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141.
A series of ethacrynic acid analogues, lacking the α,β-unsaturated carbonyl unit, was synthesized and subsequently evaluated for their ability to inhibit the migration of human breast cancer cells, MCF-7/AZ. Several of the analogues were already active in the low micromolar range, whereas ethacrynic acid itself shows no potential to inhibit the migration of these cancer cells. Preliminary studies show that the presence of one or more methoxy groups at the phenyl ring of ethacrynic acid is important in order for the ethacrynic acid analogues to demonstrate an inhibitory effect on the migration.  相似文献   
142.
143.
Vegetative insecticidal protein (Vip3A) is synthesized as an extracellular insecticidal toxin by certain strains of Bacillus thuringiensis. Vip3A is active against several lepidopteran pests of crops. Polyphagous pest, Spodoptera frugiperda, and its cell line Sf21 are sensitive for lyses to Vip3A. Screening of cDNA library prepared from Sf21 cells through yeast two-hybrid system with Vip3A as bait identified ribosomal protein S2 as a toxicity-mediating interacting partner protein. The Vip3A-ribosomal-S2 protein interaction was validated by in vitro pulldown assays and by RNA interference-induced knockdown experiments. Knockdown of expression of S2 protein in Sf21 cells resulted in reduced toxicity of the Vip3A protein. These observations were further extended to adult fifth-instar larvae of Spodoptera litura. Knockdown of S2 expression by injecting corresponding double-stranded RNA resulted in reduced mortality of larvae to Vip3A toxin. Intracellular visualization of S2 protein and Vip3A through confocal microscopy revealed their interaction and localization in cytoplasm and surface of Sf21 cells.Insecticidal proteins produced by strains of Bacillus thuringiensis can broadly be classified into two major categories based on their site of accumulation. Category I consist of proteins that are deposited as crystals in sporangia and are referred to as insecticidal crystalline proteins (ICPs). The second category consists of recently described group of insecticidal proteins, called vegetative insecticidal proteins (8). These proteins are synthesized during the vegetative growth of Bacillus cells and are secreted into the culture medium. Irrespective of the site of accumulation of insecticidal proteins, their ingestion by susceptible insect larvae leads to disruption and lysis of epithelial tissue from the midgut, resulting in larval death (12). The mechanism of lysis of gut epithelial tissue by ICPs has been investigated in detail in several insects (16). Ingestion of ICPs triggers a sequence of biochemical cascade that involves its solubilization and subsequent activation by gut proteases. The activated toxin interacts with specific receptors located at the midgut epithelial tissue. In this sequence of events, the interaction with the receptor is the most significant event since subsequent to interaction, pore formation is initialized, and that leads to lysis of epithelial cells. The identification and characterization of receptors from various insect larvae has led to the identification of following molecules as receptor to ICPs, such as cadherinlike protein (21), glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored aminopeptidase N (APN) (1, 9, 11, 17, 19, 20), a GPI-anchored alkaline phosphatase (10, 14), and a 270-kDa glycoconjugate (see references 2, 7, 9, and 16 and references therein for an extensive list of receptors). In addition, certain glycopeptides have been identified as lysis-initiating receptor molecules. Although there is extensive information about the receptor-toxin interaction for ICPs, negligible work has been done toward the identification of receptors to vegetative insecticidal proteins. The ultrastructural changes induced at the midgut epithelial tissue, upon ingestion of ICPs or Vip3As, are common (12). Both ICPs and Vip3As interact at the epithelial layer of midgut, enlarging the affected cells due to osmotic imbalance and eventually causing lysis. In spite of inflicting nearly identical structural damage, the interacting receptor for the Vip3A is not identical (12). In fact, the receptor to Vip3As has not yet been characterized.Our group has been working on the identification, cloning, and evaluation of vegetative insecticidal proteins from strains of B. thuringiensis held in our collection. We have characterized the Vip3A (EMBL accession no. Y17158) class of protein and evaluated its toxicity profile (2, 8, 18). Vip3A is active against larvae of Spodoptera litura, among several other lepidopteran pests. In a parallel series of experiments, we identified APN as a receptor to the B. thuringiensis protein Cry1C in S. litura. The heterologously expressed APN did not interact with Vip3A, suggesting that Vip3A toxicity in this insect is not through interaction with APN (1). Our preliminary results on the toxicity of Vip3A revealed that purified insecticidal protein could lyse Sf21 cells, suggesting the presence of receptors in the insect cell line. In the present study, we identified the Vip3A interacting protein in Sf21 cells and the larvae of S. litura. The specificity of the interaction has been examined by a combination of ex vivo and in vitro assays. These assays identified ribosomal S2 protein as the interacting partner of Vip3A. The functional significance of S2-Vip3A protein interaction was examined by monitoring the reduction in Vip3A toxicity in Sf21 cells and larvae of S. litura by the RNA interference-induced knockdown of S2 protein. The results of these experiments are discussed in the context of colocalization of the S2-Vip3A protein interacting complex by confocal microscopy.  相似文献   
144.
