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Query: UNIPROT:P80098 (
monocyte chemoattractant protein
)
1,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cytokines play a pivotal role in synthesis and deposition of extracellular matrix in chronic renal failure (CRF). The proinflammatory properties of
monocyte chemoattractant protein
(
MCP
)-1 make it an ideal candidate
cytokine
for the production of interstitial inflammation in CRF. To investigate the possible role of proteinuria in inducing proximal tubular (PT) MCP-1, MCP-1 mRNA levels were measured by Northern blot and reverse transcription PCR in confluent monolayers of PT cells in primary culture in media containing a variety of proteins. PT cells produced MCP-1 mRNA in response to bovine serum albumin (BSA), delipidated BSA (dBSA; 0.5 to 30 mg/ml), holotransferrin, and apotransferrin (1 to 8 mg/ml). Unstimulated PT cells expressed very low levels of MCP-1 mRNA, detectable by reverse transcription PCR but not by Northern blot. The expression of MCP-1 mRNA reached a peak (sixfold greater than control) within 4 h of exposure to dBSA and was maintained for at least 24 h with continued exposure. Removal of dBSA from the media led to a rapid decline in MCP-1 mRNA expression. dBSA-induced MCP-1 expression was inhibited by lysine, an inhibitor of protein uptake, and reproduced by dBSA purified by gel and size-selective filtration. dBSA influenced MCP-1 expression at the level of transcription and probably translation, as evidenced by abrogation of MCP-1 by actinomycin D and superinduction with the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. The concentration of MCP-1 protein in response to dBSA added to the apical surface of PT cells was 2.4-fold greater in basolateral than in apical media, indicating basolateral secretion of MCP-1 protein. In summary, PT cell MCP-1 mRNA and protein expression are upregulated by albumin and transferrin, in concentrations similar to those of proteinuric urine. This effect could explain the link between proteinuria and interstitial inflammation in CRF.
...
PMID:Induction of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 in proximal tubule cells by urinary protein. 933 81
Plasma levels of proinflammatory cytokines,
cytokine
inhibitors, and the beta chemokines RANTES, macrophage inhibitory protein (MIP)-1alpha, and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
(
MCP
)-1 were studied in relationship with virus load in 40 patients exhibiting plasma levels of HIV RNA ranging between undetectable and levels >10(6) copies/mL. Mean plasma levels of MCP-1 were increased in patients with high virus load compared with HIV-seropositive subjects with undetectable plasma viral RNA and healthy controls. MCP-1 levels were directly correlated with plasma levels of HIV RNA. No correlation was observed between virus load and plasma concentrations of MIP-1alpha and RANTES. The results suggest that low rates of viral replication in vivo are not dependent on increased production of the suppressive chemokines RANTES and MIP-1alpha. Since MCP-1 upregulates viral replication in vitro, the results may suggest a role for MCP-1 in triggering viral replication in HIV disease.
...
PMID:Plasma levels of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 but not those of macrophage inhibitory protein-1alpha and RANTES correlate with virus load in human immunodeficiency virus infection. 939 78
Using a multiprobe RNase protection assay, we examined
cytokine
and chemokine mRNAs that were expressed after corneal infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa in mice. Cytokines that were upregulated included interleukin-1alpha (IL-1alpha) and -1beta, IL-1 receptor antagonist, IL-6, IL-11, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, macrophage colony-stimulating factor, stem cell factor, lymphotoxin beta, transforming growth factor beta1, and tumor necrosis factor alpha. Chemokine transcripts that were upregulated included Eotaxin; gamma-interferon-inducible protein 10;
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1; macrophage inflammatory proteins 1alpha, 1beta, and 2; and RANTES. Peak expression of these cytokines and chemokines was observed between 1 and 3 days after infection. These responses returned to or approached baseline preinfection levels by 7 days after ocular challenge. Identification of the various cytokines and chemokines upregulated during corneal infection provides important information relevant to unraveling the pathogenesis induced by this bacterium and provides hope that specific molecules can be targeted for therapy.
...
