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51.
52.
A 15-residue peptide dimer G15 derived from the cell lytic protein granulysin has been shown to exert potent activity against microbes, including E. coli, but not against human Jurkat cells [Z. Wang, E. Choice, A. Kaspar, D. Hanson, S. Okada, S.C. Lyu, A.M. Krensky, C. Clayberger, Bactericidal and tumoricidal activities of synthetic peptides derived from granulysin. J. Immunol. 165 (2000) 1486-1490]. We investigated the target membrane selectivity of G15 using fluorescence, circular dichroism and 31P NMR methods. The ANS uptake assay shows that the extent of E. coli outer membrane disruption depends on G15 concentration. 31P NMR spectra obtained from E. coli total lipid bilayers incorporated with G15 show disruption of lipid bilayers. Fluorescence binding studies on the interaction of G15 with synthetic liposomes formed of E. coli lipids suggest a tight binding of the peptide at the membrane interface. The peptide also binds to negatively charged POPC/POPG (3:1) lipid vesicles but fails to insert deep into the membrane interior. These results are supported by the peptide-induced changes in the measured isotropic chemical shift and T1 values of POPG in 3:1 POPC:POPG multilamellar vesicles while neither a non-lamellar phase nor a fragmentation of bilayers was observed from NMR studies. The circular dichroism studies reveal that the peptide exists as a random coil in solution but folds into a less ordered conformation upon binding to POPC/POPG (3:1) vesicles. However, G15 does not bind to lipid vesicles made of POPC/POPG/Chl (9:1:1) mixture, mimicking tumor cell membrane. These results explain the susceptibility of E. coli and the resistance of human Jurkat cells to G15, and may have implications in designing membrane-selective therapeutic agents.  相似文献   
53.
Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections are associated with persistent immune killing of infected hepatocytes. Hepatocytes constitute a largely self-renewing population. Thus, immune killing may exert selective pressure on the population, leading it to evolve in order to survive. A gradual course of hepatocyte evolution toward an HBV-resistant state is suggested by the substantial decline in the fraction of infected hepatocytes that occurs during the course of chronic infections. Consistent with hepatocyte evolution, clones of >1,000 hepatocytes develop postinfection in the noncirrhotic livers of chimpanzees chronically infected with HBV and of woodchucks infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (W. S. Mason, A. R. Jilbert, and J. Summers, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 102:1139-1144, 2005; W. S. Mason et al., J. Virol. 83:8396-8408, 2009). The present study was carried out to determine (i) if extensive clonal expansion of hepatocytes also occurred in human HBV carriers, particularly in the noncirrhotic liver, and (ii) if clonal expansion included normal-appearing hepatocytes, not just hepatocytes that appear premalignant. Host DNA extracted from fragments of noncancerous liver, collected during surgical resection of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), was analyzed by inverse PCR for randomly integrated HBV DNA as a marker of expanding hepatocyte lineages. This analysis detected extensive clonal expansion of hepatocytes, as previously found in chronically infected chimpanzees and woodchucks. Tissue sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), and DNA was extracted from the adjacent section for inverse PCR to detect integrated HBV DNA. This analysis revealed that clonal expansion can occur among normal-appearing human hepatocytes.Transient hepatitis B virus (HBV) infections, which generally last <6 months, do not cause cirrhosis and cause only minor increases in the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) (3, 46). Chronic infections, typically lifelong, can cause cirrhosis and HCC (3). Of the ∼350 million HBV carriers now alive, ca. 60 million will die prematurely of cirrhosis and/or HCC. Cirrhosis, which usually develops late in infection, is a significant risk factor for HCC. Early reports stated that most HCCs occur on a background of cirrhosis. However, later studies suggested that as many as 50% of HCCs may occur in noncirrhotic liver (4), that is, in patients in whom the progression of liver disease still appears rather mild. Thus, liver damage that appears severe by histologic examination is not a prerequisite for HCC.Interestingly, during chronic HBV infections there is, in the face of persistent viremia, a decline over time in the fraction of infected hepatocytes, from 100% to as little as a few percent (5, 12-14, 16, 17, 22, 23, 27, 34, 37, 38). Along with HCC, this is perhaps the most surprising and unexplained outcome of chronic infection. The timing of this decline has not been systematically studied, but it is presumably gradual, occurring over years or decades, and dependent on persistent, albeit low-level, killing of infected hepatocytes by antiviral cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) (20). It is believed that the liver is largely a closed, self-renewing population. Such a population might be expected to evolve under any strong or persistent selective pressure. In HBV-infected patients, the earliest and most persistent selective pressure is immune killing of infected hepatocytes, which should initially constitute the entire hepatocyte population. Persistent killing of HBV-infected hepatocytes could lead to clonal expansion of mutant or epigenetically altered hepatocytes that had lost the ability to support infection and that were not, therefore, targeted by antiviral CTLs.Such a selective pressure may explain why foci of altered hepatocytes (FAH) and HCC are typically virus negative (1, 6, 11, 26, 29, 31, 35, 40, 41, 44). Normal or preneoplastic hepatocytes (e.g., in FAH) that have evaded the host immune response should undergo clonal expansion, because their death rate is lower than that of surrounding