排序方式: 共有193条查询结果,搜索用时 31 毫秒
91.
Ying Wang Rebekka Gehringer Shaaban A. Mousa Dagmar Hackel Alexander Brack Heike L. Rittner 《PloS one》2014,9(4)
Acupuncture is widely used for pain treatment in patients with osteoarthritis or low back pain, but molecular mechanisms remain largely enigmatic. In the early phase of inflammation neutrophilic chemokines direct opioid-containing neutrophils in the inflamed tissue and stimulate opioid peptide release and antinociception. In this study the molecular pathway and neuroimmune connections in complete Freund''s adjuvant (CFA)-induced hind paw inflammation and electroacupuncture for peripheral pain control were analyzed. Free moving Wistar rats with hind paw inflammation were treated twice with electroacupuncture at GB30 (Huan Tiao - gall bladder meridian) (day 0 and 1) and analyzed for mechanical and thermal nociceptive thresholds. The cytokine profiles as well as the expression of opioid peptides were quantified in the inflamed paw. Electroacupuncture elicited long-term antinociception blocked by local injection of anti-opioid peptide antibodies (beta-endorphin, met-enkephalin, dynorphin A). The treatment altered the cytokine profile towards an anti-inflammatory pattern but augmented interferon (IFN)-gamma and the chemokine CXCL10 (IP-10: interferon gamma-inducible protein) protein and mRNA expression with concomitant increased numbers of opioid peptide-containing CXCR3+ macrophages. In rats with CFA hind paw inflammation without acupuncture repeated injection of CXCL10 triggered opioid-mediated antinociception and increase opioid-containing macrophages. Conversely, neutralization of CXCL10 time-dependently decreased electroacupuncture-induced antinociception and the number of infiltrating opioid peptide-expressing CXCR3+ macrophages. In summary, we describe a novel function of the chemokine CXCL10 - as a regulator for an increase of opioid-containing macrophages and antinociceptive mediator in inflammatory pain and as a key chemokine regulated by electroacupuncture. 相似文献
92.
Sniegowski JA Lappe JW Patel HN Huffman HA Wachter RM 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2005,280(28):26248-26255
In green fluorescent protein (GFP), chromophore biosynthesis is initiated by a spontaneous main-chain condensation reaction. Nucleophilic addition of the Gly67 amide nitrogen to the Ser65 carbonyl carbon is catalyzed by the protein fold and leads to a heterocyclic intermediate. To investigate this mechanism, we substituted the highly conserved residues Arg96 and Glu222 in enhanced GFP (EGFP). In the R96M variant, the rate of chromophore formation is greatly reduced (time constant = 7.5 x 10(3) h, pH 7) and exhibits pH dependence. In the E222Q variant, the rate is also attenuated at physiological pH (32 h, pH 7) but is accelerated severalfold beyond that of EGFP at pH 9-10. In contrast, EGFP maturation is pH-independent and proceeds with a time constant of 1 h (pH 7-10). Mass spectrometric results for R96M and E222Q indicate accumulation of the pre-cyclization state, consistent with rate-limiting backbone condensation. The pH-rate profile implies that the Glu222 carboxylate titrates with an apparent pK(a) of 6.5 in R96M and that the Gly67 amide nitrogen titrates with an apparent pK(a) of 9.2 in E222Q. These data suggest a model for GFP chromophore synthesis in which the carboxylate of Glu222 plays the role of a general base, facilitating proton abstraction from the Gly67 amide nitrogen or the Tyr66 alpha-carbon. Arg96 fulfills the role of an electrophile by lowering the respective pK values and stabilizing the alpha-enolate. Modulating the base strength of the proton-abstracting group may aid in the design of fast-maturing GFPs with improved characteristics for real-time monitoring of cellular events. 相似文献
93.