PMID:Early cytokine and chemokine gene expression during Pseudomonas aeruginosa corneal infection in mice. 942 85
This study demonstrates that the therapeutic effect of a nitric oxide inhibitor in a murine model of fecal peritonitis is mediated in part by increased levels of interleukin-10 (IL-10) and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1 (MCP-1). Female CD1 mice were subjected to cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) with a 21-gauge needle and, immediately following surgery, were injected intraperitoneally with saline, N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME; 8 mg/kg), or N(G)-nitro-D-arginine methyl ester (D-NAME; 8 mg/kg). At 96 h after surgery and drug treatment, 20% of mice that received D-NAME had survived whereas 60% of mice that received L-NAME were alive. To elucidate the effect of L-NAME treatment on chemokine and
cytokine
production during fecal peritonitis, the levels of macrophage inflammatory protein 2 (MIP-2), IL-10, and MCP-1 were measured in peritoneal washings from additional groups of mice 24 h after the CLP surgery. Peritoneal fluids from L-NAME-treated mice contained significantly higher levels of IL-10 and MCP-1 than did those from D-NAME-treated mice. To elucidate the effect of nitric oxide inhibition on potential cellular sources of IL-10 and MCP-1 in the CLP model, cultured alveolar and peritoneal macrophages were activated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide in the presence of L-NAME; these macrophages produced significantly more MCP-1 than did similarly activated macrophages in the presence of D-NAME. In the CLP surgery model, immunoneutralization of IL-10 alone or IL-10 and MCP-1 together with polyclonal antibodies prior to surgery significantly reduced the survival rates in L-NAME-treated groups compared with L-NAME-treated groups that received preimmune serum. Taken together, these data demonstrate that the inhibition of nitric oxide following experimental CLP fecal peritonitis is therapeutic, in part through the modulatory effect of this treatment on the synthesis of IL-10 and MCP-1.
...
PMID:Therapeutic effects of nitric oxide inhibition during experimental fecal peritonitis: role of interleukin-10 and monocyte chemoattractant protein 1. 945 22
Injury in non-neuronal tissues stimulates chemokine expression leading to recruitment of inflammatory cells responsible for orchestration of repair processes. The signals involved in directing repair of damage to the brain are less well understood. We hypothesized that following brain injury, chemokines are expressed and regulate the rate and pattern of inflammatory cell accumulation. The two chemokine subfamilies are alpha(alpha)-chemokines, which primarily function as neutrophil chemoattractants, and the beta(beta)-chemokines, which function primarily as monocyte chemoattractants. We assessed alpha and beta chemokine mRNA expression patterns and leukocyte accumulation following a cerebral cortical lesion. Cortical lesions were produced with and without addition of endotoxin, Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which stimulates
cytokine
expression. We studied the expression of the beta-chemokines:
monocyte chemoattractant protein
(gene product JE; MCP-1/JE), macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha and beta (MIP-1alpha and MIP-1beta), and the regulated upon activation normal T expressed and secreted chemokine (RANTES) as well as the alpha-chemokines: interferon-gamma-inducible protein (IP-10) and N51/KC (KC; a murine homologue of MIP-2). Changes in gene expression were analyzed by Northern analysis at different time points following injury. Leukocyte and macrophage densities were analyzed by immunohistochemistry at the same time intervals. All chemokines were elevated following cortical injury/endotoxin. MCP-1 and MIP-1alpha were elevated at 2 h and peaked 6 h, MIP-1beta peaked at 6 h, but declined more rapidly than MCP-1 or MIP-1alpha, and IP-10 peaked at 6 h and showed the most rapid decline. KC was elevated at 1 h, and peaked at 6 h following LPS. RANTES was elevated at 1 h and achieved a plateau level between 6 and 18 h, then declined. In contrast, sterile injuries produced in the absence of endotoxin only induced the mRNA of the beta-chemokine MCP-1, and its expression was delayed compared to the cortical injury/endotoxin group. The presence of chemokine message as early as 1 h indicates that expression of this class of molecules is an early response in the repair process following traumatic brain injury. Macrophage/microglia accumulation occurred more rapidly, activated microglia further from the lesion border, and more cells accumulated in cortical injury/endotoxin than in cortical lesions produced under sterile conditions. Thus, there was a positive correlation between beta-chemokine expression and the number of beta-chemokine responsive cells (i.e. microglia) accumulating in injury sites. This is the first comprehensive study using a panel of chemokine probes and specific marcophage/microglial markers to study in vivo activation of the brain following injury. Our data show that the brain is capable of expression of multiple chemokine genes upon appropriate stimulation (e.g. LPS-treatment). The gradient of microglial activation is consistent with physical damage stimulating release of chemokines that diffuse from the injury site. These data strongly suggest that chemokines are instrumental in the initiation of repair processes following brain injury.
...
