Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (lipopolysaccharide)
62,215 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cell envelope of Helicobacter pylori contains a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) essential for the physical integrity and functioning of the bacterial cell membrane. The O-chain of this LPS frequently expresses type 2 Lewis x (Lex) and Lewis y (Ley) blood group antigens that mimic human gastric mucosal cell-surface glycoconjugates. This article describes the isolation and structural analysis of the LPS from a clinical isolate of H. pylori strain PJ2 that lacks Le antigens but is still capable of colonization. Subsequent composition, methylation, and CE-ESMS analyses of LPS revealed its core oligosaccharide structure to be consistent with the previously proposed structural model for H. pylori LPS. In addition, it carries an unusually long side branch alpha1,6-glucan and was devoid of Le O-chain polysaccharide. Its ability to colonize the mouse stomach was essentially identical to that of DD-heptoglycan- and Le antigen- producing H. pylori strains.
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PMID:Occurrence of a nontypable Helicobacter pylori strain lacking Lewis blood group O antigens and DD-heptoglycan: evidence for the role of the core alpha1,6-glucan chain in colonization. 1290 91

To clarify the origin of (1-->3)-beta-D-glucan in blood products and assess the biological activity of filter extracts, we evaluated (1-->3)-beta-D-glucan extraction from depth filters used to process blood products and their in vitro effects on proinflammatory cytokine production from macrophages. Cellulose or nylon filters were analyzed for (1-->3)-beta-D-glucan using the Fungitec G test. To evaluate the biological activity of the filter extracts, Mono Mac 6 cells (a human macrophage cell line) were cultured with filter extracts with or without lipopolysaccharide, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-1 beta (IL-1beta) concentrations in the culture media were measured. (1-->3)-beta-D-Glucan was released from seven cellulose filters but the nylon filter level was undetectable. Proinflammatory cytokine production ranged from 74.3% to 119.0% of the control for TNF-alpha and 81.2% to 115.9% for IL-1beta. TNF-alpha and IL-1beta levels were low without lipopolysaccharide. The data indicate that (1-->3)-beta-D-glucan in blood products is contaminated with the depth filters and that these filter extracts modulate proinflammatory cytokine production from macrophages.
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PMID:Release of (1-->3)-beta-D-glucan from depth-type membrane filters and their in vitro effects on proinflammatory cytokine production. 1291 48

The prophenoloxidase (proPO) cascade is a major innate immune response in invertebrates, which is triggered into its active form by elicitors, such as lipopolysaccharide, peptidoglycan, and 1,3-beta-D-glucan. A key question of the proPO system is how pattern recognition proteins recognize pathogenic microbes and subsequently activate the system. To investigate the biological function of 1,3-beta-D-glucan pattern recognition protein in the proPO cascade system, we isolated eight different 1,3-beta-D-glucan-binding proteins from the hemolymph of large beetle (Holotrichia diomphalia) larvae by using 1,3-beta-D-glucan immobilized column. Among them, a 20- and 17-kDa protein (referred to as Hd-PGRP-1 and Hd-PGRP-2) show high sequence identity with the short forms of peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs-S) from human and Drosophila melanogaster. To be able to characterize the biochemical properties of these two proteins, we expressed them in Drosophila S2 cells. Hd-PGRP-1 and Hd-PGRP-2 were found to specifically bind both 1,3-beta-D-glucan and peptidoglycan. By BIAcore analysis, the minimal 1,3-beta-D-glucan structure required for binding to Hd-PGRP-1 was found to be laminaritetraose. Hd-PGRP-1 increased serine protease activity upon binding to 1,3-beta-D-glucan and subsequently induced the phenoloxidase activity in the presence of both 1,3-beta-D-glucan and Ca(2+), but no phenoloxidase activity was elicited under the same conditions in the presence of peptidoglycan and Ca(2+). These results demonstrate that Hd-PGRP-1 can serve as a receptor for 1,3-beta-D-glucan in the insect proPO activation system.
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PMID:Peptidoglycan recognition proteins involved in 1,3-beta-D-glucan-dependent prophenoloxidase activation system of insect. 1458 8

