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Query: UNIPROT:P43026 (
lipopolysaccharide
)
62,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan (PGN) and
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
), which are both macrophage activators and polyclonal B cell mitogens, were shown to bind to the same dominant 70-kDa 6.5 pI protein on the surface of mouse B lymphocytes. This conclusion was supported by the following results: (a) the PGN- and
LPS
-binding proteins co-migrated following photoaffinity cross-linking and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; (b) cross-linking of PGN to this 70-kDa protein was competitively inhibited by
LPS
(IC50 = 7.3 microM),
LPS
from a deep rough mutant (IC50 = 6.9 microM), and lipid A (IC50 = 18-72 microM); (c) cross-linking of
LPS
to this 70-kDa protein was competitively inhibited by polymeric soluble PGN (IC50 = 0.09 microM) and sonicated high Mr PGN (IC50 = 0.6 microM); (d) cross-linking of both PGN and
LPS
to this 70-kDa protein was also competitively inhibited by dextran sulfate (IC50 = 115-124 microM); (e) cross-linking of both PGN and
LPS
to this 70-kDa protein was inhibited by a (GlcNAc)2-specific
lectin
; and (f) peptide maps of the 70-kDa proteins digested with chymotrypsin, subtilisin, staphylococcal protease V, or papain were identical for PGN- and
LPS
-binding proteins and unique for each enzyme. Based on competitive inhibition experiments, binding of PGN to the 70-kDa protein was 20-1200 times stronger than the binding of
LPS
or lipid A on a per mol basis. However, when aggregated micellar structures of
LPS
or lipid A were considered, the avidities of
LPS
and PGN binding were similar. These results demonstrate binding of PGN and
LPS
to the same 70-kDa protein on lymphocytes and suggest that the binding is specific for the (GlcNAc-MurNAc)n backbone of PGN and the (GlcNAc)2 part of lipid A.
...
PMID:Peptidoglycan and lipopolysaccharide bind to the same binding site on lymphocytes. 200 21
Factor C is an endotoxin-sensitive, intracellular serine protease zymogen which initiates the coagulation cascade system in the limulus hemolymph. We have determined the entire amino acid sequence of factor C using recombinant DNA technique. The zymogen consisted of 994 amino acid residues with a calculated molecular mass of 109,648 Da. Most interestingly, factor C has five repeating units ("Sushi" domain or short consensus repeat) of about 60 amino acid residues each, which have been found in many proteins participating in the mammalian complement system. In addition to a typical serine protease domain in the carboxyl-terminal portion, characteristic segments with an epidermal growth factor-like, a
lectin
-like, a cysteine-rich, and a proline-rich domain were also found, revealing a unique mosaic protein structure. The serine protease domain was most analogous to human thrombin. Factor C was identified to localize in large granules in the cell, indicating that it is released from the cell by
lipopolysaccharide
stimulation. Furthermore, we identified a transcript possibly derived by alternative splicing of factor C mRNA, which encodes a protein sharing the amino-terminal portion of factor C. We suggest that factor C, a newly discovered type of serine protease zymogen, is a "coagulation-complement factor" which may play important roles in both hemostasis and host defense mechanisms.
...