PMID:Selective chemokine mRNA expression following brain injury. 955 51
C/EBPepsilon is a member of the CCAAT/enhancer binding protein family of basic region/leucine zipper transcriptional activators. The C/EBPepsilon protein is highly conserved between rodents and humans, and its domain structure is very similar to C/EBPalpha. In mice C/EBPepsilon mRNA is only detected in hematopoietic tissues, including embryonic liver and adult bone marrow and spleen. Within the hematopoietic system, C/EBPepsilon is expressed primarily in myeloid cells, including promyelocytes, myelomonocytes, and their differentiated progeny. To identify potential functions of C/EBPepsilon, cell lines over-expressing the C/EBPepsilon protein were generated in the P388 lymphoblastic cell line. In contrast to the parental cell line, C/EBPepsilon-expressing cell lines displayed lipopolysaccharide-inducible expression of the interleukin-6 and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1 (MCP-1) genes as well as elevated basal expression of the MIP-1alpha and MIP-1beta chemokine genes. In the EML-C1 hematopoietic stem cell line, C/EBPepsilon mRNA levels increased as the cells progressed along the myeloid lineage, just preceding activation of the gene encoding the receptor for macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (M-CSFR). M-CSFR expression was stimulated in C/EBPepsilon-expressing P388 cell lines, when compared with either the parental P388 cells or P388 cell lines expressing either C/EBPalpha or C/EBPbeta. These results suggest that C/EBPepsilon may be an important regulator of differentiation of a subset of myeloid cell types and may also participate in the regulation of
cytokine
gene expression in mature cells.
...
PMID:C/EBPepsilon is a myeloid-specific activator of cytokine, chemokine, and macrophage-colony-stimulating factor receptor genes. 959 84
Airway hyperresponsiveness leading to subepithelial fibrosis is mediated by inflammatory cells activated by T helper (Th) 2-derived cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-5. By analyzing the phenotype and response of human lung fibroblasts derived from either fetal (ICIG7) or adult (CCL202) tissue as well as from a Th2-type stromal reaction (FPA) to IL-4 and IL-13, we provide evidence that human lung fibroblasts may behave as inflammatory cells upon activation by IL-4 and IL-13. We show that the three types of fibroblasts constitute different populations that display a distinct pattern in cell surface molecule expression and proinflammatory
cytokine
and chemokine release. All fibroblasts express functional but different IL-4/IL-13 receptors. Thus, while IL-4 receptor (R) alpha and IL-13Ralpha1 chains are present in all the cells, CCL202 and FPA fibroblasts coexpress the IL-13Ralpha2 and the IL-2Rgamma chain, respectively, suggesting the existence of a heterotrimeric receptor (IL-4Ralpha/IL-13Ralpha/IL-2Rgamma) able to bind IL-4 and IL-13. Stimulation with IL-4 or IL-13 triggers in the fibroblasts a differential signal transduction and upregulation in the expression of beta1 integrin and vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 and in the production of IL-6 and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1, two inflammatory cytokines important in the pathogenesis of allergic inflammation. Our results suggest that when activated by IL-4 and IL-13, different subsets of lung fibroblasts may act as effector cells not only in the pathogenesis of asthma but also in lung remodeling processes. They may also differentially contribute to trigger and maintain the recruitment, homing, and activation of inflammatory cells.
...
