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1.
The type III transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) receptor is a cell surface chondroitin/heparan sulfate proteoglycan that binds various forms of TGF-beta with high affinity and specificity. Here, we have used a genetic approach to determine the requirement for glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains for normal TGF-beta receptor expression and the role that the receptor proteoglycan core and GAG chains play in TGF-beta binding. Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells defective in GAG synthesis express on their surface 110-130-kDa type III receptor proteoglycan cores that can bind normal levels of TGF-beta compared to wild type CHO cells. The affinity of the receptor core for TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2 in CHO cell mutants is similar to that of the TGF-beta receptor proteoglycan forms present in wild type CHO cells or in CHO cell mutants that have been allowed to bypass their metabolic defect and express the wild type proteoglycan phenotype. The binding properties of TGF-beta receptor types I and II in CHO cells and the growth-inhibitory response of CHO cell mutants to TGF-beta are not impaired by the absence of GAG chains in the type III receptor. These results show that the GAG chains are dispensable for type III receptor expression on the cell surface, binding of TGF-beta to the receptor core, and growth inhibitory response of the cells to TGF-beta. The evidence also suggests that the type III receptor may act as a multifunctional proteoglycan able to bind TGF-beta via the receptor core while performing another as yet unidentified function(s) via the GAG chains.  相似文献   

2.
Cultured monolayers of NMuMG mouse mammary epithelial cells have augmented amounts of cell surface chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycan (GAG) when cultured in transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), presumably because of increased synthesis on their cell surface proteoglycan (named syndecan), previously shown to contain chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate GAG. This increase occurs throughout the monolayer as shown using soluble thrombospondin as a binding probe. However, comparison of staining intensity of the GAG chains and syndecan core protein suggests variability among cells in the attachment of GAG chains to the core protein. Characterization of purified syndecan confirms the enhanced addition of chondroitin sulfate in TGF-beta: (a) radiosulfate incorporation into chondroitin sulfate is increased 6.2-fold in this proteoglycan fraction and heparan sulfate is increased 1.8-fold, despite no apparent increase in amount of core protein per cell, and (b) the size and density of the proteoglycan are increased, but reduced by removal of chondroitin sulfate. This is shown in part by treatment of the cells with 0.5 mM xyloside that blocks the chondroitin sulfate addition without affecting heparan sulfate. Higher xyloside concentrations block heparan sulfate as well and syndecan appears at the cell surface as core protein without GAG chains. The enhanced amount of GAG on syndecan is partly attributed to an increase in chain length. Whereas this accounts for the additional heparan sulfate synthesis, it is insufficient to explain the total increase in chondroitin sulfate; an approximately threefold increase in chondroitin sulfate chain addition occurs as well, confirmed by assessing chondroitin sulfate ABC lyase (ABCase)-generated chondroitin sulfate linkage stubs on the core protein. One of the effects of TGF-beta during embryonic tissue interactions is likely to be the enhanced synthesis of chondroitin sulfate chains on this cell surface proteoglycan.  相似文献   

3.
We report the purification of betaglycan, a low-abundance membrane proteoglycan with high affinity for transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta). Betaglycan solubilized from rat embryo membrane preparations was purified to near-homogeneity by sequential chromatography through DEAE-Trisacryl, wheat germ lectin-Sepharose, and TGF-beta 1-agarose. Purified betaglycan has properties similar to betaglycan affinity-labeled in intact cells: it binds TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2 with KD approximately 0.2 nM, contains heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains and N-linked glycans attached to a 110-kDa core protein, and can spontaneously associate with phosphatidylcholine liposomes. The betaglycan core obtained by enzymatic removal of the GAG chains has high affinity for TGF-beta and associates with artificial liposomes, indicating that the core protein binds TGF-beta and anchors to membranes independently of the GAG chains present on the native protein or of any ancillary protein.  相似文献   