PMID:Limulus factor C. An endotoxin-sensitive serine protease zymogen with a mosaic structure of complement-like, epidermal growth factor-like, and lectin-like domains. 200 2
We studied functional and immunohistochemical characteristics of cultured rat microglia. Unstimulated microglia did not proliferate. Microglia stimulated with LCM (L929 conditioned medium: colony stimulating factor-1) had proliferative activity and increased acid phosphatase activity. LPS (
lipopolysaccharide
) and IFN gamma (interferon-gamma) but did not affect proliferative activity. Immunohistochemically, RCA-1
lectin
and GS-1
lectin
, which react to beta-D-galactose and alpha-D-galactose respectively, strongly reacted to the cytoplasm and membrane of unstimulated microglia. After stimulation with LCM, microglia elongated processes and decreased response to these lectins. On the other hand, microglia stimulated with LCM showed increased reactivity to monoclonal antibody of vimentin. Microglia stimulated with LPS had round shape and had response to these lectins and vimentin. Microglia stimulated with IFN gamma had adhesive activity and weakly stained with these lectins but not with vimentin. ED-1 (monoclonal antibody of rat monocytes/macrophages) reacted to unstimulated and stimulated microglia. In flow cytometry, unstimulated microglia expressed OX-18 (MHC class I) and W3/25 (CD4) antigen. After stimulation with IFN gamma, microglia were induced to express these antigens. CD4 antigen is a marker of helper/inducer T cells and thought to be a receptor of HIV. The results that microglia had CD4 antigen which was further induced with IFN gamma are important to investigate infection of the CNS with HIV. OX-6 (Ia) antigen was induced with IFN gamma. This indicates that the microglia plays a central role in the CNS immune reaction. These characteristics of cultured rat microglia provide useful informations to investigate the pathogenesis of the CNS disorders.
...
PMID:[Functional and immunohistochemical studies of cultured rat microglia]. 206 Feb 34
Hydrogen peroxide and oxygen radicals are agents commonly produced during inflammatory processes. In this study, we show that micromolar concentrations of H2O2 can induce the expression and replication of HIV-1 in a human T cell line. The effect is mediated by the NF-kappa B transcription factor which is potently and rapidly activated by an H2O2 treatment of cells from its inactive cytoplasmic form. N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC), a well characterized antioxidant which counteracts the effects of reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) in living cells, prevented the activation of NF-kappa B by H2O2. NAC and other thiol compounds also blocked the activation of NF-kappa B by cycloheximide, double-stranded RNA, calcium ionophore, TNF-alpha, active phorbol ester, interleukin-1,
lipopolysaccharide
and
lectin
. This suggests that diverse agents thought to activate NF-kappa B by distinct intracellular pathways might all act through a common mechanism involving the synthesis of ROI. ROI appear to serve as messengers mediating directly or indirectly the release of the inhibitory subunit I kappa B from NF-kappa B.
...
PMID:Reactive oxygen intermediates as apparently widely used messengers in the activation of the NF-kappa B transcription factor and HIV-1. 206 63
This review suggests that infections are potent immunomodulators by causing significant alterations in one or more mediators of homeostasis and that an effective antibiosis may be a potent immunomodulator, albeit indirectly. When large numbers of microorganisms are killed, their enzymes and toxins are rapidly released and activate the immune system. The septic syndrome and the potentially progressive states of septic shock, acute respiratory distress syndrome and multiple organ system failure illustrate the biological response modulating (BRM) activity of both infection and antibiotic. Enhancement of phagocytosis and intracellular killing would be a useful immunomodulatory activity for antibiotics. Equally useful would be the capacity of the antibiotic to bind or inactivate bacterial
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) to diminish monocyte release of tumour-necrosing factor (TNF) at a rate equal to or faster than the killing effect of the antibiotic on bacteria. For other types of immune deficiencies, such as are observed in HIV-positive patients with secondary bacterial, fungal and viral infections, modulation of viral receptors including HIV-R on CD4 lymphocytes accompanied by their up-regulation, enhancement of interferon (IFN) and natural killer (NK) function and inhibition of CD8 suppressor activity would be important activities. The classic example of polymyxin as an immunomodulating, albeit toxic, antibiotic offers a rational and definitive basis for the concept. In-vitro data on cefodizime, a third generation cephalosporin that achieves good tissue levels, are presented and show the ability of the intact antibiotic, as well as its immunomodulating side-chain, to down-regulate TNF and interleukin 1 (IL-1) released from human monocytes by
lectin
-activated lymphocytes,
LPS
and IFN.
...
