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1.
Aminopeptidase N (APN; EC 3.4.11.2) is an exopeptidase that is attached to cell membranes by a hydrophobic amino-terminal stalk in vertebrates or a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor in insects. In this study, we report the cloning, expression, and characterization of an aminopeptidase N from Manduca sexta midgut. The full-length aminopeptidase N cDNA (APN1a) encodes a 995-amino-acid protein. The predicted amino acid sequence differs by 8 amino acids from M. sexta APN1. These different amino acids do not modify any putative glycosylation or glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor sites. The full-length cDNA was cloned into an expression plasmid, pHSP-HR5, and transiently expressed in an insect cell line derived from Spodoptera frugiperda (Sf21 cells). Immunoblot analysis with anti-APN antiserum showed that APN1a expressed in Sf21 cells is the same size (120 kDa) as APN found in midgut brush border membranes. After treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PIPLC), anti-cross-reacting determinant antibody specific for PIPLC cleavage products recognized the expressed 120-kDa APN1a, but not endogenous Sf21 proteins, indicating that APN1a has an intact glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. These results are evidence that Sf21 cells synthesize few, if any, endogenous GPI-linked proteins. Immunofluorescence staining showed that the expressed APN1a was located on the surface of Sf21 cells.  相似文献   

2.
The sensitivity of acetylcholinesterases (AChEs) from Musca domestica and from Drosophila melanogaster to the phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus and to the glycosylphosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C from Trypanosoma brucei was investigated. B. cereus phospholipase C solubilizes membrane-bound AChE, and both phospholipases convert amphiphilic AChEs into hydrophilic forms of the enzyme. The lipases uncover an immunological determinant that is found on other glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored membrane proteins after the same treatment. This immunological determinant is also present on the native hydrophilic form of AChE. The polypeptide bearing the active site of the membrane-bound enzyme migrates faster during sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis than the same polypeptide from the soluble enzyme. We conclude that AChE from insect brain is attached to membranes via a glycophospholipid anchor. This anchor is covalently linked to the polypeptide bearing the active esterase site of the enzyme and can be cleaved by an endogenous lipase.  相似文献   

3.
Photoaffinity labeling of alpha 1-adrenergic receptors of rat heart   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The photoaffinity probe [125I]aryl azidoprazosin was used to examine structural aspects of rat left ventricular alpha 1-adrenergic receptor. Autoradiography of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis-resolved proteins from photoaffinity-labeled membranes revealed a specifically labeled protein of mass 77 kDa. Adrenergic drugs competed with the photoaffinity probe for binding to the receptor in a manner expected of an alpha 1-adrenergic antagonist. Because the autoradiographic pattern was unaltered by incubating labeled membranes in gel sample buffer containing high concentrations of reducing agents, the binding component of the cardiac alpha 1-adrenergic receptor appears to be a single polypeptide chain. The photoaffinity probe specifically labeled a single protein of approximately 68 kDa in membranes of cardiac myocytes prepared from rat left ventricles. The role played by sulfhydryls in receptor structure and function was also studied. Dithiothreitol (DTT) inhibited [3H]prazosin binding to left ventricular membranes and altered both the equilibrium dissociation constant and maximal number of [3H]prazosin-binding sites but not the ability of the guanine nucleotide guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate to decrease agonist affinity for the receptors. When photoaffinity-labeled membranes were incubated with 40 mM DTT for 30 min at room temperature, two specifically labeled proteins of 77 and 68 kDa were identified. The DTT-induced conversion of the 77-kDa protein to 68 kDa was irreversible with washing, but the effect of DTT on [3H]prazosin binding was reversible. Both 77- and 68-kDa proteins were observed with liver membranes even in the absence of reducing agent. We suggest that the DTT-induced conversion of the 77-kDa protein to 68 kDa is due to enhancement in protease activity by the reductant. These results document that the cardiac alpha 1-adrenergic receptor is a 77-kDa protein, similar in mass to the receptor in liver and other sites. Proteolysis likely accounts for lower Mr forms of this receptor found in cardiac myocytes and in previous publications on hepatic alpha 1-receptors.  相似文献   