4.
Affinity-labeling techniques have been used to identify three types of high-affinity receptors for transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) on the surface of many cells in culture. Here we demonstrate that membrane preparations from tissue sources may also be used as an alternative system for studying the binding properties of TGF-beta receptors. Using a chemical cross-linking technique with 125I-TGF-beta 1 and 125I-TGF-beta 2 and bis(sulfosuccinimidyl)suberate (BS3), we have identified and characterized two high-affinity binding components in membrane preparations derived from human term placenta. The larger species, which migrates as a diffuse band of molecular mass 250-350 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels, is characteristic of the TGF-beta receptor type III, a proteoglycan containing glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains of chondroitin and heparan sulfate. The smaller species of molecular mass 140 kDa was identified as the core glycoprotein of this type III receptor by using the techniques of enzymatic deglycosylation and peptide mapping. Competition experiments, using 125I-TGF-beta 1 or 125I-TGF-beta 2 and varying amounts of competing unlabeled TGF-beta 1 or TGF-beta 2, revealed that both the placental type III proteoglycan and its core glycoprotein belong to a novel class of type III receptors that exhibit a greater affinity for TGF-beta 2 than for TGF-beta 1. This preferential binding of TGF-beta 2 to placental type III receptors suggests differential roles for TGF-beta 2 and TGF-beta 1 in placental function.  相似文献   

5.
The transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) receptor type III is a low abundance cell surface component that binds TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2 with high affinity and specificity, and is present in many mammalian and avian cell types. Type III TGF-beta receptors affinity-labeled with 125I-TGF-beta migrate in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels as diffuse species of 250-350 kDa. Here we show that type III receptors deglycosylated by the action of trifluoromethanesulfonic acid yield affinity-labeled receptor cores of 110-130 kDa. This marked decrease in molecular weight is also achieved by combined treatment of type III receptors with heparitinase and chondroitinase ABC. Digestion of receptor-linked glycosaminoglycans by treatment of intact cell monolayers with heparitinase and chondroitinase does not prevent TGF-beta binding to the type III receptor core polypeptide and does not release the receptor polypeptide from the membrane. The type III TGF-beta receptor binds tightly to DEAE-Sephacel and coelutes with cellular proteoglycans at a characteristically high salt concentration. Thus, the type III TGF-beta receptor has the properties of a membrane proteoglycan that carries heparan and chondroitin sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains. The binding site for TGF-beta appears to reside in the 100-120-kDa core polypeptide of this receptor. The type III receptor is highly sensitive to cleavage by trypsin. Trypsin action releases the glycosaminoglycan-containing domain of the receptor leaving a 60-kDa membrane-associated domain that contains the cross-linked ligand. A model for the domain structure of the TGF-beta receptor type III is proposed based on these results.  相似文献   

6.
TGF-beta receptors.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
  相似文献   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(6):3137-3145
Transforming growth factors beta 1 and beta 2 bind with high affinity to the core protein of a 250-350-kD cell surface proteoglycan. This proteoglycan (formerly referred to as the type III TGF-beta receptor) coexists in many cells with the receptor implicated in TGF-beta signal transduction (type I TGF-beta receptor), but its function is not known. We report here that soluble TGF-beta-binding proteoglycans are released by several cell types into the culture media, and can be found in serum and extracellular matrices. As has been shown for the membrane-bound form, the soluble proteoglycans have a heterogeneous core protein of 100-120 kD that carries chondroitin sulfate and/or heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycan chains and a small amount of N-linked carbohydrate. The membrane-bound form of this proteoglycan is hydrophobic and associates with liposomes, whereas the soluble forms lack a membrane anchor and do not associate with liposomes. Differences in the electrophoretic migration of the soluble and membrane forms of this proteoglycan suggest additional structural differences in their core proteins and glycosaminoglycan chains. These soluble and membrane-bound proteoglycans, for which we propose the name "betaglycans," might play distinct roles in pericellular retention, delivery, or clearance of activated TGF-beta.  相似文献   