We are interested in asparagine-linked glycans (N-glycans) of Plasmodium falciparum and Toxoplasma gondii, because their N-glycan structures have been controversial and because we hypothesize that there might be selection against N-glycans in nucleus-encoded proteins that must pass through the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) prior to threading into the apicoplast. In support of our hypothesis, we observed the following. First, in protists with apicoplasts, there is extensive secondary loss of Alg enzymes that make lipid-linked precursors to N-glycans. Theileria makes no N-glycans, and Plasmodium makes a severely truncated N-glycan precursor composed of one or two GlcNAc residues. Second, secreted proteins of Toxoplasma, which uses its own 10-sugar precursor (Glc3Man5GlcNAc2) and the host 14-sugar precursor (Glc3Man9GlcNAc2) to make N-glycans, have very few sites for N glycosylation, and there is additional selection against N-glycan sites in its apicoplast-targeted proteins. Third, while the GlcNAc-binding Griffonia simplicifolia lectin II labels ER, rhoptries, and surface of plasmodia, there is no apicoplast labeling. Similarly, the antiretroviral lectin cyanovirin-N, which binds to N-glycans of Toxoplasma, labels ER and rhoptries, but there is no apicoplast labeling. We conclude that possible selection against N-glycans in protists with apicoplasts occurs by eliminating N-glycans (Theileria), reducing their length (Plasmodium), or reducing the number of N-glycan sites (Toxoplasma). In addition, occupation of N-glycan sites is markedly reduced in apicoplast proteins versus some secretory proteins in both Plasmodium and Toxoplasma.Animals, fungi, and plants synthesize Asn-linked glycans (N-glycans) by means of a lipid-linked precursor containing 14 sugars (dolichol-PP-Glc3Man9GlcNAc2) (26). Recently we used bioinformatics and experimental methods to show that numerous protists are missing sets of glycosyltransferases (Alg1 to Alg14) and so make truncated N-glycan precursors containing 0 to 11 sugars (46). For example, Entamoeba histolytica, which causes dysentery, makes N-glycan precursors that contain seven sugars (Man5GlcNAc2) (33). Giardia lamblia, a cause of diarrhea, makes N-glycan precursors that contain just GlcNAc2 (41). N-glycan precursors may be identified by metabolic labeling with radiolabeled mannose (Entamoeba) or glucosamine (Giardia) (46). Unprocessed N-glycans of each protist may be recognized by wheat germ agglutinin 1 (WGA-1) (GlcNAc2 of Giardia) or by the antiretroviral lectin cyanovirin-N (Man5GlcNAc2 of Entamoeba) (2, 33, 41).N-glycans are transferred from lipid-linked precursors to sequons (Asn-Xaa-Ser or Asn-Xaa-Thr, where Xaa cannot be Pro) on nascent peptides by an oligosaccharyltransferase (OST) (28). For the most part, transfer of N-glycans by the OST is during translocation, although there are human and Trypanosoma OSTs that transfer N-glycans after translocation (34, 45).N-glycan-dependent quality control (QC) systems for protein folding and endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated degradation (ERAD), which are present in most eukaryotes, are missing from Giardia and a few other protists that make truncated N-glycans (5, 26, 53). There is positive Darwinian selection for sequons (sites of N-glycans) that contain Thr in secreted and membrane proteins of organisms that have N-glycan-dependent QC (12). This selection occurs for the most part by an increased probability that Asn and Thr will be present in sequons rather than elsewhere in secreted and membrane proteins. In contrast, there is no selection on sequons that contain Ser, and there is no selection on sequons in the secreted proteins of organisms that lack N-glycan-dependent QC.For numerous reasons, we are interested in the N-glycans of Plasmodium falciparum and Toxoplasma gondii, which cause severe malaria and disseminated infections, respectively.(i) There has been controversy for a long time as to whether Plasmodium makes N-glycans. While some investigators identified a 14-sugar Plasmodium N-glycan resembling that of the human host (29), others identified no N-glycans (6, 22).(ii) There is also controversy concerning whether the N-glycans of Toxoplasma, after removal of Glc by glucosidases in the ER lumen, contain either 7 sugars (Man5GlcNAc2), like Entamoeba (32, 33), or 11 sugars (Man9GlcNAc2), like the human host (16, 19, 26). If it is Man5GlcNAc2, then Toxoplasma uses the dolichol-PP-linked glycan predicted by its set of Alg enzymes (32, 46). If it is Man9GlcNAc2, then Toxoplasma uses the dolichol-PP-linked glycan of the host cell (16, 19, 26).