rela NF-kappaB was also activated. In bone marrow, an NF-kappaB-like binding factor was induced that may be Nfkb1/Rela- and Rel/Rela-like heterodimers, but it exhibited a higher mobility than Nfkb1 homodimers. These results indicate that in vivo, ionizing radiation induces NF-kappaB activation that varies in both tissue distribution and moleoular composition.
...
PMID:A high dose of ionizing radiation induces tissue-specific activation of nuclear factor-kappaB in vivo. 1036 Jul 90
Nitric oxide (NO), an intercellular messenger in the brain, has been implicated in both neuronal plasticity and neurotoxicity. It has been suggested that NO can activate the DNA binding activity of nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) family proteins in some cell types while having an inhibitory effect in others. In this study we have investigated the effect of acute NO in primary neuronal cultures of rat striatum using immunohistochemistry. Exposure of neurones to the NO-mimetic S-nitroso-n-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP; 200 microM) and to bacterial
lipopolysaccharide
(LPS; 10 microg/ml) for 30 min increased
nuclear protein
expression of the p50 subunit of NF-kappaB. SNAP also enhanced
nuclear protein
expression of the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB. Simultaneously, the cytoplasmic expression of phosphorylated inhibitory protein IkappaB alpha was dramatically increased by SNAP (200 microM), LPS (10 microg/ml), and kainate (50 microM) treatment. In the adult rat, stimulation with NOR-3 (2 mg/kg), a NO donor, increased NF-kappaB DNA binding activity in the striatum after 45 min. Because glucocorticoids inhibit NF-kappaB activity, primary cultures were pretreated with dexamethasone (50 microM) before SNAP, LPS, and kainate treatment, and the effect on the protein expression level of the individual subunits p50 and p65 present in the classical form of the transcription factor NF-kappaB was assessed. Dexamethasone pretreatment resulted in a marked reduction of p65 protein in striatal neurones after SNAP, LPS, and kainate, whereas p50 expression was reduced by dexamethasone pretreatment only after an LPS stimulus. This study indicates that NO-releasing compounds can directly induce nuclear NF-kappaB subunit expression in rat striatum and that glucocorticoids selectively inhibit p65 subunit expression following exposure to NO.
...
PMID:Activation of nuclear factor kappaB by nitric oxide in rat striatal neurones: differential inhibition of the p50 and p65 subunits by dexamethasone. 1038 88
It is currently believed that prostaglandin (PG) of E2 type plays a crucial role in transferring the information received from circulating immune factors to brain parenchymal cells. Although PGE2 is synthesized quite essentially by cells of the blood-brain barrier, the organization and regulation of its receptor subtypes within neuronal elements remain unknown. In this study, intravenous (i.v.) injection of the endotoxin
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) or recombinant rat interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), and intramuscular (i.m.) injection of turpentine were used as different models of systemic immune stimuli. Rats were perfused at various times after the insults (30 min to 24 h), their brains cut and hybridized with full-length rat cRNA probes. Double-labelling procedures were accomplished to determine the cellular phenotype and activity. A very distinct distribution of both EP2 and EP4 receptors was found across the brain under basal conditions; the hybridization signal for the type 2 was detected in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST), lateral septum, subfornical organ (SFO), ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMH), central nucleus of the amygdala (CeA), locus coeruleus (LC) and the area postrema (AP), whereas the ventral septal/anterior preoptic area, the magnocellular paraventricular nucleus (PVN), supraoptic nucleus, parabrachial nucleus, LC, the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) and the ventrolateral medulla (VLM) exhibited moderate to strong levels for the EP4 mRNA under basal conditions. Upregulation of the genes encoding EP2 and EP4 receptors was detected in selective regions and neuronal populations during systemic inflammatory challenges. The most dramatic one being the robust transcriptional activation of the EP4 subtype within corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) neurons of the parvocellular PVN following i.v.
LPS
and IL-1beta injection, and the localized i.m. aggression. These neurons of the endocrine hypothalamus as well as those of numerous autonomic-related nuclei were activated by the proinflammatory cytokine, as they were immunoreactive (ir) to Fos
nuclear protein
. The EP4 transcript was also present in activated catecholaminergic neurons of the LC, NTS and VLM, although only the A1 cell group exhibited an increase in EP4 transcription in response to circulating IL-1beta. Moreover, the systemic immunogenic insults caused a significant increase in the EP2 mRNA levels in the CeA, SFO, AP and the leptomeninges. These data provide a distinct pattern of EP2 and EP4 expression throughout the rat brain under both basal and immune-challenged conditions, and underlie the possible role of the EP4 subtype in mediating the effects of PGE2 on different autonomic and neuroendocrine functions. The presence of Fos-ir nuclei in various populations of EP4 neurons of IL-1beta-treated animals clearly supports this concept and suggests that the selectivity of the neuronal response during systemic inflammation may depend on the expression of specific PGE2 receptors in key structures of the brain.
...
