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Query: UNIPROT:P80098 (
monocyte chemoattractant protein
)
1,800
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The interaction of mesangial cells and monocyte-macrophages plays an important role in renal glomerular immune injury. We have, therefore, examined the regulation of two monocyte-specific cytokines, i.e., macrophage
CSF-1
and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
(MCP-1), the product of the mouse JE gene, in mouse mesangial cells. TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, and aggregates of IgG increased the synthesis of
CSF-1
(determined by RIA) and of MCP-1 (determined by biolabeling and immunoprecipitation). Stimulation of cAMP generation by forskolin or PGE2 decreased basal
CSF-1
synthesis and attenuated the responses to TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, and IgG. Forskolin and PGE2 also decreased biolabeled MCP-1 generation after stimulation with IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, or IgG. By Northern blot analysis steady state levels of mRNA for
CSF-1
and JE/MCP-1 were increased after incubation with IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, or IgG, and these effects were attenuated by forskolin. By using nuclear run-on assays the decrease in
CSF-1
and JE/MCP-1 mRNA levels induced by stimulation of cAMP generation with forskolin was attributed to decreased transcription of these genes. Thus, agents stimulating cAMP generation, including PGE2, counterbalance the generation of
CSF-1
and JE/MCP-1 in response to IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and IgG complexes. The locally produced
CSF-1
and MCP-1 may in turn influence the interaction between mesangial cells and monocyte-macrophages in glomerular injury.
...
PMID:Regulation of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and macrophage colony-stimulating factor-1 by IFN-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, IgG aggregates, and cAMP in mouse mesangial cells. 838 48
The potential involvement of reactive oxygen species in the expression of genes involved in immune response was examined in mesangial cells. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) and aggregated (aggr.) IgG increased mRNA levels for the
monocyte chemoattractant protein
, JE/MCP-1, and the colony-stimulating factor,
CSF-1
. Scavengers for free radicals such as di- and tetra-methylthiourea (DMTU and TMTU) attenuated the increase in mRNA levels in response to TNF-alpha and aggr. IgG. Generation of superoxide anion by xanthine oxidase and hypoxanthine increased mRNA levels of these genes, but exogenous H2O2 did not. Addition of NADPH to activate a membrane-bound NADPH-oxidase generated superoxide and caused a dose-dependent increase in mRNA levels and further enhanced the stimulation by TNF-alpha or aggr. IgG. An inhibitor of NADPH-dependent oxidase 4'-hydroxy-3'-methoxy-acetophenone attenuated the rise in mRNA levels in response to TNF-alpha and aggr. IgG. By nuclear run-on experiments TNF-alpha, aggr. IgG and NADPH increased the transcription rates for JE/MCP-1 and
CSF-1
, effects inhibited by TMTU. We conclude that generation of reactive oxygen species, possibly by NADPH-dependent oxidase, are involved in the induction of the JE/MCP-1 and
CSF-1
genes by TNF-alpha and IgG complexes. The concerted expression of leukocyte-directed cytokines represents a general response to tissue injury.
...
PMID:Oxygen radicals as second messengers for expression of the monocyte chemoattractant protein, JE/MCP-1, and the monocyte colony-stimulating factor, CSF-1, in response to tumor necrosis factor-alpha and immunoglobulin G. Evidence for involvement of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-dependent oxidase. 839 28
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
Oxidative stress and inflammatory processes are of major importance in atherogenesis because they stimulate oxidized LDL (Ox-LDL)-induced macrophage cholesterol accumulation and foam cell formation, the hallmark of early atherosclerosis. Under oxidative stress, both blood monocytes and plasma lipoproteins invade the arterial wall, where they are exposed to atherogenic modifications. Oxidative stress stimulates endothelial secretion of
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1 (MCP-1) and of
macrophage colony stimulating factor
(
M-CSF
), leading to monocyte adhesion and differentiation, respectively. LDL binds to extracellular matrix (ECM secreted by endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells and macrophages) proteoglycans, in a process that contributes to the enhanced susceptibility of the lipoprotein to oxidation by arterial wall macrophages. ECM-retained Ox-LDL is taken up by activated macrophages via their scavenger receptors. This leads to cellular cholesterol accumulation and enhanced atherogenesis. Protection of LDL against oxidation by antioxidants that can act directly on the LDL, or indirectly on the cellular oxidative machinery, or conversion of Ox-LDL to a non-atherogenic particle by HDL-associated paraoxonase (PON-1), can contribute to attenuation of atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Oxidized low density lipoprotein: atherogenic and proinflammatory characteristics during macrophage foam cell formation. An inhibitory role for nutritional antioxidants and serum paraoxonase. 1053 26
Oxidized LDL (oxLDL) is known to induce endothelial adhesion molecule and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1 expression and this is thought to be involved in monocyte recruitment into atherosclerotic lesions. oxLDL has also been found to induce macrophage proliferation. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether oxLDL might also have the ability to increase macrophage populations by inhibiting apoptosis. We found that oxLDL caused a dose-dependent inhibition of the apoptosis that occurs in cultured bone marrow-derived macrophages after
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
M-CSF
) withdrawal without inducing proliferation. Incubation of macrophages with either native LDL or acetylated LDL had no effect on apoptosis. The prosurvival effect of oxLDL was not inhibited by neutralizing antibodies to granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, was maintained in mice homozygous for a mutation in the
M-CSF
gene, and was not due to other secreted cytokines or growth factors. oxLDL caused activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinases ERK1/2 (extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2) as well as protein kinase B (PKB), a target of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase). Furthermore, there was phosphorylation of two important prosurvival PKB targets, I-kappaBalpha(Ser-32) and Bad(Ser-136). The MEK inhibitors PD 98059 and U0126 blocked ERK1/2 activation but did not diminish survival. Conversely, the PI 3-kinase inhibitors LY 294002 and wortmannin blocked PKB activation, and the ability of oxidized LDL to promote macrophage survival. Taken together, these results indicate that oxLDL can directly activate a PI 3-kinase/PKB-dependent pathway that permits macrophage survival in the absence of growth factors.