Tumoricidal potential of native blood dendritic cells: direct tumor cell killing and activation of NK cell-mediated cytotoxicity 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Schmitz M Zhao S Deuse Y Schäkel K Wehner R Wöhner H Hölig K Wienforth F Kiessling A Bornhäuser M Temme A Rieger MA Weigle B Bachmann M Rieber EP 《Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)》2005,174(7):4127-4134
Dendritic cells (DCs) are characterized by their unique capacity for primary T cell activation, providing the opportunity for DC-based cancer vaccination protocols. Novel findings reveal that besides their role as potent inducers of tumor-specific T cells, human DCs display additional antitumor effects. Most of these data were obtained with monocyte-derived DCs, whereas studies investigating native blood DCs are limited. In the present study, we analyze the tumoricidal capacity of M-DC8(+) DCs, which represent a major subpopulation of human blood DCs. We demonstrate that IFN-gamma-stimulated M-DC8(+) DCs lyse different tumor cell lines but not normal cells. In addition, we show that tumor cells markedly enhance the production of TNF-alpha by M-DC8(+) DCs via cell-to-cell contact and that this molecule essentially contributes to the killing activity of M-DC8(+) DCs. Furthermore, we illustrate the ability of M-DC8(+) DCs to promote proliferation, IFN-gamma production, and tumor-directed cytotoxicity of NK cells. The M-DC8(+) DC-mediated enhancement of the tumoricidal potential of NK cells is mainly dependent on cell-to-cell contact. These results reveal that, in addition to their crucial role in activating tumor-specific T cells, blood DCs exhibit direct tumor cell killing and enhance the tumoricidal activity of NK cells. These findings point to the pivotal role of DCs in triggering innate and adaptive immune responses against tumors. 相似文献
94.
Shedding light on ADAM metalloproteinases 总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22
Huovila AP Turner AJ Pelto-Huikko M Kärkkäinen I Ortiz RM 《Trends in biochemical sciences》2005,30(7):413-422
ADAM metalloproteinase disintegrins have emerged as the major proteinase family that mediates ectodomain shedding, the proteolytic release of extracellular domains from their membrane-bound precursors. Recent gene-manipulation studies have established the role of ADAM-mediated shedding in mammalian physiology and, in addition, raised the issue of functional redundancy among ADAM sheddases. ADAM sheddases activate, for example, growth factors and cytokines, thus regulating signalling pathways that are important in development and pathological processes such as cancer. The recent studies have also begun to elucidate the substrate specificity and the mechanisms that control ADAM-mediated shedding events that regulate, for example, growth-factor and Notch signalling, and the processing of the amyloid precursor protein. 相似文献
95.
Lisa Rein-Fischboeck Elisabeth M. Haberl Rebekka Pohl Verena Schmid Susanne Feder Sabrina Krautbauer Gerhard Liebisch Christa Buechler 《Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)/Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids》2018,1863(5):526-537
Adipose tissue dysfunction contributes to the pathogenesis of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). The adapter protein alpha-syntrophin (SNTA) is expressed in adipocytes. Knock-down of SNTA increases preadipocyte proliferation and formation of small lipid droplets, which are both characteristics of healthy adipose tissue. To elucidate a potential protective role of SNTA in NASH, SNTA null mice were fed a methionine-choline-deficient (MCD) diet or an atherogenic diet which are widely used as preclinical NASH models. MCD diet mediated loss of fat mass was largely improved in SNTA?/? mice compared to the respective wild type animals. Hepatic lipids were mostly unchanged while the oxidative stress marker malondialdehyde was only induced in the wild type mice. The expression of inflammatory markers and macrophage immigration into the liver were reduced in SNTA?/? animals. This protective function of SNTA loss was absent in atherogenic diet induced NASH. Here, hepatic expression of inflammatory and fibrotic genes was similar in both genotypes though mutant mice gained less body fat during feeding. Hepatic cholesterol and ceramide were strongly induced in both strains upon feeding the atherogenic diet, while hepatic sphingomyelin, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylethanolamine levels were suppressed.SNTA deficient mice are protected from fat loss and NASH in the experimental MCD model. NASH induced by an atherogenic diet is not influenced by loss of SNTA. The present study suggests the use of different experimental NASH models to study the pathophysiological role of proteins like SNTA in NASH. 相似文献
96.