hepatocytes, even if they do not have a higher growth rate. Indeed, clonal expansion of hepatocytes has been detected, in the absence of cirrhosis, in woodchucks chronically infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) (19) and in chimpanzees chronically infected with HBV (21). The presence of discrete foci of normal-appearing but virus-negative hepatocytes in chronically infected woodchuck livers (39) suggested, but did not prove, that normal-appearing hepatocytes that had lost the ability to support virus replication might clonally expand.The purpose of the present study was, therefore, to determine if normal-appearing hepatocytes undergo clonal expansion. To address this issue, we focused on noncirrhotic livers, because hepatocyte appearance and organization in many cirrhotic nodules are often considered to indicate premalignancy (7, 24, 25, 44), and this, together with the cellular environment in the cirrhotic liver, may explain why as many as 50% of cirrhotic nodules have been found to be made up of clonally expanded hepatocytes (2, 18, 24, 25, 28, 44). In older HBV patients, cirrhosis, the result of cumulative scarring due to ongoing tissue injury, presumably produces an evolutionary pressure on the hepatocyte population due to restricted blood flow and altered hepatic architecture.Clonal expansion was detected by assaying for integrated HBV DNA by inverse PCR (19, 21). Because integration occurs at random sites in host DNA, each integration event provides a unique genetic marker for the cell in which it occurred, and for any daughter cells. Thus, the clonal expansion of these tagged hepatocytes can be measured by determining how many times a given virus-cell DNA junction is repeated in a liver fragment. Analysis of fragments of nontumorous liver from noncirrhotic HCC patients revealed that at least 1% of hepatocytes are present as clones of >1,000 cells. Examination of 5-μm-thick sections of paraffin-embedded livers from the same patients revealed that clonally expanded hepatocytes were present in liver sections lacking preneoplastic lesions or changes. Therefore, normal-appearing hepatocytes must have undergone clonal expansion. Although clonal expansion was detected by analysis of integrated HBV DNA, the expansion did not appear to be due to the site of integration of the viral DNA into host DNA.These results are consistent with the hypothesis that immune selection and the later emergence of liver cirrhosis, with altered lobular organization and restricted blood flow, may constitute the two major selective pressures on the hepatocyte population that culminate in hepatocellular carcinoma. More-direct proof of the role, if any, of immune selection in hepatocyte evolution and HCC will require, first of all, an assay with a greater ability to detect clonally expanded hepatocytes. The present approach is limited by a number of factors, including a need for integration near a particular restriction endonuclease cleavage site in host DNA and for conservation of particular viral sequences so that the integrated DNA can be amplified using the PCR primers chosen. These issues may explain why the fraction of clonally expanded hepatocytes reported here is much less than that suggested by histologic data showing that more than 50% of hepatocytes appear negative for virus replication in long-term carriers. Further dissection of this issue will also require localization and determination of the virologic status of hepatocyte clones present in tissue sections.  相似文献   
54.
We have characterized the effects of p53 on several biochemical activities of simian virus 40 (SV40) large tumor (T) antigen. While p53 induced a strong inhibition of the T antigen DNA helicase activity, surprisingly, its RNA helicase activity was stimulated. This supports the liklihood that the DNA and RNA helicase activities of T antigen reflect discrete functions. p53 did not significantly affect the ATP-dependent conversion of T antigen monomers to hexamers. However, the ability of these hexamers to assemble on a DNA fragment containing the viral origin was impaired by p53. Thus, these results suggest that p53 inhibits the function but not the formation of T antigen multimers. This conclusion was further supported by the observation that the addition of a purified p53:T antigen complex was as inhihitory as free p53 to the DNA helicase activity of free T antigen. Thus our data indicates that the targets of p53 inhibition are the functional units of T antigen, namely the hexamers.  相似文献   
55.
Summary The relative hydraulic conductivities of major and minor longitudinal veins, and the apoplastic permeability of the bundle sheaths surrounding all longitudinal and transverse veins were investigated in representatives of the C3, C4/NAD-ME, C4/NAD-ME/PCK intermediate, C4/PCK and C4/NADP-ME photosynthetic types. Using the Hagen-Poiseuille equation and measurements of tracheary element diameters, the number of elements in each vein type and the numbers of each vein type, we calculated that 87–99% of the water flow in a longitudinal direction would be expected to occur in the major veins. The permeability of the mestome sheaths and parenchymatous bundle sheaths surrounding the veins was tested using the negatively-charged, fluorescent dye, trisodium 3-hydroxy-5,8,10-pyrenetrisulfonate (PTS). This dye proved nontoxic to plant tissue at a concentration of 0.5%, according to a deplasmolysis test with onion epidermal strips. The PTS concentration achieved in the tested grass leaves was about 0.035%, well below the toxic limit. When a solution of PTS was fed to the leaves by means of a basal cut, the dye moved into the veins of all orders. From there, it moved outward into the surrounding tissues, indicating that the sheaths surrounding the veins of all orders in all species tested were permeable. Therefore, contrary to previous predictions based on structural observations and some tracer studies, bundle sheaths with suberized cell walls do not function as endodermal layers.  相似文献   
56.