We have isolated and characterized a new beta-1,3-glucan recognition protein that is present in Manduca sexta cuticle and hemolymph. This 52 kDa protein, designated betaGRP-2, is 57% identical in sequence to betaGRP-1 from larval hymolymph of the same insect. BetaGRP-2 differs from betaGRP-1 in its absence of the naive larvae before the wandering stage begins. Transcription of the betaGRP-2 was up-regulated in larvae challenged with yeast or bacteria. BetaGRP-2 contains a region with sequence similarity to several glucanases but lacks glucanase activity. It aggregates yeasts and bacteria to, perhaps, limit the spread of invading cells and ensure a localized defense reaction. BetaGRP-2 binds laminarin and lipoteichoic acid, but not lipopolysaccharide. Laminarin-triggered prophenoloxidase activation was greatly enhanced in the induced larval hemolymph supplemented with purified betaGRP-2. Complementing other studies on pattern recognition molecules in M. sexta, these results indicate that a complex system of protein sensors is an integral component of the insect immune system and that different recognition molecules have overlapping binding specificity and functions.
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PMID:Beta-1,3-glucan recognition protein-2 (betaGRP-2)from Manduca sexta; an acute-phase protein that binds beta-1,3-glucan and lipoteichoic acid to aggregate fungi and bacteria and stimulate prophenoloxidase activation. 1497 85

cDNA encoding the endo-1,3-beta-d-glucanase from Spisula sachalinensis (LIV) was amplified by PCR using oligonucleotides deduced from the N-terminal end peptide sequence. Predicted enzyme structure consists of 444 amino acids with a signal sequence. The mature enzyme has 316 amino acids and its deduced amino acid sequence coincides completely with the N-terminal end (38 amino acids) of the beta-1,3-glucanase (LIV) isolated from the mollusk. The enzyme sequence from Val 121 to Met 441 reveals closest homology with Pacifastacus leniusculus lipopolysaccharide- and beta-1,3-glucan-binding protein and with coelomic cytolytic factors from Lumbricus terrestris. The mollusk glucanase also shows 36% identity and 56% similarity with beta-1,3-glucanase of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. It is generally considered that invertebrate glucanase-like proteins containing the bacterial glucanase motif have evolved from an ancient beta-1,3-glucanase gene, but most of them lost their glucanase activity in the course of evolution and retained only the glucan-binding activity. A more detailed evaluation of the protein folding elicited very interesting relationships between the active site of LIV and other enzymes, which hydrolyze native glucans.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and characterization of an endo-1,3-beta-D-glucanase from the mollusk Spisula sachalinensis. 1499 Feb 13

Intact peritoneal macrophages in vitro secreted the cysteine proteinase inhibitor cystatin C. Polysaccharides stimulated cystatin C secretion: lipopolysaccharide < carboxymethylated beta-D-glucan < sulfoethylated beta-D-glucan. Human plasma low-density- (LDL) and high-density lipoproteins (HDL) are still more potent inducers of cystatin C secretion by macrophages. Peritoneal macrophages from mice with experimental HA-1 hepatoma compared to those from intact mice secreted more cystatin C with maximum polysaccharide-stimulated secretion after 30 min of incubation. LDL and HDL induced cystatin C secretion by tumor macrophages also.
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PMID:Effect of polysaccharides and human plasma lipoproteins on the secretion of cystatin C by peritoneal macrophages from normal and tumor bearing mice. 1506 96

Oligochitosan, which has greater than 3 but less than 10 saccharide (N-acetylglucosamine or glucosamine) residues, is obtained by either chemical or enzymatic hydrolysis of chitosan. In this work, we demonstrated that oligochitosan had an in vitro stimulatory effect on the release of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-1 beta in macrophages. Moreover, we observed that oligochitosan could be uptaken by macrophages through confocal laser microscopy. Scatchard analysis of internalization of 2-aminoacridone-oligochitosan in macrophages indicated its internalization was mediated by a specific receptor on macrophage membrane with a Kd of 2.1 x 10(-5) M. Competition studies showed that mannose could inhibit oligochitosan internalization, while lipopolysaccharide and beta-glucan could not do it. Inhibition of mannose-BSA, fucose-BSA, and N-acetylglucosamine-BSA on oligochitosan internalization further suggests that oligochitosan internalization is mediated by a macrophage lectin receptor like with mannose specificity.
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PMID:Receptor-mediated stimulatory effect of oligochitosan in macrophages. 1506 74