Patrick T. Schwing Isabel C. Romero Rebekka A. Larson Bryan J. O'Malley Erika E. Fridrik Ethan A. Goddard Gregg R. Brooks David W. Hastings Brad E. Rosenheim David J. Hollander Guy Grant Jim Mulhollan 《Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE》2016,(114)
Aquatic sediment core subsampling is commonly performed at cm or half-cm resolution. Depending on the sedimentation rate and depositional environment, this resolution provides records at the annual to decadal scale, at best. An extrusion method, using a calibrated, threaded-rod is presented here, which allows for millimeter-scale subsampling of aquatic sediment cores of varying diameters. Millimeter scale subsampling allows for sub-annual to monthly analysis of the sedimentary record, an order of magnitude higher than typical sampling schemes. The extruder consists of a 2 m aluminum frame and base, two core tube clamps, a threaded-rod, and a 1 m piston. The sediment core is placed above the piston and clamped to the frame. An acrylic sampling collar is affixed to the upper 5 cm of the core tube and provides a platform from which to extract sub-samples. The piston is rotated around the threaded-rod at calibrated intervals and gently pushes the sediment out the top of the core tube. The sediment is then isolated into the sampling collar and placed into an appropriate sampling vessel (e.g., jar or bag). This method also preserves the unconsolidated samples (i.e., high pore water content) at the surface, providing a consistent sampling volume. This mm scale extrusion method was applied to cores collected in the northern Gulf of Mexico following the Deepwater Horizon submarine oil release. Evidence suggests that it is necessary to sample at the mm scale to fully characterize events that occur on the monthly time-scale for continental slope sediments. 相似文献
97.
The mechanism of chromophore biosynthesis in green fluorescent protein (GFP) is triggered by a spontaneous main chain cyclization reaction of residues 65-67. Here, we demonstrate that the initially colorless Y66L variant, designed to trap chromophore precursor states, is oxidatively modified to generate yellow chromophores that absorb at 412 and 374 nm. High- and low-pH crystal structures determined to 2.0 and 1.5 A resolution, respectively, are consistent with pi-orbital conjugation of a planar Leu66-derived adduct with the imidazolinone ring, which is approximately 90 and 100% dehydrated, respectively. Time-, base-, and oxygen-dependent optical properties suggest that the yellow chromophores are generated from a 338 nm-absorbing intermediate, interpreted to be the Y66L analogue of the wild-type GFP chromophore. Generation of this species is catalyzed by a general base such as formate, and proceeds via a cyclization-oxidation-dehydration mechanism. The data suggest that a hydration-dehydration equilibrium exists in the cyclic form of the peptide, and that dehydration is favored upon extensive conjugation with the modified side chain. We conclude that the mechanism of GFP chromophore biosynthesis is not driven by the aromatic character of residue 66. In the low-pH X-ray structure, a highly unusual cross-link is observed between His148 and the oxidized Leu66 side chain, suggesting a conjugate addition reaction of the imidazole nitrogen to the highly electrophilic diene group of the yellow chromophore. The reactivity described here further expands the chemical diversity observed in the active site of GFP-like proteins, and may allow for covalent attachment of functional groups to the protein scaffold for catalytic purposes. 相似文献
98.
Rebekka Karlowitz Megan L. Stanifer Jens Roedig Geoffroy Andrieux Denisa Bojkova Marco Bechtel Sonja Smith Lisa Kowald Ralf Schubert Melanie Boerries Jindrich Cinatl Jr. Steeve Boulant Sjoerd J. L. van Wijk 《Cell death & disease》2022,13(8)
Pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) and interferons (IFNs) serve as essential antiviral defense against SARS-CoV-2, the causative agent of the COVID-19 pandemic. Type III IFNs (IFN-λ) exhibit cell-type specific and long-lasting functions in auto-inflammation, tumorigenesis, and antiviral defense. Here, we identify the deubiquitinating enzyme USP22 as central regulator of basal IFN-λ secretion and SARS-CoV-2 infections in human intestinal epithelial cells (hIECs). USP22-deficient hIECs strongly upregulate genes involved in IFN signaling and viral defense, including numerous IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs), with increased secretion of IFN-λ and enhanced STAT1 signaling, even in the absence of exogenous IFNs or viral infection. Interestingly, USP22 controls basal and 2′3′-cGAMP-induced STING activation and loss of STING reversed STAT activation and ISG and IFN-λ expression. Intriguingly, USP22-deficient hIECs are protected against SARS-CoV-2 infection, viral replication, and the formation of de novo infectious particles, in a STING-dependent manner. These findings reveal USP22 as central host regulator of STING and type III IFN signaling, with important implications for SARS-CoV-2 infection and antiviral defense.Subject terms: Cell signalling, Inflammation 相似文献
99.