8.
Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster are relevant models for studying the roles of glycosaminoglycans (GAG) during the development of multicellular organisms. The genome projects of these organisms have revealed the existence of multiple genes related to GAG-synthesizing enzymes. Although the putative genes encoding the enzymes that synthesize the GAG-protein linkage region have also been identified, there is no direct evidence that the GAG chains bind covalently to core proteins. This study aimed to clarify whether GAG chains in these organisms are linked to core proteins through the conventional linkage region tetrasaccharide sequence found in vertebrates and whether modifications by phosphorylation and sulfation reported for vertebrates are present also in invertebrates. The linkage region oligosaccharides were isolated from C. elegans chondroitin in addition to D. melanogaster heparan and chondroitin sulfate after digestion with the respective bacterial eliminases and were then derivatized with a fluorophore 2-aminobenzamide. Their structures were characterized by gel filtration and anion-exchange high performance liquid chromatography in conjunction with enzymatic digestion and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight spectrometry, which demonstrated a uniform linkage tetrasaccharide structure of -GlcUA-Gal-Gal-Xyl- or -GlcUA-Gal-Gal-Xyl(2-O-phosphate)- for C. elegans chondroitin and D. melanogaster CS, respectively. In contrast, the unmodified and phosphorylated counterparts were demonstrated in heparan sulfate of adult flies at a molar ratio of 73:27, and in that of the immortalized D. melanogaster S2 cell line at a molar ratio of 7:93, which suggests that the linkage region in the fruit fly first becomes phosphorylated uniformly on the Xyl residue and then dephosphorylated. It has been established here that GAG chains in both C. elegans and D. melanogaster are synthesized on the core protein through the ubiquitous linkage region tetrasaccharide sequence, suggesting that indispensable functions of the linkage region in the GAG synthesis have been well conserved during evolution.  相似文献   

9.
The regulation of vascular endothelial cell behavior during angiogenesis and in disease by transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1)) is complex, but it clearly involves growth factor-induced changes in extracellular matrix synthesis. Proteoglycans (PGs) synthesized by endothelial cells contribute to the formation of the vascular extracellular matrix and also influence cellular proliferation and migration. Since the effects of TGF-beta(1) on vascular smooth muscle cell growth are dependent on cell density, it is possible that TGF-beta(1) also directs different patterns of PG synthesis in endothelial cells at different cell densities. In the present study, dense and sparse cultures of bovine aortic endothelial cells were metabolically labeled with [(3)H]glucosamine, [(35)S]sulfate, or (35)S-labeled amino acids in the presence of TGF-beta(1). The labeled PGs were characterized by DEAE-Sephacel ion exchange chromatography and Sepharose CL-4B molecular sieve chromatography. The glycosaminoglycan M(r) and composition were analyzed by Sepharose CL-6B chromatography, and the core protein M(r) was analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, before and after digestion with papain, heparitinase, or chondroitin ABC lyase. These experiments indicate that the effect of TGF-beta(1) on vascular endothelial cell PG synthesis is dependent on cell density. Specifically, TGF-beta(1) induced an accumulation of small chondroitin/dermatan sulfate PGs (CS/DSPGs) with core proteins of approximately 50 kDa in the medium of both dense and sparse cultures, but a cell layer-associated heparan sulfate PG with a core protein size of approximately 400 kDa accumulated only in dense cultures. Moreover, only in the dense cell cultures did TGF-beta(1) cause CS/DSPG hydrodynamic size to increase, which was due to the synthesis of CS/DSPGs with longer glycosaminoglycan chains. The heparan sulfate PG and CS/DSPG core proteins were identified as perlecan and biglycan, respectively, by Western blot analysis. The present data suggest that TGF-beta(1) promotes the synthesis of both perlecan and biglycan when endothelial cell density is high, whereas only biglycan synthesis is stimulated when the cell density is low. Furthermore, glycosaminoglycan chains are elongated only in biglycan synthesized by the cells at a high cell density.  相似文献   

10.
Sulfated glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains are a class of long linear polysaccharides that are covalently attached to multiple core proteins to form proteoglycans (PGs). PGs are major pericellular and extracellular matrix components that surround virtually all mammalian cell surfaces, and create conducive microenvironments for a number of essential cellular events, such as cell adhesion, cell proliferation, differentiation, and cell fate decisions. The multifunctional properties of PGs are mostly mediated by their respective GAG moieties, including chondroitin sulfate (CS), heparan sulfate (HS), and keratan sulfate (KS) chains. Structural divergence of GAG chains is enzymatically generated and strictly regulated by the corresponding biosynthetic machineries, and is the major driving force for PG functions. Recent studies have revealed indispensable roles of GAG chains in stem cell biology and technology. In this review, we summarize the current understanding of GAG chain-mediated stem cell niches, focusing primarily on structural characteristics of GAG chains and their distinct regulatory functions in stem cell maintenance and fate decisions.  相似文献   