...
PMID:Oxidized low density lipoprotein inhibits macrophage apoptosis through activation of the PI 3-kinase/PKB pathway. 1151 69
Macrophages are numerous in the testicular interstitial tissue under normal conditions and increase during inflammation. The mechanisms involved are poorly characterized. Expression of the macrophage-regulating cytokines
monocyte chemoattractant protein
(
MCP
)-1 and
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
M-CSF
) was examined in the adult rat testis before and after an i.p. injection of an inflammatory stimulus, lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In the normal testis,
M-CSF
was readily observed using Northern blot and Western blot analysis. In contrast, MCP-1 was not detectable by Northern blot in the normal testis, but was detected using RT-PCR amplification and a sensitive ELISA. After LPS treatment, testicular MCP-1 mRNA and protein expression increased dramatically (up to 400-fold). In-situ hybridization for MCP-1 revealed that production was confined to the interstitium of the inflamed testis, in Leydig cells, peritubular cells, perivascular cells and monocyte-like macrophages, but not in tissue-resident macrophages. Unlike MCP-1,
M-CSF
mRNA and protein expression in the testis increased only marginally, if at all, after LPS treatment. These results suggest that MCP-1 stimulates the increase in intratesticular macrophages that accompanies LPS-induced inflammation in vivo. Together with
M-CSF
, MCP-1 may also play a role in maintaining the resident macrophage population of the normal testis.
...
PMID:Expression of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 and macrophage colony-stimulating factor in normal and inflamed rat testis. 1202 68
Small volumes of cervical secretions have limited measurements of immunity at the cervix, which may be important to studies of human papillomavirus (HPV). We report the use of recycling immunoaffinity chromatography to efficiently study immune profiles in cervical secretions. Frozen pairs of plasma and cervical secretions (collected on ophthalmic sponges) were selected randomly from women with normal cervical cytology (n = 50) participating in a natural history study of HPV in Guanacaste, Costa Rica. Single 25- micro l aliquots of plasma and (diluted) cervical secretions were assayed for interleukin (IL) -1 beta, -2, -4, -6, -8, -10, -12, -13, -15, IFN-alpha, -beta, -gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, -beta, RANTES (regulated on activation normal T-cell express and secreted), MCP-1 (
monocyte chemoattractant protein
), -2, -3, macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha, -1 beta (regulated on activation normal T-cell express and secreted),
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
, IgG, IgA, and cyclooxygenase 2. All of the specimens were tested as blind replicates, and refrozen plasma was retested 4 months later. To evaluate the reproducibility of the repeat measurements and to examine the correlation between plasma and cervical secretions, we calculated kappa values with 95% confidence intervals among categorized analyte values and Spearman correlation coefficients (rho) among detectable, continuous analyte values. Measurements of all of the analytes in either plasma or cervical secretions were highly reproducible, with all of the kappa > or = 0.78 (70% above 0.90), and all of the rho > or = 0.88 (96% above 0.90). Only IL-1 beta (kappa = 0.60 and rho = 0.82) and IL-6 (kappa = 0.50 and rho = 0.78) levels were strongly correlated between plasma and cervical secretions. IFN-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-beta, RANTES, MCP-1, MCP -2, macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha, and
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
levels were especially poorly correlated between plasma and cervical secretions (kappa < or = 0.25 and rho < or = 0.25). We conclude that recycling immunoaffinity chromatography is a reproducible method of measuring immune profiles from biological specimens, and immune profiles are not well correlated between plasma and cervical secretions, perhaps necessitating cervical collections to study cervix-specific immunity in HPV natural history studies.
...