4.
Cellular prion protein (Prp(C)) is a glycoprotein usually associated with membranes via its glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor. The trans-conformational form of this protein (Prp(SC)) is the suggested agent responsible for transmissible neurodegenerative spongiform encephalopathies. This protein has been shown on sperm and in the reproductive fluids of males. Antibodies directed against the C-terminal sequence near the GPI-anchor site, an N-terminal sequence, and against the whole protein showed that the Prp isoforms were compartmentalized within the reproductive tract of the ram. Immunoblotting with the three antibodies showed that the complete protein and both N- and C-terminally truncated and glycosylated isoforms are present within cauda epididymal fluid and seminal plasma. Moreover, we demonstrate that in these fluids, the Prp(C) isoforms are both in a soluble state as well as associated with small membranous vesicles (epididymosomes). We also report that only one major glycosylated 25 kDa C-terminally truncated Prp(C) isoform is associated with sperm from the testis, cauda epididymis, and semen, and this form is also present in the sperm cytoplasmic droplets that are released during maturation. In sperm, this C-terminal truncated form was found to be associated with membrane lipid rafts present in the mature sperm, suggesting a role for it in the terminal stages of sperm maturation.  相似文献   

5.
A comparative study of proteolytic enzymes and cell-surface protein composition in virulent and avirulent Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis promastigote forms was carried out using one- and two-dimensional dodecyl sulfate sodium-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The surface iodinated protein profiles showed two major polypeptides of 65-60 and 50-47 kDa that were expressed in both virulent and avirulent promastigote forms. However, minor quantitative differences were observed in the cell-surface profile between the avirulent and virulent promastigotes. These included polypeptides of 115, 52, 45, 32, and 25 kDa that were preferentially expressed in the virulent forms. Two-dimensional SDS-PAGE showed an accentuated expression of acidic polypeptides; some of them differentially expressed in the promastigote forms analyzed. Live parasites treated with glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-specific phospholipase C (PLC) from Trypanosoma brucei and immunoprecipitated with the cross-reacting determinant (CRD) antibody recognized three major polypeptides of 65-60, 52, and 50-47 kDa, hence suggesting that these peptides were anchored to the plasma membrane domains through GPI anchor. Moreover, the polypeptides of 65-60 and 52 kDa were also recognized by the gp63 antiserum. Several metalloproteinase activities were similar in both virulent and avirulent promastigote forms, whereas cysteine proteinase activities, sensitive to E-64, were preferentially expressed in virulent promastigotes. These results suggest that cell-surface polypeptides and intracellular cysteine proteinases might play an important role in the virulence of L. (L.) amazonensis.  相似文献   

6.
Glycosylphoshatidylinositol (GPI) anchors are remodeled during their transport to the cell surface. Newly synthesized proteins are transferred to a GPI anchor, consisting of diacylglycerol with conventional C16 and C18 fatty acids, whereas the lipid moiety in mature GPI-anchored proteins is exchanged to either diacylglycerol containing a C26:0 fatty acid in the sn-2 position or ceramide in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Here, we report on PER1, a gene encoding a protein that is required for the GPI remodeling pathway. We found that GPI-anchored proteins could not associate with the detergent-resistant membranes in per1Delta cells. In addition, the mutant cells had a defect in the lipid remodeling from normal phosphatidylinositol (PI) to a C26 fatty acid-containing PI in the GPI anchor. In vitro analysis showed that PER1 is required for the production of lyso-GPI, suggesting that Per1p possesses or regulates the GPI-phospholipase A2 activity. We also found that human PERLD1 is a functional homologue of PER1. Our results demonstrate for the first time that PER1 encodes an evolutionary conserved component of the GPI anchor remodeling pathway, highlighting the close connection between the lipid remodeling of GPI and raft association of GPI-anchored proteins.  相似文献   

7.
The folate receptor (FR) in HeLa cells was characterized as to ligandbinding mechanism, antigenic properties and membrane anchor in order toobtain information to be used for the design of biological agentstargeting FR in malignant tumors. The receptor displayed the followingbinding characteristics in equilibrium dialysis experiments(37°C, pH 7.4) with [3H] folate: a high-affinity type of bindingthat exhibited positive cooperativity with a Hill coefficient >1.0and an upward convex Scatchard plot, a slow radioligand dissociation atpH 7.4 becoming rapid at pH 3.5 and inhibition in the presence of otherfolates. The molecular size of the receptor was 100 kDa on gel filtrationwith Triton X-100, or similar to that of high molecular weight human milkfolate binding protein (FBP). The latter protein represents a 25 kDamolecule which equipped with a hydrophobic glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) membrane anchor susceptible to cleavage byphosphatidylinositol specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) formsmicelles of 100 kDa size with Triton X-100. The HeLa cell FRimmunoreacted with antibodies against purified human milk FBP inELISA, and in a fluorescence activated cell sorting system, whereHeLa cells exposed to increasing concentrations of antibody showed adose-dependent response. Exposure to PI-PLC decreased the fraction ofimmunolabeled cells indicating a linkage of FR to cell membranes by aGPI anchor. HeLa cells incubated with radiofolate showed a continuousuptake with time, however, with a complete suppression of uptake in thepresence of an excess of cold folate. Prewash of cells at acidic pH toremove endogenous folate increased the uptake. Binding and uptake of [3H]folate was increased in cells grown in a folate-deprived medium. The HeLaFR seems to be epitope related to human milk FBP.  相似文献   