11.
Molecular structure of the beta-adrenergic receptor   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The beta-adrenergic receptor from several tissues has been purified to homogeneity or photoaffinity radiolabeled and its subunit molecular weight determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In this study we have examined the oligomeric structure of nondenatured beta 1- and beta 2-adrenergic receptor proteins, as solubilized with the detergent digitonin. Model systems used were frog and turkey red blood cell as well as rat, rabbit, and bovine lung plasma membrane preparations. To correct for the effects of detergent binding, sedimentation equilibrium analysis in various solvents, as adapted for the air-driven ultracentrifuge, was used. With this approach an estimate of 6 g of digitonin/g of protein binding was determined, corresponding to a ratio of 180 mol of digitonin/mol of protein. Protein molecular weights estimated by this method were 43 500 for the turkey red blood cell beta 1 receptor and 54 000 for the frog red blood cell beta 2 receptor. Molecular weights of 60 000-65 000 were estimated for beta 1 and beta 2 receptors present in mammalian lungs. These values agree with estimates of subunit molecular weight obtained by SDS gel electrophoresis of purified or photoradiolabeled preparations and suggest beta-adrenergic receptors to be digitonin solubilized from the membrane as single polypeptide chains.  相似文献   

12.
Human embryonic skin fibroblasts were pretreated with transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) for 6 h and then labeled with [35S]sulphate and [3H]leucine for 24 h. Radiolabeled proteoglycans from the culture medium and the cell layer were isolated and separated by isopycnic density-gradient centrifugation, followed by gel, ion-exchange and hydrophobic-interaction chromatography. The major proteoglycan species were examined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulphate before and after enzymatic degradation of the polysaccharide chains. The results showed that TGF-beta increased the production of several different 35S-labelled proteoglycans. A large chondroitin/dermatan sulphate proteoglycan (with core proteins of approximately 400-500 kDa) increased 5-7-fold and a small dermatan sulphate proteoglycan (PG-S1, also termed biglycan, with a core protein of 43 kDa) increased 3-4-fold both in the medium and in the cell layer. Only a small effect was observed on another dermatan sulphate proteoglycan, PG-S2 (also named decorin). These observations are generally in agreement with results of other studies using similar cell types. In addition, we have found that the major heparan sulphate proteoglycan of the cell layer (protein core approximately 350 kDa) was increased by TGF-beta treatment, whereas all the other smaller heparan sulphate proteoglycans with protein cores from 250 kDa to 30 kDa appeared unaffected. To investigate whether TGF-beta also influences the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chain-synthesizing machinery, we also characterized GAGs derived from proteoglycans synthesized by TGF-beta-treated cells. There was generally no increase in the size of the GAG chains. However, the dermatan sulphate chains on biglycan and decorin from TGF-beta treated cultures contained a larger proportion of D-glucuronosyl residues than those derived from untreated cultures. No effect was noted on the 4- and 6-sulphation of the GAG chains. By the use of p-nitrophenyl beta-D-xyloside (an initiator of GAG synthesis) it could be demonstrated that chain synthesis was also enhanced in TGF-beta-treated cells (approximately twofold). Furthermore, the dermatan sulphate chains synthesized on the xyloside in TGF-beta-treated fibroblasts contained a larger proportion of D-glucuronosyl residues than those of the control. These novel findings indicate that TGF-beta affects proteoglycan synthesis both quantitatively and qualitatively and that it can also change the copolymeric structure of the GAG by affecting the GAG-synthesizing machinery. Altered proteoglycan structure and production may have profound effects on the properties of extracellular matrices, which can affect cell growth and migration as well as organisation of matrix fibres.  相似文献   