The innate immune response in vertebrates and invertebrates requires the presence of pattern recognition receptors or proteins that recognize microbial cell components including lipopolysaccharide, bacterial peptidoglycan (PGN), and fungal 1,3-beta-D-glucan. We reported previously that PGN and 1,3-beta-D-glucan recognition proteins from insect hemolymph were able to induce the activation of the prophenoloxidase-activating system, one of the major invertebrate innate immune reactions. The goal of this study was to characterize the biochemical properties and effects of the human counterparts of these molecules. Soluble pattern recognition proteins were purified from human serum and identified as human mannose-binding lectin (MBL) and L-ficolin. The use of specific microbial cell component-coupled columns demonstrated that MBL and L-ficolin bind to PGN and 1,3-beta-D-glucan, respectively. Purified MBL and L-ficolin were associated with MBL-associated serine proteases-1 and -2 (MASPs) and small MBL-associated protein as determined by Western blot analysis. Finally, the binding of purified MBL/MASP and L-ficolin/MASP complexes to PGN and 1,3-beta-D-glucan, respectively, resulted in the activation of the lectin-complement pathway. These results indicate that human PGN and 1,3-beta-D-glucan recognition proteins function as complement-activating lectins.
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PMID:Human mannose-binding lectin and L-ficolin function as specific pattern recognition proteins in the lectin activation pathway of complement. 1507 67

Invertebrates, like vertebrates, utilize pattern recognition proteins for detection of microbes and subsequent activation of innate immune responses. We report structural and functional properties of two domains from a beta-1,3-glucan recognition protein present in the hemolymph of a pyralid moth, Plodia interpunctella. A recombinant protein corresponding to the first 181 amino-terminal residues bound to beta-1,3-glucan, lipopolysaccharide, and lipoteichoic acid, polysaccharides found on cell surfaces of microorganisms, and also activated the prophenoloxidase-activating system, an immune response pathway in insects. The amino-terminal domain consists primarily of an alpha-helical secondary structure with a minor beta-structure. This domain was thermally stable and resisted proteolytic degradation. The 290 residue carboxyl-terminal domain, which is similar in sequence to glucanases, had less affinity for the polysaccharides, did not activate the prophenoloxidase cascade, had a more complicated CD spectrum, and was heat-labile and susceptible to proteinase digestion. The carboxyl-terminal domain bound to laminarin, a beta-1,3-glucan with beta-1,6 branches, but not to curdlan, a beta-1,3-glucan that lacks branching. These results indicate that the two domains of Plodia beta-1,3-glucan recognition protein, separated by a putative linker region, bind microbial polysaccharides with differing specificities and that the amino-terminal domain, which is unique to this class of pattern recognition receptors from invertebrates, is responsible for stimulating prophenoloxidase activation.
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PMID:Innate immunity in a pyralid moth: functional evaluation of domains from a beta-1,3-glucan recognition protein. 1508 91

Injections of immunogens, such as beta-1,3-glucan or lipopolysaccharide (LPS), bring about a marked hyperlipaemia with associated changes in lipophorins and apolipophorin-III in the haemolymph of Locusta migratoria. These changes are similar to those observed after injection of adipokinetic hormone (AKH). The possibility that endogenous AKH is released as part of the response to these immunogens is investigated using passive immunisation against AKH-I, and measurement of AKH-I titre in the haemolymph after injection of immunogens. The data presented show that, despite the similarity of the changes brought about by the presence of immunogens in the haemolymph to those brought about by AKH, there is no release of endogenous AKH after injection of laminarin or LPS. A direct effect of the immunogens on release of neutral lipids by the fat body cannot be demonstrated in vitro, and the mechanism by which hyperlipaemia is induced during immune challenge remains uncertain.
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PMID:Induced hyperlipaemia and immune challenge in locusts. 1512 54


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