(iii) Both Plasmodium and Toxoplasma are missing proteins involved in N-glycan-dependent QC of protein folding (5).(iv) We hypothesize that there may be negative selection against N-glycans in Plasmodium and Toxoplasma, because the N-glycans added in the ER lumen during translocation will likely interfere with threading of nucleus-encoded apicoplast proteins into a nonphotosynthetic, chloroplast-derived organelle called the apicoplast (21, 35, 37, 48, 52, 54). Nucleus-encoded apicoplast proteins have a bipartite signal at the N terminus, which targets proteins first to the lumen of the ER and second to lumen of the apicoplast. This bipartite signal has been used in transformed plasmodia where green fluorescent protein (GFP) is targeted to the apicoplast with the bipartite signal of the acyl carrier protein (ACPleader-GFP), to the secretory system with the signal sequence only (ACPsignal-GFP), and to the cytosol with the organelle-targeting transit peptide only (ACPtransit-GFP) (55). Similar constructs have been used to characterize signals that target nucleus-encoded proteins of Toxoplasma to the apicoplast (11, 25).Here we use a combination of bioinformatic, biochemical, and morphological methods to characterize the N-glycans of Plasmodium and Toxoplasma and to test our hypothesis that there is negative selection against N-glycans in protists with apicoplasts.  相似文献   
145.
A plant's morphology is both strongly influenced by local light availability and, simultaneously, strongly influences this local light availability. This reciprocal relationship is complex, but lies at the heart of understanding plant growth and competition. Here, we develop a sub-individual-based simulation model, cast at the level of interacting plant components. The model explicitly simulates growth, development and competition for light at the level of leaves, branches, etc., located in 3D space. In this way, we are able to explore the manner in which the low-level processes governing plant growth and development give rise to individual-, cohort-, and community-level phenomena. In particular, we show that individual-level trade-offs between growing up and growing out arise naturally in the model, and robustly give rise to cohort-level phenomena such as self-thinning, and community processes such as the effect of ecological disturbance on the maintenance of biodiversity. We conclude with a note on our methodology and how to interpret the results of simulation models such as this one.  相似文献   
146.
Cl(-) influx across the basolateral membrane is a limiting step in fluid production in exocrine cells and often involves functionally linked Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) (Ae) and Na(+)/H(+) (Nhe) exchange mechanisms. The dependence of this major Cl(-) uptake pathway on Na(+)/H(+) exchanger expression was examined in the parotid acinar cells of Nhe1(-/-) and Nhe2(-/-) mice, both of which exhibited impaired fluid secretion. No change in Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger activity was detected in Nhe2-deficient mice. Conversely, Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger activity increased nearly 4-fold in Nhe1-deficient mice, despite only minimal or any change in mRNA and protein levels of the anion exchanger Ae2. Acetazolamide completely blocked the increase in Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger activity in Nhe1-null mice suggesting that increased anion exchange required carbonic anhydrase activity. Indeed, the parotid glands of Nhe1(-/-) mice expressed higher levels of carbonic anhydrase 2 (Car2) polypeptide. Moreover, the enhanced Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchange activity was accompanied by an increased abundance of Car2.Ae2 complexes in the parotid plasma membranes of Nhe1(-/-) mice. Anion exchanger activity was also significantly reduced in Car2-deficient mice, consistent with an important role of a putative Car2.Ae2 HCO(3)(-) transport metabolon in parotid exocrine cell function. Increased abundance of this HCO(3)(-) transport metabolon is likely one of the multiple compensatory changes in the exocrine parotid gland of Nhe1(-/-) mice that together attenuate the severity of in vivo electrolyte and acid-base balance perturbations.  相似文献   
147.