13.
Several cytokines and growth factors act on cells after their association with the glycosaminoglycan (GAG) moiety of cell surface proteoglycans (PGs). Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) binds to GAG; however, the relevance of this interaction for the biological activity of IFN-gamma on human cells remains to be established. Human arterial smooth muscle cells (HASMC), the main cells synthesizing PG in the vascular wall, respond markedly to IFN-gamma. We found that treatment of HASMC with chondroitinase ABC, an enzyme that degrades chondroitin sulfate GAG, reduced IFN-gamma binding by more than 50%. This treatment increased the affinity of 125I-IFN-gamma for cells from a Kd value of about 93 nM to a Kd value of about 33 nM. However, the total binding was reduced from 9. 3 +/- 0.77 pmol/microg to 3.0 +/- 0.23 pmol/mg (n = 4). Interestingly, pretreatment with chondroitinase ABC reduced significantly the cellular response toward IFN-gamma. The interaction of IFN-gamma with chondroitin sulfate GAG was confirmed by affinity chromatography of isolated cell-associated 35S-, 3H-labeled PG on a column with immobilized IFN-gamma. The cell-associated PG that binds to IFN-gamma was a chondroitin sulfate PG (CSPG). This CSPG had a core protein of approximately 110 kDa that was recognized by anti-CD44 antibodies on Western blots. High molecular weight complexes between IFN-gamma and chondroitin 6-sulfate were observed in gel exclusion chromatography. Additions of chondroitin 6-sulfate to cultured HASMC antagonized the antiproliferative effect and expression of major histocompatibility complex II antigens induced by IFN-gamma. These results indicate that IFN-gamma binds with low affinity to the chondroitin sulfate GAG moiety of the cell surface CSPG receptor CD44. This interaction may increase the local concentration of IFN-gamma at the cell surface, thus facilitating its binding to high affinity receptors and modulating the ability of IFN-gamma to signal a cellular response.  相似文献   

14.
Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-) binds specifically and with high affinity to several different cell surface proteins. Low Mr proteins of 50,000 and 80,000 have been termed type I and type II receptors. Intermediate sized binding components of 115,000–140,000 Mr and a high binding components of approximately 250,000 Mr in subunit size have been termed type III receptors. The high Mr component is a proteoglycan containing the glycosaminoglycan chains of heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate and the intermediate sized components are its core proteins. Although almost all cells have TGF- receptors, binding of TGF- to the type III binding components is restricted to cells of fibroblastic, osteoblastic and chondroblastic origin. The physiological relevance of each individual binding class is unclear. However, recent data indicate that the type III protein does not transmit signals to inhibit cell proliferation, induce protein synthesis, or promote cytomorphological change and that these activities may be mediated through the type I receptor. The mechanism of signal transduction remains unknown, but it does not appear to be associated with tyrosine phosphorylation or phosphorylation of the 40s ribosomal protein S6.Abbreviations TGF Transforming Growth Factor - GAG Glycosaminoglycan - EGF Epidermal Growth Factor  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
X Lin  N Perrimon 《Matrix biology》2000,19(4):303-307
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) are abundant molecules associated with the cell surface and extracellular matrix, and consist of a protein core to which heparan sulfate (HS) glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains are attached. Although these molecules have been the focus of intense biochemical studies in vitro, their biological functions in vivo were unclear until recently. We have undertaken an in vivo functional study of HSPGs in Drosophila. Our studies, as well as others, demonstrate the critical roles of HSPGs in several major signaling pathways, including ibroblast growth factor (FGF), Wnt, Hedgehog (Hh) and TGF-beta. Our results also suggest that specific HS GAG chain modifications, as well as specific HSPG protein cores, are involved in specific signaling pathways.  相似文献   

18.
Previous work (Yanagishita, M., and Hascall, V. C. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 10270-10283) has indicated that heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans in rat ovarian granulosa cells are degraded by two kinetically distinct pathways. Pathway 1 degrades proteoglycans rapidly with a t 1/2 approximately 25 min without generating appreciable degradative intermediates. Pathway 2 degrades proteoglycans more slowly with a t 1/2 approximately 4 h, generating distinct degradative intermediates: single HS chains of Mr = approximately 10,000 and approximately 5,000. Effects of leupeptin, an inhibitor of thiol proteases, on the intracellular degradation of proteoglycans in the rat ovarian granulosa cell culture were examined using various chase protocols after labeling cells with [35S]sulfate. The presence of leupeptin at 100 micrograms/ml in the culture medium inhibited the intracellular degradation of proteoglycans by approximately 80% during a 7-h chase period after a 20-h labeling. Leupeptin affected neither the cellular content nor the in vitro activities of beta-hexosaminidase and arylsulfatase. Structural analyses of heparan sulfate species in leupeptin-treated cells demonstrated that the drug inhibited the degradation of HS proteoglycans at two distinct points. First, degradation of the core protein was partially inhibited and delayed before the start of glycosaminoglycan degradation. This resulted in the accumulation of degradative intermediates with partially degraded core proteins bearing intact glycosaminoglycan chains. This establishes the initial sequence for HS proteoglycan degradation, with proteolysis preceding endoglycosidase digestion, and suggests that these two degradation steps may occur in physically separate compartments. Second, the final depolymerization of HS fragments through pathway 2 was totally inhibited, resulting in the continuous accumulation of Mr = 5,000 HS chains. This is not due to the direct inhibition of the lysosomal exoglycosidase and sulfatase enzymes responsible for the complete depolymerization of HS chains, since pathway 1, while slowed, continued to completely depolymerize the HS chains in the presence of leupeptin. The results suggest that the intracellular compartment which completely degrades heparan sulfate chains is separate from those containing partially, endoglycosidically processed heparan sulfate chains and that leupeptin interfered with the translocation of glycosaminoglycans to the final degradation site.  相似文献   