PMID:Antibiotics as biological response modifiers. 207 50
Human T cell hybridomas were constructed by somatic cell fusion in order to dissect molecular heterogeneity of human macrophage activating-factors (MAF). Two stable human hybridoma supernatants contained MAF activity capable of inducing human monocytes tumoricidal without the help of bacterial
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
). These supernatants in the presence of
LPS
could also render mouse macrophages tumoricidal. In contrast, recombinant and natural human interferon-gamma (Hu-IFN-gamma) activated human monocytes, but not mouse peritoneal macrophages. The supernatants from the two clones could neither support the growth of human-granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor/human-interleukin-4-dependent (Hu-GM-CSF/Hu-IL-4) cell lines, such as AML 193 and TALL-101, nor stimulate the proliferation of human-interleukin-2-dependent human cell line and
lectin
-stimulated lymphoblast, which are responsive to human-interleukin-2 and human-interleukin-4. Rabbit or murine antibodies against human-interferon-gamma (Hu-IFN), human-granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor, human interleukin-1 alpha, human-interleukin-1 beta, human-interleukin-6, human-tumour necrosis factor (Hu-TNF), human-lymphotoxin and human-macrophage migration inhibitory factor (Hu-MIF) could not absorb MAF activity. MAF activity in the hybridoma supernatants is associated with the two polypeptides of molecular weights of 70,000-80,000 and 20,000-30,000 daltons, as determined by gel filtration. These results indicate decisively that novel MAF molecule(s) is secreted by human T cell hybridomas.
...
PMID:Constitutive production of novel macrophage-activating factor(s) by human T cell hybridomas. 212 37
A
lectin
with strong hemagglutinating activity toward erythrocytes of several animal species was isolated from an 18-h culture supernatant of a diarrheagenic strain, V2, of non-O1 Vibrio cholerae. The hemagglutinin (HA) was purified free of
lipopolysaccharide
by salt fractionation followed by gel filtration, hydrophobic interaction chromatography, and, finally, gel filtration in the presence of urea and deoxycholate. The purification procedure resulted in an HA preparation with 80-fold enhancement of specific activity. The HA consisted of noncovalently bound subunits of Mr 62,000 and behaved essentially as a single component with pI 6.0. Nonpolar and acidic amino acids contributed 46 and 24%, respectively, to the total amino acid residues. Electron micrographs of the HA showed it to consist of large, nonstoichiometric aggregates' of disklike molecules of 10-nm diameter. Inhibition of the HA by the glycoproteins fetuin, asialofetuin, and mucin, but not by ovalbumin and simple sugars, suggested the specific requirement of complex carbohydrates for binding. Rabbit antisera to the purified HA inhibited the hemagglutinating activities of the crude cell-free HA preparations, but not cell-associated HA activities of the parent (V2) or of other O1 and non-O1 V. cholerae strains. This suggested that the released and cell-associated HA activities were mediated by antigenically distinct components. Immunoblotting experiments showed that the antisera recognized a polypeptide component of Mr 62,000 in the cell envelope preparations of the parent and several other V. cholerae O1 and non-O1 strains. These data suggested that the HA was a nonfimbrial
lectin
of somatic origin with no protease activity and was apparently distinct from V. cholerae HAs described so far.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a novel hemagglutinin from Vibrio cholerae. 222 40
Peripheral blood monocytes from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals or AIDS-related complex/AIDS patients ex vivo exhibit distinct alterations in some but not all immune functions. In studies presented here, monocytes from healthy donors were infected with HIV 1 in vitro and co-cultures with autologous uninfected T lymphocytes were set up. The monocyte/macrophage (M phi)-dependent T cell function was determined by measurement of proliferative and secretory [interleukin (IL)2, interferon-gamma] responses to
lectin
(phytohemagglutinin), mitogen (anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody), or recall antigen (tetanus toxoid, tuberculin). Accessory function of M phi was normal after HIV infection when optimal amounts (10%-20%) were added to the T lymphocytes. However, HIV infection of M phi significantly decreased T cell proliferative responses and secretion of IL2 when supplemented at limited dilution (0.5%-5%), although interferon-gamma production was not affected. Whereas the
lipopolysaccharide
-triggered M phi production of IL1 was not impaired by HIV 1 infection, there was a significant decrease in this response when anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody or tetanus toxoid were used to trigger the peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The impairment of proliferation of T lymphocytes in the presence of HIV 1-infected M phi could be overcome by addition of exogenous IL 1. Taken together, these data clearly show that the mononuclear phagocyte-dependent enhancement of stimulated T cell proliferation and lymphokine secretion is decreased when the restricted numbers of monocytes/M phi are HIV 1 infected. There are, therefore, two possible roles of M phi in HIV infection and progression to disease. First, as a reservoir and vehicle for dissemination of the virus, and second, as an immune cell whose essential functions are impaired by infection.