SER virus is a type 5 parainfluenza virus that does not exhibit syncytium formation, in contrast to most other paramyxoviruses. This property has been attributed, at least in part, to the presence of an extension of the cytoplasmic tail (CT) of the SER F protein, as truncations or mutations of this region resulted in enhanced fusion. In this study we used repeated passage to select for mutant SER viruses, which were found to be fusogenic. The mutant viruses replicated at levels comparable to or higher than the wild-type SER virus and caused plaque formation, in contrast to the wild-type virus which does not form plaques. The mutants differed strikingly in their plaque sizes. The F genes of mutant viruses were cloned and sequenced and shared some mutations, including a proline-to-leucine change at position 22 and an isoleucine-to-leucine substitution at position 191; other changes that were specific to each mutant were also found. The HN proteins of mutant viruses also showed mutations spanning the length of the protein whereas the M protein showed a consistent mutation, threonine to isoleucine, at position 129. The structure of the F protein was used to identify residues involved in the mutant phenotypes in terms of their location and proximity to heptad repeat domains.  相似文献   
148.
Kalra N  Seth K  Prasad S  Singh M  Pant AB  Shukla Y 《Life sciences》2007,80(23):2137-2146
Prostate cancer (PCA), the most frequently diagnosed malignancy in men, represents an excellent candidate disease for chemoprevention studies because of its particularly long latency period, high rate of mortality and morbidity. Infusion of black tea and its polyphenolic constituents have been shown to possess antineoplastic effects in androgen dependent PCA in both in vivo and in vitro models including transgenic animals. In the present study, we report that black tea polyphenol, Theaflavins (TF)-induced apoptosis in human prostate carcinoma, LNCaP cells is mediated via modulation of two related pathways: up-regulation of p53 and down-regulation of NF-kappa B activity, causing a change in the ratio of pro-and antiapoptotic proteins leading to apoptosis. The altered expression of Bcl-2 family member proteins triggered the release of cytochrome-C and activation of initiator capsase 9 followed by activation of effector caspase 3. Furthermore, TF also affected the protein expression of mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPK) pathways. Our results demonstrated that TF treatment resulted in down-regulation of phospho-extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (Erk1/2) and phospho-p38 MAPK expressions. We conclude that TF induces apoptosis in LNCaP cells by shifting the balance between pro-and antiapoptotic proteins and down-regulation of cell survival pathways leading to apoptosis. Further extending this work, we also showed that TF induces apoptosis in androgen independent PCA cell line, PC-3 through caspases and MAPKs mediated pathways. Thus, effect of TF on PCA cell lines seems to be irrespective of their androgen status.  相似文献   
149.
Beyond finding individual genes that are involved in medical disorders, an important challenge is the integration of sets of disease genes with the complexities of basic biological processes. We examine this issue by focusing on neuronal multiprotein complexes and their components encoded on the human X chromosome. Multiprotein signaling complexes in the postsynaptic terminal of central nervous system synapses are essential for the induction of neuronal plasticity and cognitive processes in animals. The prototype complex is the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor complex/membrane-associated guanylate kinase-associated signaling complex (NRC/MASC) comprising 185 proteins and embedded within the postsynaptic density (PSD), which is a set of complexes totaling approximately 1,100 proteins. It is striking that 86% (6 of 7) of X-linked NRC/MASC genes and 49% (19 of 39) of X-chromosomal PSD genes are already known to be involved in human psychiatric disorders. Moreover, of the 69 known proteins mutated in X-linked mental retardation, 19 (28%) encode postsynaptic proteins. The high incidence of involvement in cognitive disorders is also found in mouse mutants and indicates that the complexes are functioning as integrated entities or molecular machines and that disruption of different components impairs their overall role in cognitive processes. We also noticed that NRC/MASC genes appear to be more strongly associated with mental retardation and autism spectrum disorders. We propose that systematic studies of PSD and NRC/MASC genes in mice and humans will give a high yield of novel genes important for human disease and new mechanistic insights into higher cognitive functions.  相似文献   
150.
Superantigens (SAGs) bind simultaneously to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and T-cell receptor (TCR) molecules, resulting in the massive release of inflammatory cytokines that can lead to toxic shock syndrome (TSS) and death. A major causative agent of TSS is toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1), which is unique relative to other bacterial SAGs owing to its structural divergence and its stringent TCR specificity. Here, we report the crystal structure of TSST-1 in complex with an affinity-matured variant of its wild-type TCR ligand, human T-cell receptor beta chain variable domain 2.1. From this structure and a model of the wild-type complex, we show that TSST-1 engages TCR ligands in a markedly different way than do other SAGs. We provide a structural basis for the high TCR specificity of TSST-1 and present a model of the TSST-1-dependent MHC-SAG-TCR T-cell signaling complex that is structurally and energetically unique relative to those formed by other SAGs. Our data also suggest that protein plasticity plays an exceptionally significant role in this affinity maturation process that results in more than a 3000-fold increase in affinity.  相似文献   
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