Sun L Chen Y Rajendran C Mueller U Panjikar S Wang M Mindnich R Rosenthal C Penning TM Stöckigt J 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2012,287(14):11213-11221
Perakine reductase (PR) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of the aldehyde perakine to yield the alcohol raucaffrinoline in the biosynthetic pathway of ajmaline in Rauvolfia, a key step in indole alkaloid biosynthesis. Sequence alignment shows that PR is the founder of the new AKR13D subfamily and is designated AKR13D1. The x-ray structure of methylated His(6)-PR was solved to 2.31 ?. However, the active site of PR was blocked by the connected parts of the neighbor symmetric molecule in the crystal. To break the interactions and obtain the enzyme-ligand complexes, the A213W mutant was generated. The atomic structure of His(6)-PR-A213W complex with NADPH was determined at 1.77 ?. Overall, PR folds in an unusual α(8)/β(6) barrel that has not been observed in any other AKR protein to date. NADPH binds in an extended pocket, but the nicotinamide riboside moiety is disordered. Upon NADPH binding, dramatic conformational changes and movements were observed: two additional β-strands in the C terminus become ordered to form one α-helix, and a movement of up to 24 ? occurs. This conformational change creates a large space that allows the binding of substrates of variable size for PR and enhances the enzyme activity; as a result cooperative kinetics are observed as NADPH is varied. As the founding member of the new AKR13D subfamily, PR also provides a structural template and model of cofactor binding for the AKR13 family. 相似文献
100.
Gregor Langen Sabrina von Einem Aline Koch Jafargholi Imani Subhash B. Pai Murli Manohar Katrin Ehlers Hyong Woo Choi Martina Claar Rebekka Schmidt Hyung-Gon Mang Yogendra Bordiya Hong-Gu Kang Daniel F. Klessig Karl-Heinz Kogel 《Plant physiology》2014,164(2):866-878
MORC1 and MORC2, two of the seven members of the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) Compromised Recognition of Turnip Crinkle Virus1 subfamily of microrchidia Gyrase, Heat Shock Protein90, Histidine Kinase, MutL (GHKL) ATPases, were previously shown to be required in multiple layers of plant immunity. Here, we show that the barley (Hordeum vulgare) MORCs also are involved in disease resistance. Genome-wide analyses identified five MORCs that are 37% to 48% identical on the protein level to AtMORC1. Unexpectedly, and in clear contrast to Arabidopsis, RNA interference-mediated knockdown of MORC in barley resulted in enhanced basal resistance and effector-triggered, powdery mildew resistance locus A12-mediated resistance against the biotrophic powdery mildew fungus (Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordei), while MORC overexpression decreased resistance. Moreover, barley knockdown mutants also showed higher resistance to Fusarium graminearum. Barley MORCs, like their Arabidopsis homologs, contain the highly conserved GHKL ATPase and S5 domains, which identify them as members of the MORC superfamily. Like AtMORC1, barley MORC1 (HvMORC1) binds DNA and has Mn2+-dependent endonuclease activities, suggesting that the contrasting function of MORC1 homologs in barley versus Arabidopsis is not due to differences in their enzyme activities. In contrast to AtMORCs, which are involved in silencing of transposons that are largely restricted to pericentromeric regions, barley MORC mutants did not show a loss-of-transposon silencing regardless of their genomic location. Reciprocal overexpression of MORC1 homologs in barley and Arabidopsis showed that AtMORC1 and HvMORC1 could not restore each other’s function. Together, these results suggest that MORC proteins function as modulators of immunity, which can act negatively (barley) or positively (Arabidopsis) dependent on the species.The evolution of a complex defense system has been the consequence of plants being constantly exposed to pathogenic microbes and pests. One of the first lines of active defense is based on a perception of pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) by pattern recognition receptors located in the plant cell membrane. The defense response to PAMP recognition is called PAMP-triggered immunity (PTI). While PTI is sufficient to stop colonization by many microbes, some microorganisms overcome this immune response by releasing effectors (formerly called virulence factors). In a