8.
Phospholipase B (Plb1) is secreted by pathogenic fungi and is a proven virulence determinant in Cryptococcus neoformans. Cell-associated Plb1 is presumptively involved in fungal membrane biogenesis and remodelling. We have also identified it in cryptococcal cell walls. Motif scanning programs predict that Plb1 is attached to cryptococcal membranes via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor, which could regulate Plb1 export and secretion. A functional GPI anchor was identified in cell-associated Plb1 by (G)PI-specific phospholipase C (PLC)-induced release of Plb1 from strain H99 membrane rafts and inhibition of GPI anchor synthesis by YW3548, which prevented Plb1 secretion and transport to membranes and cell walls. Plb1 containing beta-1,6-linked glucan was released from H99 (wild-type strain) cell walls by beta-1,3 glucanase, consistent with covalent attachment of Plb1 via beta-1,6-linked glucans to beta-1,3-linked glucan in the central scaffold of the wall. Naturally secreted Plb1 also contained beta-1,6-linked glucan, confirming that it originated from the cell wall. Plb1 maintains cell wall integrity because a H99 deletion mutant, DeltaPLB1, exhibited a morphological defect and was more susceptible than H99 to cell wall disruption by SDS and Congo red. Growth of DeltaPLB1 was unaffected by caffeine, excluding an effect of Plb1 on cell wall biogenesis-related signaling pathways. Environmental (heat) stress caused Plb1 accumulation in cell walls, with loss from membranes and reduced secretion, further supporting the importance of Plb1 in cell wall integrity. This is the first demonstration that Plb1 contributes to fungal survival by maintaining cell wall integrity and that the cell wall is a source of secreted enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Renal dipeptidase (EC 3.4.13.11) has been solubilized from pig kidney microvillar membranes with n-octyl-beta-D-glucopyranoside and then purified by affinity chromatography on cilastatin-Sepharose. The enzyme exists as a disulphide-linked dimer of two identical subunits of Mr 45,000 each. The purified dipeptidase partitioned into the detergent-rich phase upon phase separation in Triton X-114 and reconstituted into liposomes consistent with the presence of the glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol membrane anchor. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the amphipathic, detergent-solubilized, form of renal dipeptidase was identical with that of the hydrophilic, phospholipase-solubilized, form, locating the membrane anchor at the C-terminus of the protein. The glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchor of both purified and microvillar membrane renal dipeptidase was a substrate for an activity in pig plasma which displayed properties similar to those of a previously described phospholipase D. The cross-reacting determinant of the glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchor was generated by incubation of purified renal dipeptidase with bacterial phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase c, whereas the anchor-degrading activity in plasma failed to generate this determinant.  相似文献   

10.
During pathogenesis of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) an abnormal form (PrP(Sc)) of the host encoded prion protein (PrP(C)) accumulates in insoluble fibrils and plaques. The two forms of PrP appear to have identical covalent structures, but differ in secondary and tertiary structure. Both PrP(C) and PrP(Sc) have glycosylphospatidylinositol (GPI) anchors through which the protein is tethered to cell membranes. Membrane attachment has been suggested to play a role in the conversion of PrP(C) to PrP(Sc), but the majority of in vitro studies of the function, structure, folding and stability of PrP use recombinant protein lacking the GPI anchor. In order to study the effects of membranes on the structure of PrP, we synthesized a GPI anchor mimetic (GPIm), which we have covalently coupled to a genetically engineered cysteine residue at the C-terminus of recombinant PrP. The lipid anchor places the protein at the same distance from the membrane as does the naturally occurring GPI anchor. We demonstrate that PrP coupled to GPIm (PrP-GPIm) inserts into model lipid membranes and that structural information can be obtained from this membrane-anchored PrP. We show that the structure of PrP-GPIm reconstituted in phosphatidylcholine and raft membranes resembles that of PrP, without a GPI anchor, in solution. The results provide experimental evidence in support of previous suggestions that NMR structures of soluble, anchor-free forms of PrP represent the structure of cellular, membrane-anchored PrP. The availability of a lipid-anchored construct of PrP provides a unique model to investigate the effects of different lipid environments on the structure and conversion mechanisms of PrP.  相似文献   