PMID:Interleukin (IL) 4 and IL-13 act on human lung fibroblasts. Implication in asthma. 959 69
Macrophages are a major source of proinflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), which are expressed during conditions of inflammation, infection, or injury. We identified an activity secreted by a macrophage tumor cell line that negatively regulates bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced expression of TNF-alpha. This activity, termed TNF-alpha-inhibiting factor (TIF), suppressed the induction of TNF-alpha expression in macrophages, whereas induction of three other proinflammatory cytokines (interleukin-1beta [IL-1beta], IL-6, and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1) was accelerated or enhanced. A similar or identical inhibitory activity was secreted by IC-21 macrophages following LPS stimulation. Inhibition of TNF-alpha expression by macrophage conditioned medium was associated with selective induction of the NF-kappaB p50 subunit. Hyperinduction of p50 occurred with delayed kinetics in LPS-stimulated macrophages but not in fibroblasts. Overexpression of p50 blocked LPS-induced transcription from a TNF-alpha promoter reporter construct, showing that this transcription factor is an inhibitor of the TNF-alpha gene. Repression of the TNF-alpha promoter by TIF required a distal region that includes three NF-kappaB binding sites with preferential affinity for p50 homodimers. Thus, the selective repression of the TNF-alpha promoter by TIF may be explained by the specific binding of inhibitory p50 homodimers. We propose that TIF serves as a negative autocrine signal to attenuate TNF-alpha expression in activated macrophages. TIF is distinct from the known TNF-alpha-inhibiting factors IL-4, IL-10, and transforming growth factor beta and may represent a novel
cytokine
.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor alpha transcription in macrophages is attenuated by an autocrine factor that preferentially induces NF-kappaB p50. 974 85
A prominent feature of Lyme disease is the perivascular accumulation of mononuclear leukocytes. Incubation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) cultured on amniotic tissue with either interleukin-1 (IL-1) or Borrelia burgdorferi, the spirochetal agent of Lyme disease, increased the rate at which human monocytes migrated across the endothelial monolayers. Very late antigen 4 (VLA-4) and CD11/CD18 integrins mediated migration of monocytes across HUVEC exposed to either B. burgdorferi or IL-1 in similar manners. Neutralizing antibodies to the chemokine
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1 (MCP-1) inhibited the migration of monocytes across unstimulated, IL-1-treated, or B. burgdorferi-stimulated HUVEC by 91% +/- 3%, 65% +/- 2%, or 25% +/- 22%, respectively. Stimulation of HUVEC with B. burgdorferi also promoted a 6-fold +/- 2-fold increase in the migration of human CD4(+) T lymphocytes. Although MCP-1 played only a limited role in the migration of monocytes across B. burgdorferi-treated HUVEC, migration of CD4(+) T lymphocytes across HUVEC exposed to spirochetes was highly dependent on this chemokine. The anti-inflammatory
cytokine
IL-10 reduced both migration of monocytes and endothelial production of MCP-1 in response to B. burgdorferi by approximately 50%, yet IL-10 inhibited neither migration nor secretion of MCP-1 when HUVEC were stimulated with IL-1. Our results suggest that activation of endothelium by B. burgdorferi may contribute to formation of the chronic inflammatory infiltrates associated with Lyme disease. The transendothelial migration of monocytes that is induced by B. burgdorferi is significantly less dependent on MCP-1 than is migration induced by IL-1. Selective inhibition by IL-10 further indicates that B. burgdorferi and IL-1 employ distinct mechanisms to activate endothelial cells.
...
PMID:Borrelia burgdorferi and interleukin-1 promote the transendothelial migration of monocytes in vitro by different mechanisms. 974 92
Recent studies support the concept that pulmonary granulomatous inflammation directed by interferon (IFN)-gamma, interleukin (IL)-12, and nitric oxide usually resolves in the absence of fibrosis. To determine whether nitric oxide participates in modulating the fibrotic response during the development of pulmonary granulomas in response to purified protein derivative (PPD), mice presensitized to PPD received daily intraperitoneal injections of N(G)-nitro-D-arginine-methyl ester (D-NAME), N(G)-nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester (L-NAME), or aminoguanidine after delivery of PPD-coated beads to the lungs. Eight days later, morphometric analysis of lung granulomas revealed that L-NAME-treated mice when challenged with PPD in vitro for 36 hours had the largest pulmonary granulomas and the greatest collagen deposition among the treated groups. In addition, equivalent numbers of dispersed lung cells from L-NAME- and aminoguanidine-treated mice produced significantly higher levels of IL-4,
monocyte chemoattractant protein
(
MCP
)-1, and macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha and significantly lower levels of eotaxin compared with D-NAME-treated mice. Cultures of dispersed lung cells from L-NAME-treated mice also produced significantly more IL-10 and less IL-12 compared with similar numbers of dispersed lung cells from D-NAME-treated mice. Cultures of isolated lung fibroblasts from L-NAME-treated mice expressed higher levels of C-C chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2) and CCR3 mRNA and contained less MCP-1 and eotaxin protein than a similar number of fibroblasts from D-NAME-treated mice. Thus, nitric oxide appears to regulate the deposition of extracellular matrix in lung granulomas through the modulation of the
cytokine
and chemokine profile of these lesions. Alterations in the
cytokine
, chemokine, and procollagen profile of this lesion may be a direct effect of nitric oxide on the pulmonary fibroblast and provide an important signal for regulating fibroblast activity during the evolution of chronic lung disease.
...
PMID:Collagen deposition in a non-fibrotic lung granuloma model after nitric oxide inhibition. 984 76
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