PMID:Immune profiling of plasma and cervical secretions using recycling immunoaffinity chromatography. 1469 36
As an Old World nonhuman primate, baboons have been extensively used for research on dyslipidemia and atherogenesis. With increasing knowledge about the endothelium's role in the initiation and progression of atherosclerosis, the value of the baboon model can be increased by developing it for research on the role of dysfunctional endothelium in atherogenesis. Toward that goal, we have established and validated methods of isolating and culturing baboon femoral artery endothelial cells (BFAECs) and compared baboon endothelial cellular characteristics with those of humans. Our results indicated that baboon and human endothelial cells share similar growth and culture behaviors. As was the case for human endothelial cells, BFAECs responded to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha stimulation with increased expression of adhesion molecules (maximum increase for intracellular adhesion molecule (ICAM): 1.76 +/- 0.26-fold; vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM): 1.65 +/- 0.25-fold; E-selectin: 2.86 +/- 0.57-fold). However, BFAECs were hyporesponsive to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (range, 0.25-20 microg/mL) in adhesion molecule expression, whereas 1 microg/mL LPS induced 2.14- to 3.71-fold increases in human endothelial cells. The differential responses to LPS were not related to TLR-2 and toll-like receptor (TLR)-4 expression on the cell surface. And baboon microvascular endothelial cells had similar features as BFAECs. We observed constitutive expression of interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8, granulocyte
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(GM-CSF), and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
(
MCP
)-1 in both human and baboon endothelial cells, and these cytokines were further induced by TNF-alpha and LPS. We also demonstrated that the responses to TNF-alpha or LPS varied among baboons maintained under the same dietary and environmental conditions, suggesting that response may be controlled by genetic factors.
...
PMID:Comparative analysis of vascular endothelial cell activation by TNF-alpha and LPS in humans and baboons. 1521 Oct 29
Multiple signaling pathways participate in the regulation of bone remodeling, and pathological negative balance in the regulation results in osteoporosis. However, interactions of signaling pathways that act comprehensively in concert to maintain bone mass are not fully understood. We investigated roles of parathyroid hormone receptor (PTH/PTHrP receptor) signaling in osteoblasts in unloading-induced bone loss using transgenic mice. Hind limb unloading by tail suspension reduced bone mass in wild-type mice. In contrast, signaling by constitutively active PTH/PTHrP receptor (caPPR), whose expression was regulated by the osteoblast-specific Col1a1 promoter (Col1a1-caPPR), suppressed unloading-induced reduction in bone mass in these transgenic mice. In Col1a1-caPPR transgenic (Tg) mice, hind limb unloading suppressed bone formation parameters in vivo and mineralized nodule formation in vitro similarly to those observed in wild-type mice. In addition, serum osteocalcin levels and mRNA expression levels of type I collagen, Runx2 and Osterix in bone were suppressed by unloading in both wild-type mice and Tg mice. However, in contrast to unloading-induced enhancement of bone resorption parameters in wild-type mice, Col1a1-caPPR signaling suppressed, rather than enhanced, osteoclast number and osteoclast surface as well as urinary deoxypyridinoline excretion upon unloading. Col1a1-caPPR signaling also suppressed mRNA expression levels of RANK and c-fms in bone upon unloading. Although the
M-CSF
and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1 (MCP-1) mRNA levels were enhanced in control Tg mice, these levels were suppressed in unloaded Tg mice. These results indicated that constitutive activation of PTH/PTHrP receptor signaling in osteoblastic cells suppresses unloading-induced bone loss specifically through the regulation of osteoclastic activity.
...
PMID:Constitutively active parathyroid hormone receptor signaling in cells in osteoblastic lineage suppresses mechanical unloading-induced bone resorption. 1750 70
Suaeda asparagoides Miq. (Chenopodiaceae: S. asparagoides) is a salt-marsh plant that has long been prescribed in traditional Oriental medicine for the treatment of hypertension and hepatitis. In order to elucidate the pharmacological mechanisms of the herb, we conducted an examination of the anti-oxidative and anti-inflammatory properties of solvent-extracts of S. asparagoides. All of the solvent fractions showed potent anti-oxidative effects, as assessed using a radical generation assay system (xanthine oxidase assay) and an electron-donating activity system (DPPH [2,2-diphenyl-l-picrylhydrazyl radical] assay), with IC50 values ranging from 9 to 42 microg/ml. In agreement with this pattern, the total phenolic contents were widely distributed in the various solvent fractions, and ranged from 36.5 to 50.3 mg/g of dry weight. All of the solvent fractions significantly suppressed NO production in RAW264.7 cells induced by lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 0.1 microg/ml) and of the fractions, only the chloroform (CHC) fraction completely blocked the expression of inducible NO synthase (iNOS). Additionally, the hexane (HEX) and CHC fractions suppressed the mRNA expression of granulocyte/
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(GM-CSF) and
monocyte chemoattractant protein
1 (MCP-1), respectively, in the LPS-stimulated RAW264.7 cells. Therefore, these results suggest that the pharmacological action of S. asparagoides is due to its potent anti-oxidative effects and anti-inflammatory effects, and that therefore it can be applied to other diseases caused by oxidative stress and inflammation, such as cardiovascular diseases.
...
PMID:In vitro anti-oxidative and anti-inflammatory effects of solvent-extracted fractions from Suaeda asparagoides. 1766 94
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