11.
It has been shown previously that cultured human venous and arterial endothelial cells (EC) bind C1q in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Cultured human endothelial cells express an average number of 5.2 x 10(5) binding sites/cell. In the present study the putative receptor for C1q (C1qR) was isolated from the membranes of 1-5 x 10(9) human umbilical cord EC by affinity chromatography on C1q-Sepharose. During isolation, C1qR was detected by its capacity to inhibit the lysis of EAC1q in C1q-deficient serum. The eluate from C1q-Sepharose was concentrated, dialysed and subjected to QAE-A50 chromatography and subsequently to gel filtration on HPLC-TSK 3000. C1qR filtered at an apparent molecular weight of 60 kDa. Purified C1qR exhibited an apparent molecular weight of 55-62 kDa in the unreduced state and a molecular weight of 64-68 kDa in reduced form. Two IgM monoclonal antibodies (mAb) D3 and D5 were raised following immunization of mice with purified receptor preparations. Both monoclonal antibodies increased the binding of (125)I-C1q to endothelial cells but F(ab')(2) anti-C1qR mAb inhibited the binding of a(125)I-C1q to EC in a dosedependent manner. The D3 mAb recognized a band of 54-60 kDa in Western blots of membranes of human EC and polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Previously, the authors showed that C1q induces the binding of IgM-containing immune complexes to EC. Therefore, it was hypothesized that during a primary immune response generation of IgM-IC may occur, resulting in binding and activation of C1, dissociation of activated C1 by C1 inhibitor and subsequent interaction of IgM-IC bearing C1q with EC-C1qR.  相似文献   

12.
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae an amphiphilic cAMP-binding protein has been found recently to be anchored to plasma membranes by virtue of a glycolipid structure (Muller and Bandlow, 1991a, 1992). The cAMP-binding parameters of this protein are affected by the lipolytic removal of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) membrane anchor by exogenous (G)PI-specific phospholipases C or D (PLC or PLD) (Muller and Bandlow, 1993) suggesting a regulatory role of glycolipidic membrane anchorage. Here we report that transfer of yeast cells from lactate to glucose medium results in the conversion of the amphiphilic form of the cAMP receptor protein into a hydrophilic version accompanied by the rapid loss of fatty acids from the GPI anchor of the [14C]palmitic acid- labeled protein. Analysis of the cleavage site identifies [14C]inositol phosphate as the major product after treatment of the soluble, [14C]inositol-labeled protein with nitrous acid which destroys the glucosamine constituent of the anchor. Together with the observed cross- reactivity of the hydrophilic fragment with antibodies directed against the cross-reacting determinant of soluble trypanosomal variable surface glycoproteins (i.e., myo-inositol-1,2-cyclic phosphate) this demonstrates that, in membrane release, the initial cleavage event is catalyzed by an intrinsic GPI-PLC activated upon transfer of cells to glucose medium. Release from the plasma membrane in soluble form requires, in addition, the presence of high salt or alpha-methyl mannopyranoside, or the removal of the carbohydrate moieties, because otherwise the protein remains associated with the membrane presumably at least in part via its N-glycosidic carbohydrate side chains. The data point to the possibility that cleavage of the anchor could play a role in the transfer of the signal for the nutritional situation to the interior of the cell.  相似文献   

13.
Lipid rafts have been identified in the membranes of mammalian cells, the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and the pathogenic fungus Candida albicans. Formed by a lateral association of sphingolipids and sterols, rafts concentrate proteins carrying a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor. We report the isolation of membranes with the characteristics of rafts from the fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans. These characteristics include insolubility in Triton X-100 (TX100) at 4 degrees C, more-buoyant density within a sucrose gradient than the remaining membranes, and threefold enrichment with sterols. The virulence determinant phospholipase B1 (PLB1), a GPI-anchored protein, was highly concentrated in raft membranes and could be displaced from them by treatment with the sterol-sequestering agent methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD). Phospholipase B enzyme activity was inhibited in the raft environment and increased 15-fold following disruption of rafts with TX100 at 37 degrees C. Treatment of viable cryptococcal cells in suspension with MbetaCD also released PLB1 protein and enzyme activity, consistent with localization of PLB1 in plasma membrane rafts prior to secretion. The antioxidant virulence factor Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) was concentrated six- to ninefold in raft membrane fractions compared with nonraft membranes, whereas the cell wall-associated virulence factor laccase was not detected in membranes. We hypothesize that raft membranes function to cluster certain virulence factors at the cell surface to allow efficient access to enzyme substrate and/or to provide rapid release to the external environment.  相似文献   