PMID:Distribution, regulation and colocalization of the genes encoding the EP2- and EP4-PGE2 receptors in the rat brain and neuronal responses to systemic inflammation. 1045 63
According to data by H. Zhabilov serum fractions in the zone of alpha 1, alpha 2 and beta-globulins from healthy people form a characteristic precipitation curve in terms of structure and density with the TNP (thymus
nuclear protein
) and CNP (carcinoma
nuclear protein
) as antigens when tested in two-dimensional agarose-gel electrophoresis. The observed immune phenomenon has not so far, to the best of our knowledge, been reported in the scientific literature and has profound implications for fundamental and applied immunology. The object of the present study was to confirm Zhabilov's data and study the ontogenetic aspect of the problem. We used 45 sera of children from different age groups, of healthy adult controls, HIV-infected and cancer patients. The sera were tested against the following exoantigens: TNP (thymus
nuclear protein
), CNP (carcinoma
nuclear protein
-Viral Genetics Inc, LA), as well as against ST (staphylococcal toxin), SL (streptolysin) and LPS (
lipopolysaccharide
) from Gram-negative bacteria (National Center for Parasitic and Infectious Diseases, Sofia, Bulgaria). Two-dimensional electrophoresis was used modified after the protocol of UCLA chemical labs. The results of our study show that immediately following birth the precipitation curve is barely discernible reaching the normal shape following 1 month-5 years of age. The precipitation curve from HIV-infected sera and those of cancer patients is similar to that of newborns. The results from our unpublished observations with sera from other biologic species tested against the same antigens show similar results: no curve was observed in fish whereas the reaction was positive with frogs, birds, rabbits and other mammals. This confirmation of the basic biologic law of ontogenesis being a repetition of phylogenesis gives us reason to consider those fractions as participating in the immune maturation of organisms for acquired immune response. There exists a possibility that they might be part of the already known immunomediators or a stage in the transition from non-specific to specific immunoglobulins which have not lost their importance in immunogenesis. The lack of previous studies in this respect and the observation and confirmation of this reaction in two different labs underscore the importance of this new immune phenomenon.
...
PMID:Immunoprecipitation against exogenous antigens in the zone of alpha-1, alpha-2 and beta-globulins--a new immune phenomenon? 1065 63
LITAF and PIG7 encode an identical protein, and they have recently been reported as
lipopolysaccharide
and p53-inducible genes, respectively. By using the differential display approach, we identified a Mycobacterium bovis BCG cell wall skeleton (BCG-CWS)-inducible gene fragment from human monocytes, showing no homology to any reported gene. Full-length cloning of this fragment reveals the following. 1) The differential display product represents the incomplete 3'-untranslated region of LITAF/PIG7. 2) The coding region of the transcript differs from LITAF/PIG7 due to an absence of a single guanine residue, resulting in a potential translational frameshift. 3) The newly coded protein turns out to be 86% identical and 90% similar to an estrogen-inducible rat gene, EET-1. Repeated analysis, expressed sequence tag search, comparison with homologues, and genome sequence analysis confirmed the absence of the single guanine residue. One interesting feature of this protein is that it possesses the RING domain signature and is predicted to be localized in the nucleus. However, detailed analysis together with experimental evidence suggests it is neither a RING family member nor a
nuclear protein
. Comparison of a total collection of 18 proteins from various species indicates that proteins of this family are small in size and mainly conserved at the C-terminal domain with a unique motif. We characterize this novel protein as an unglycosylated small integral membrane protein of the lysosome/late endosome (SIMPLE) whose expression is elicited in monocytes by live and heat-killed BCG, BCG cell wall complex,
lipopolysaccharide
, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. To our knowledge this is the first report of pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP)-induced differential expression of a lysosomal membrane protein presumably involved in apoptosis.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium bovis Bacillus Calmette-Guerin and its cell wall complex induce a novel lysosomal membrane protein, SIMPLE, that bridges the missing link between lipopolysaccharide and p53-inducible gene, LITAF(PIG7), and estrogen-inducible gene, EET-1. 1127 76
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are thought to be involved in intracellular signaling, including activation of the transcription factor NF-kappaB. We investigated the role of NADPH oxidase in the NF-kappaB activation pathway by utilizing knockout mice (p47phox-/-) lacking the p47phox component of NADPH oxidase. Wild-type (WT) controls and p47phox-/- mice were treated with intraperitoneal (i.p.) Escherichia coli
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) (5 or 20 microg/g of body weight).
LPS
-induced NF-kappaB binding activity and accumulation of RelA in
nuclear protein
extracts of lung tissue were markedly increased in WT compared to p47phox-/- mice 90 min after treatment with 20 but not 5 microg of i.p.
LPS
per g. In another model of lung inflammation, RelA nuclear translocation was reduced in p47phox-/- mice compared to WT mice following treatment with aerosolized
LPS
. In contrast to NF-kappaB activation in p47phox-/- mice,
LPS
-induced production of macrophage inflammatory protein 2 in the lungs and neutrophilic lung inflammation were not diminished in these mice compared to WT mice. We conclude that
LPS
-induced NF-kappaB activation is deficient in the lungs of p47phox-/- mice compared to WT mice, but this abnormality does not result in overt alteration in the acute inflammatory response.
...
PMID:Impaired pulmonary NF-kappaB activation in response to lipopolysaccharide in NADPH oxidase-deficient mice. 1155 35
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