19.
A low molecular weight inhibitor of TGF-beta 1 binding was detected in partially purified human platelet extracts by using Hep 3B hepatoma cells in the binding assays. The inhibitory protein was purified to homogeneity and was identified as platelet factor 4 on the basis of its amino acid sequence. TGF-beta 1 binding to Hep 3B cells was almost completely inhibited by 100 nM concentrations of platelet factor 4, but TGF-beta 1 binding to NRK 49F fibroblasts was inhibited only slightly. Affinity cross-linking experiments revealed that these differences in the inhibition of TGF-beta 1 binding by platelet factor 4 were due to differences in the complements of TGF-beta 1 binding proteins present on these two cell types. In Hep 3B cells the majority of bound TGF-beta 1 was cross-linked to a complex which had an apparent molecular weight of 70 kDa. TGF-beta 1 binding to this protein was the most sensitive to inhibition by platelet factor 4. Based on its size and TGF-beta 1 binding properties, we believe this protein is the type I TGF-beta 1 receptor. Hep 3B cells also had a high-affinity TGF-beta 1 binding protein which appeared as an 80 kDa complex, and which we believe to be the type II TGF-beta 1 receptor. TGF-beta 1 binding to this protein was not inhibited by platelet factor 4. TGF-beta 1 was also cross-linked to complexes of higher molecular weights in Hep 3B cells, but it was not clear whether any of them represented the type III TGF-beta 1 receptor. In NRK 49F cells, the majority of bound TGF-beta 1 was cross-linked to a high molecular weight complex which probably represented the type III TGF-beta 1 receptor. NRK 49F cells also had type I TGF-beta 1 receptors and platelet factor 4 inhibited binding to these receptors in the NRK cells. Since the type I receptor contributed only a small percentage of total TGF-beta 1 binding, however, the overall effects of platelet factor 4 on TGF-beta 1 binding to NRK 49F cells were negligible. We were unable to demonstrate specific or saturable binding of platelet factor 4 to Hep 3B cells using either direct binding or affinity cross-linking assays. Thus, it is not clear whether platelet factor 4 inhibits TGF-beta 1 binding by competition for binding to the type I receptor. Modest concentrations of TGF-beta 1 reduced the adherence of Hep 3B cells to tissue culture dishes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Particle masses of the Escherichia coli pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex and its component enzymes have been measured by scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM). The particle mass of PDH complex measured by STEM is 5.28 X 10(6) with a standard deviation of 0.40 X 10(6). The masses of the component enzymes together with their standard deviations are (2.06 +/- 0.26) X 10(5) for the dimeric pyruvate dehydrogenase (E1), (1.15 +/- 0.17) X 10(5) for dimeric dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase (E3), and (2.20 +/- 0.17) X 10(6) for dihydrolipoyl transacetylase (E2), the 24-subunit core enzyme. The latter value corresponds to a subunit molecular weight of (9.17 +/- 0.71) X 10(4) for E2. The subunit molecular weight measured by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate is 8.6 X 10(4). STEM measurements on PDH complex incubated with excess E3 or E1 failed to detect any additional binding of E3 but showed that the complex would bind additional E1 under forcing conditions (high concentrations with glutaraldehyde). The additional E1 subunits were bound too weakly to represent binding sites in an isolated or isolable complex. The mass measurements by STEM are consistent with the subunit composition 24:24:12 when interpreted in the light of the flavin content of the complex and assuming 24 subunits in the core enzyme (E2).  相似文献   

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