14.
Monoclonal antibodies (MAb) raised to intact Streptococcus mutans P-4 cells (serotype e) were used to demonstrate the presence of shared antigenic determinant(s) between S. mutans BHT (serotype b) cell membranes and human heart tissue. MAb binding to both BHT membrane and human heart tissue was demonstrated by ELISA. Common antigens were identified by immunoblot analysis following separation of BHT membrane components and human heart antigens by SDS-PAGE. MAb 22C4 recognized three polypeptides from the BHT membrane preparation, having molecular masses of 42, 56 and 85 kDa. MAb 22C4 also recognized an 85 kDa component and a 200 kDa component from human heart tissue. MAb D159 was specific for a single 82 kDa polypeptide in BHT membrane, and also bound to two high molecular mass components in human heart (165 and 200 kDa). When both MAb D159 and 22C4 were first absorbed with S. mutans P-4 cells, subsequent reactivity to the aforementioned BHT membrane components was inhibited, indicating that these cross-reactive components are found in S. mutans P-4 as well as in S. mutans BHT micro-organisms. Competitive binding analysis showed that both MAb D159 and MAb 22C4 bound to myosin, indicating that S. mutans BHT membrane, human heart tissue and myosin share at least one immunodeterminant. This indicates that myosin could be the cross-reactive tissue component in human heart.  相似文献   

15.
Zymogen granules (ZG) of rat pancreas have been isolated by the procedure of Paquet et al. The granules lysed when exposed to alkaline pH (pH 8.2), and their membranes could be subfractionated by centrifugation on a sucrose gradient. Four discrete types of membranes corresponding to densities of 1.105, 1.085, 1.075, and 1.020 were obtained, designated types A, B, C, and D, respectively and characterized both by morphological and biochemical criteria. Electrophoretic profiles showed that they contain the same protein bands but in different proportions. Type A membranes are comprised of four major bands corresponding to molecular weights of 80, 69, 54, and 20 kDa, being in higher concentration than the others. Types B and C contain three major bands at 80, 54 and 20 kDa whereas type D is comprised of only two major bands at 69 and 54 kDa, the latter polypeptide corresponding to ATP-diphosphohydrolase activity which is present in all four membrane types. Freeze-fracture of rapidly frozen membranes, followed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) showed that type A are large superimposed sheets of membranes with amorphous material between sheets. The surface area of these sheets corresponds grossly to the surface of an intact ZG with a few intramembrane particles (IMP) distributed at random or in small aggregates on large smooth fracture planes. Types B and C exhibit a totally different aspect, forming closed vesicles about the size of a small ZG with few IMP distributed at random or in small aggregates on smooth fracture planes. Type D membranes are very small vesicles with no detectable IMP on relatively smooth fracture planes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Bacillus thuringiensis Cry toxins recognizes their target cells in part by the binding to glycosyl–phosphatidyl–inositol (GPI) anchored proteins such as aminopeptidase-N (APN) or alkaline phosphatases (ALP). Treatment of Tenebrio molitor brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) with phospholipase C that cleaves out GPI-anchored proteins from the membranes, showed that GPI-anchored proteins are involved in binding of Cry3Aa toxin to BBMV. A 68 kDa GPI-anchored ALP was shown to bind Cry3Aa by toxin overlay assays. The 68 kDa GPI-anchored ALP was preferentially expressed in early instar larvae in comparison to late instar larvae. Our work shows for the first time that GPI-anchored ALP is important for Cry3Aa binding to T. molitor BBMV suggesting that the mode of action of Cry toxins is conserved in different insect orders.  相似文献   