...
PMID:Decreased accessory cell function of macrophages after infection with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in vitro. 225 85
The lymphocyte transformation (LT) test was performed using duck blood lymphocytes stimulated with phytohaemagglutinin (PHA), concanavalin A (Con A), lentil
lectin
(LC), Roman snail
lectin
(HP), peanut agglutinin (PNA), Bandeiraea simplicifolia seed
lectin
(BSS), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), horseshoe crab
lectin
(HSC), pokeweed mitogen (PWM) and E. coli
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
). Cells were cultured in microtitre trays, at 41.6 degrees C, 8 x 10(5) cells in 200 microliters medium (= 4 x 10(6) cells/ml) supplemented with 10% pooled duck serum. Mitogens were added at final concentrations of 0.1-100 micrograms/ml and triplicate cultures at each concentration were harvested daily for scintillation counting 6 hr after addition of 1 microCi [3H]thymidine. Three patterns of response were observed. The responses to Con A, LC, HP and HSC were greatest at high mitogen concentrations (40-100 micrograms/ml) throughout the 7 days of culture. With PHA, PNA, WGA and
LPS
maximum stimulation was obtained at 3-5 days, at which time the cells were responding to lower concentrations of mitogen than were required at other times during the experiment. The response to BSS and PWM showed increasing sensitivity to lower concentrations of mitogen during the first 3 days of culture and then stimulated most strongly at 2-10 micrograms/ml in cultures harvested after 4-7 days. Cells from two ducks were cultured for 3 and 5 days with selected concentrations of these mitogens; the results confirmed the variation in response to different mitogens. It is possible that these patterns of response are the outcome of stimulating different populations of duck lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Duck lymphocytes--III. Transformation responses to some common mitogens. 232 80
Campylobacter fetus strains with type A
lipopolysaccharide
(
LPS
) and a surface array protein layer (S+) have been found to be pathogenic in humans and animals. Spontaneous laboratory mutants that lack surface array proteins (S-) are sensitive to the bactericidal activity of normal human serum. The ability of lectins to determine the presence of the S-layer and differentiate
LPS
type was assessed. We screened 14 lectins and found 3 (wheat germ agglutinin, Bandeiraea simplicifolia II, and Helix pomatia agglutinin) that agglutinated S- C. fetus strains with type A
LPS
but not S- strains with type B or type C
LPS
or S+ strains. However, the S+ type A strains were agglutinated after sequential water extraction, heat, or pronase treatment, all of which remove the S-layer, whereas there was no effect on the control strains. Specific carbohydrates for each
lectin
and purified
LPS
from a type A C. fetus strain specifically inhibited agglutination of an S- type A strain. In a direct enzyme-linked
lectin
assay, binding to the S- type A
LPS
strain was significantly greater than binding to the S+ strain (P = 0.01) or to a Campylobacter jejuni strain (P = 0.008). Consequently, these results indicate that the three lectins bind to the O side chains of C. fetus type A
LPS
but that the presence of the S-layer on intact cells blocks binding.
...
PMID:Surface array proteins of Campylobacter fetus block lectin-mediated binding to type A lipopolysaccharide. 238 22
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