Synopsis Two groups of coho salmon,Oncorhynchus kisutch, were raised under identical regimes to test the hypothesis that the group from a stream with lower and less variable temperatures would have a lower and less variable preferred temperature than would the group from a stream with warmer and more variable temperatures. The preferred (modal) temperatures in an electronic shuttlebox of coho salmon young from a relatively cool, groundwater-fed stream were slightly lower and less variable than those of young from a warmer and more heterothermal stream (mean = 9.6° C, range: 6–16° C vs. mean = 11.6° C, range: 7–21° C). However, there was a great deal of variation within and among individual fish. While some genetic variation in thermal preference may exist, the species seems best characterized as tolerant of relatively large temperature fluctuations.  相似文献   
57.
Most signal transduction pathways in humans are regulated by protein kinases through phosphorylation of their protein substrates. Typical eukaryotic protein kinases are of two major types: those that phosphorylate‐specific sequences containing tyrosine (~90 kinases) and those that phosphorylate either serine or threonine (~395 kinases). The highly conserved catalytic domain of protein kinases comprises a smaller N lobe and a larger C lobe separated by a cleft region lined by the activation loop. Prior studies find that protein tyrosine kinases recognize peptide substrates by binding the polypeptide chain along the C‐lobe on one side of the activation loop, while serine/threonine kinases bind their substrates in the cleft and on the side of the activation loop opposite to that of the tyrosine kinases. Substrate binding structural studies have been limited to four families of the tyrosine kinase group, and did not include Src tyrosine kinases. We examined peptide‐substrate binding to Src using paramagnetic‐relaxation‐enhancement NMR combined with molecular dynamics simulations. The results suggest Src tyrosine kinase can bind substrate positioning residues C‐terminal to the phosphoacceptor residue in an orientation similar to serine/threonine kinases, and unlike other tyrosine kinases. Mutagenesis corroborates this new perspective on tyrosine kinase substrate recognition. Rather than an evolutionary split between tyrosine and serine/threonine kinases, a change in substrate recognition may have occurred within the TK group of the human kinome. Protein tyrosine kinases have long been therapeutic targets, but many marketed drugs have deleterious off‐target effects. More accurate knowledge of substrate interactions of tyrosine kinases has the potential for improving drug selectivity.  相似文献   
58.
59.
Licorice (Glycyrrhiza uralensis) is a medicinal plant that contains glycyrrhizin (GL), which has various pharmacological activities. Because licorice is a legume, it can establish a symbiotic relationship with nitrogen-fixing rhizobial bacteria. However, the effect of this symbiosis on GL production is unknown. Rhizobia were isolated from root nodules of Glycyrrhiza glabra, and a rhizobium that can form root nodules in G. uralensis was selected. Whole-genome analysis revealed a single circular chromosome of 6.7 Mbp. This rhizobium was classified as Mesorhizobium by phylogenetic analysis and was designated Mesorhizobium sp. J8. When G. uralensis plants grown from cuttings were inoculated with J8, root nodules formed. Shoot biomass and SPAD values of inoculated plants were significantly higher than those of uninoculated controls, and the GL content of the roots was 3.2 times that of controls. Because uninoculated plants from cuttings showed slight nodule formation, we grew plants from seeds in plant boxes filled with sterilized vermiculite, inoculated half of the seedlings with J8, and grew them with or without 100 µM KNO3. The SPAD values of inoculated plants were significantly higher than those of uninoculated plants. Furthermore, the expression level of the CYP88D6 gene, which is a marker of GL synthesis, was 2.5 times higher than in inoculated plants. These results indicate that rhizobial symbiosis promotes both biomass and GL production in G. uralensis.  相似文献   
60.
Why the fruits are retained on dead upright herbaceous plants and how this relates to seed dispersal and timing of germination remain unclear. Stems of the annual Euclidium syriacum (Brassicaceae) with infructescences bearing indehiscent silicles remain upright after plants die in the spring. We investigated the effect of anatomical structures of stem and pedicle and delayed silicle dehiscence on seed dispersal phenology of this species. For comparison, sections were made of the stem of the annual Goldbachia laevigata (Brassicaceae), which has stems that fall over when plants die. Compared to G. laevigata, the stem of E. syriacum has vascular bundles that are closer together, a thicker xylem and phloem, more fibers, a thicker perimedullary zone and a smaller pith diameter:stem diameter ratio. The thickened pedicle did not form an abcission layer. By late October, 5–20% of seeds were dispersed, depending on the position of infructescences on the plant. Snow covered the plants in late autumn and when it melted in mid-April many of the plants had fallen over, with a high number of seeds germinating in attached silicles; seedlings became rooted in soil. After snowmelt, 14–15% of the silicles on the remaining upright plants contained seeds; all seeds were dispersed by early July. The anatomical structures of the stem and pedicle plus the delayed dehiscence of silicles explain the presence of an aerial seed bank in E. syriacum and delay of germination of many of seeds until spring. Further, pieces of upright plants are broken off and dispersed by wind, which helps to explain the wide distribution of E. syriacum in the cold desert.  相似文献   
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