17.
We show that the yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, contains two cAMP-binding proteins in addition to the well-characterized regulatory (R) subunit of cytoplasmic cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). We provide evidence that they comprise a new type of cAMP receptor, membrane-anchored by covalently attached lipid structures. They are genetically not related to the cytoplasmic R subunit. The respective proteins can be detected in sral mutants, in which the gene for the R subunit of PKA has been disrupted and a monoclonal antibody raised against the cytoplasmic R subunit does not cross-react with the two membrane-bound cAMP-binding proteins. In addition, they differ from the cytoplasmic species also with respect to their location and the peptide maps of the photoaffinity-labeled proteins. Although they differ from one another in molecular mass and subcellular location, peptide maps of the cAMP-binding domains resemble each other and both proteins are membrane-anchored by lipid structures, one to the outer surface of the plasma membrane, the other to the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Both anchors can be metabolically labeled by Etn, myo-Ins and fatty acids. In addition, the anchor structure of the cAMP receptor from plasma membranes can be radiolabeled by GlcN and Man. After cleavage of the anchor with glycosylphosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C from trypanosomes, the solubilized cAMP-binding protein from plasma membranes reacts with antibodies which specifically recognize the cross-reacting determinant from soluble trypanosomal coat protein, suggesting similarity of the anchors. Degradation studies also point to the glycosylphosphatidylinositol nature of the anchor from the plasma membrane, whereas the mitochondrial counterpart is less complex in that it lacks carbohydrates. The plasma membrane cAMP receptor is, in addition, modified by an N-glycosidically linked carbohydrate side chain, responsible mainly for its higher molecular mass.  相似文献   

18.
Connective tissue diseases often have overlapping clinical features and laboratory abnormalities. The distinctiveness of mixed connective tissue disease (MCTD) as an entity is of scientific interest and practical importance. In order to discriminate between MCTD and SLE patients we used a newly developed, commercially not available ELISA with recombinant antigen expressed in Baculovirus infected cells. This ELISA detects antibodies against RNP and Sm in complex as well as the subsets U1-snRNP 68 kDa, RNP-A, RNP-C (RNP), Sm-BB' and SS-D. We analyzed 66 RNP-positive consecutive patients prediagnosed as SLE or MCTD/overlap-syndrome. 45/66 patients were found to be U1-snRNP-68 kDa positive (27 SLE, 18 MCTD), 51/66 RNP-A [36,15] and 44/66 RNP-C [31,13]. 35/66 had antibodies against Sm-BB' (30 SLE, 5 MCTD), 10/66 against Sm-D (all SLE). 28/66 were found to be U1-snRNP-68 kDa and Sm-BB' positive (23 SLE, 5 MCTD), while 8/66 where U1-snRNP-68 kDa and Sm-D positive (all SLE). The combination of antibodies against 68 kDa, Aand C was exclusively observed in 6 MCTD patients, while the combination against 68 kDa, A, C, Sm-BB' and Sm-D was restricted to 8 patients with SLE. The antibody combination to 68 kDa, A, C and Sm-BB' was also found in 11/20 SLE patients with major organ involvement. In SLE and MCTD, determination of subsets of antibodies against Ul-snRNP-68 kDa and Sm-complex allows a differentiation of patient subgroups with more definite diagnoses and potential prognostic impact.  相似文献   

19.
The properdin-binding site in the human third complement component (C3) was mapped by using isolated C3b, C3c, alpha- and beta-chains of C3 and C3 polypeptide fragments and an enzyme-linked-immunosorbent-assay procedure. The C3 chains and the polypeptide fragments were purified to homogeneity by preparative sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. The alpha-chain polypeptides included a 68 kDa and a 43 kDa polypeptide, which were generated by cleavage of C3b with factors I and H, and a 40 kDa, 33 kDa (C3d) and 27 kDa polypeptide, which were generated by cleavage of C3b with porcine elastase. It was shown that properdin binds to C3b, C3c, alpha-chain, and to the 43 kDa (factor-I + H-derived), as well as to 40 kDa (elastase-derived) alpha-chain fragment, but not to the beta-chain 68 kDa, 33 kDa (C3d) and 27 kDa alpha-chain fragments. Thus the binding site for properdin resides on the 40-43 kDa C-terminal alpha-chain fragment of C3.  相似文献   

20.
The binary toxin (Bin) from Bacillus sphaericus crystals specifically binds to soluble midgut brush border membrane proteins from Culex pipiens larvae. A single 60 kDa midgut membrane protein is identified as the binding protein. This protein is anchored in the mosquito midgut membrane via a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor, and is partially released by phosphatidylinositol specific-phospholipase C (PI-PLC). Fractionation of soluble proteins by anion exchange chromatography indicates that the binding protein does not co-elute with leucine aminopeptidase activity. After partial purification, the sequences of internal amino acid fragments of the 60 kDa protein were determined. The peptide sequences were compared with data in GenBank, and showed a very high degree of similarity with enzymes belonging to the alpha-amylase family. Further enzymatic investigation showed that the receptor of the Bin toxin in C. pipiens larval midgut may be an alpha-glucosidase.  相似文献   

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