coevolutionary process, some plants have evolved resistance (R) proteins for direct or indirect recognition of microbial effectors (avirulence [Avr] factors) leading to effector-triggered immunity (ETI). ETI is frequently characterized by a rapid and locally restricted programmed cell death response (also known as hypersensitive reaction [HR]), which helps to limit pathogen proliferation and disease symptoms. On the contrary, the absence of an Avr-R protein interaction results in virulence of the pathogen. In addition, ETI is counteracted by some microbes by the release of additional virulence factors that block or overcome effector recognition and ensure pathogenicity. The mutual evolution of host and microbe leading to elicitation or suppression of ETI is summarized by the “zigzag” model proposed by Jones and Dangl (2006). PTI and ETI are associated with activation of various defense responses both at infection sites and in distal tissue, including production and accumulation of reactive oxygen species, salicylic acid, and pathogenesis-related proteins. Systemic activation of such responses, triggered in the uninfected tissue, leads to long-lasting, broad-based resistance to subsequent pathogen infections, termed systemic acquired resistance.A genetic screen in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) searching for mutants with compromised resistance mediated by the R protein HR to Turnip Crinkle Virus (HRT) against Turnip Crinkle Virus (TCV) led to the discovery of the Compromised Recognition of TCV1 (CRT1) subfamily of the microrchidia (MORC) subclade of the GHKL (for Gyrase, Heat Shock Protein90, Histidine Kinase, MutL) ATPase superfamily (Watson et al., 1998; Iyer et al., 2008; Kang et al., 2008). Genome analysis of Arabidopsis revealed that MORC1 (formerly named CRT1 in Kang et al., 2008, 2010, 2012) has two close (>70% sequence similarity on amino acid [aa] level) and four distant (<50% aa similarity) homologs. A double knockout mutant, morc1-2 morc2-1, lacking MORC1 and its closest homolog MORC2 also displayed compromised ETI to avirulent Pseudomonas syringae, suppressed basal resistance, systemic acquired resistance, and/or PTI to TCV and virulent P. syringae and compromised nonhost resistance to Phytophthora infestans (Kang et al., 2012). Arabidopsis MORC1 physically interacts with at least eleven R proteins belonging to three different structural classes (Martin et al., 2003), including HRT, the R protein involved in recognition of TCV. This interaction is a dynamic process, as MORC1 bound inactive R proteins, while little or no interaction was observed when the R proteins were activated (Kang et al., 2010). Taken together, these results argued that MORC1 protein family members in Arabidopsis are key components in multiple layers of resistance against a variety of pathogens. Recently, it was shown that a small fraction of AtMORC1 translocates to the plant nucleus after ETI and PTI activation (Kang et al., 2012). Because Arabidopsis MORC1 possesses DNA/RNA-binding capacity and endonuclease activity in vitro, these findings suggest a potential role in DNA recombination and repair (Kang et al., 2012). In addition, three recent independent studies identified Arabidopsis MORC1 and its homolog MORC6 (also named Defective in Meristem Silencing11) as novel factors involved in gene silencing and/or chromatin superstructure remodeling in response to epigenetic signals (Lorković et al., 2012; Moissiard et al., 2012; Brabbs et al., 2013).Given that the CRT1 subfamily of MORC ATPases is involved in multiple layers of disease resistance against various pathogens, these genes may have relevance for agronomic applications. To assess whether MORCs are involved in crop plant resistance and thus could be exploited in breeding strategies, MORC1 homologous genes were identified in the model cereal crop barley (Hordeum vulgare). We show here that all five barley MORCs, discovered in the not yet fully annotated barley genome, are involved in resistance to agronomically important diseases. Unexpectedly, however, and in clear contrast to Arabidopsis, barley plants silenced for MORC genes were more resistant, while overexpression compromised resistance to infections by both biotrophic and necrotrophic fungal pathogens. Moreover, reciprocal overexpression in Arabidopsis and barley showed that AtMORC1 and HvMORC1 homologs are not functionally interchangeable. 相似文献