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971.
D-Serine dehydratase from Escherichia coli is a member of the β-family (fold-type II) of the pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-dependent enzymes, catalyzing the conversion of D-serine to pyruvate and ammonia. The crystal structure of monomeric D-serine dehydratase has been solved to 1.97 Å-resolution for an orthorhombic data set by molecular replacement. In addition, the structure was refined in a monoclinic data set to 1.55 Å resolution. The structure of DSD reveals a larger pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-binding domain and a smaller domain. The active site of DSD is very similar to those of the other members of the β-family. Lys118 forms the Schiff base to PLP, the cofactor phosphate group is liganded to a tetraglycine cluster Gly279-Gly283, and the 3-hydroxyl group of PLP is liganded to Asn170 and N1 to Thr424, respectively. In the closed conformation the movement of the small domain blocks the entrance to active site of DSD. The domain movement plays an important role in the formation of the substrate recognition site and the catalysis of the enzyme. Modeling of D-serine into the active site of DSD suggests that the hydroxyl group of D-serine is coordinated to the carboxyl group of Asp238. The carboxyl oxygen of D-serine is coordinated to the hydroxyl group of Ser167 and the amide group of Leu171 (O1), whereas the O2 of the carboxyl group of D-serine is hydrogen-bonded to the hydroxyl group of Ser167 and the amide group of Thr168. A catalytic mechanism very similar to that proposed for L-serine dehydratase is discussed.  相似文献   
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973.
Bis-phenylamides and bis-hydroxyindolamides of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-gadolinium (DTPA(Gd)) are paramagnetic reducing substrates of peroxidases that enable molecular imaging of peroxidase activity in vivo. Specifically, gadolinium chelates of bis-5-hydroxytryptamide-DTPA (bis-5HT-DTPA(Gd)) have been used to image localized inflammation in animal models by detecting neutrophil-derived myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity at the inflammation site. However, in other preclinical disease models, bis-5HT-DTPA(Gd) presents technical challenges due to its limited solubility in vivo. Here we report a novel MPO-sensing probe obtained by replacing the reducing substrate serotonin (5-HT) with 5-hydroxytryptophan (HTrp). Characterization of the resulting probe (bis-HTrp-DTPA(Gd)) in vitro using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and enzyme kinetic analysis showed that bis-HTrp-DTPA(Gd) (1) improves solubility in water; (2) acts as a substrate for both horseradish peroxidase and MPO enzymes; (3) induces cross-linking of proteins in the presence of MPO; (4) produces oxidation products, which bind to plasma proteins; and (5) unlike bis-5HT-DTPA(Gd), does not follow first-order reaction kinetics. In vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in mice demonstrated that bis-HTrp-DTPA(Gd) was retained for up to 5 days in MPO-containing sites and cleared faster than bis-5HT-DTPA(Gd) from MPO-negative sites. Bis-HTrp-DTPA(Gd) should offer improvements for MRI of MPO-mediated inflammation in vivo, especially in high-field MRI, which requires a higher dose of contrast agent.  相似文献   
974.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II-associated Invariant chain (Ii) is present in professional antigen presenting cells where it regulates peptide loading onto MHC class II molecules and the peptidome presented to CD4+ T lymphocytes. Because Ii prevents peptide loading in neutral subcellular compartments, we reasoned that Ii cells may present peptides not presented by Ii+ cells. Based on the hypothesis that patients are tolerant to MHC II-restricted tumor peptides presented by Ii+ cells, but will not be tolerant to novel peptides presented by Ii cells, we generated MHC II vaccines to activate cancer patients'' T cells. The vaccines are Ii tumor cells expressing syngeneic HLA-DR and the costimulatory molecule CD80. We used liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry to sequence MHC II-restricted peptides from Ii+ and Ii MCF10 human breast cancer cells transfected with HLA-DR7 or the MHC Class II transactivator CIITA to determine if Ii cells present novel peptides. Ii expression was induced in the HLA-DR7 transfectants by transfection of Ii, and inhibited in the CIITA transfectants by RNA interference. Peptides were analyzed and binding affinity predicted by artificial neural net analysis. HLA-DR7-restricted peptides from Ii and Ii+ cells do not differ in size or in subcellular location of their source proteins; however, a subset of HLA-DR7-restricted peptides of Ii cells are not presented by Ii+ cells, and are derived from source proteins not used by Ii+ cells. Peptides from Ii cells with the highest predicted HLA-DR7 binding affinity were synthesized, and activated tumor-specific HLA-DR7+ human T cells from healthy donors and breast cancer patients, demonstrating that the MS-identified peptides are bonafide tumor antigens. These results demonstrate that Ii regulates the repertoire of tumor peptides presented by MHC class II+ breast cancer cells and identify novel immunogenic MHC II-restricted peptides that are potential therapeutic reagents for cancer patients.Cancer vaccines are a promising tool for cancer treatment and prevention because of their potential for inducing tumor-specific responses in conjunction with minimal toxicity for healthy cells. Cancer vaccines are based on the concept that tumor cells synthesize multiple peptides that are potential immunogens, and that with the appropriate vaccine protocol, these peptides will activate an efficacious antitumor response in the patient. Much effort has been invested in identifying and testing tumor-encoded peptides, particularly peptides presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC)1 class I, molecules capable of activating CD8+ T-cells that directly kill tumor cells (1, 2). Fewer studies have been devoted to identifying MHC class II-restricted peptides for the activation of tumor-reactive CD4+ T-cells despite compelling evidence that Type 1 CD4+ T helper cells facilitate the optimal activation of CD8+ T-cells and the generation of immune memory, which is likely to be essential for protection from metastatic disease.Activation of CD4+ T cells requires delivery of a costimulatory signal plus an antigen-specific signal consisting of peptide bound to an MHC II molecule. Most cells do not express MHC II or costimulatory molecules, so CD4+ T cells are typically activated by professional antigen presenting cells (APC), which endocytose exogenously synthesized antigen and process and present it in the context of their own MHC II molecules. This processing and presentation process requires Invariant chain (Ii), a molecule that is coordinately synthesized with MHC II molecules and prevents the binding and presentation of APC-encoded endogenous peptides (3, 4). As a result, tumor-reactive CD4+ T cells are activated to tumor peptides generated by the antigen processing machinery of professional APC, rather than peptides generated by the tumor cells. Because of the potential discrepancy in peptide generation between professional APC and tumor cells, and the critical role of Ii in preventing the presentation of endogenous peptides, we have generated “MHC II cancer vaccines” that consist of Ii tumor cells transfected with syngeneic MHC class II and CD80 genes. We reasoned that MHC II+IiCD80+ tumor cells may present a novel repertoire of MHC II-restricted tumor peptides that are not presented by professional APC, and therefore may be highly immunogenic. Once activated, CD4+ T cells produce IFNγ and provide help to CD8+ T cells and do not need to react with native tumor cells. Therefore, the MHC II vaccines have the potential to activate CD4+ Th1 cells that facilitate antitumor immunity. In vitro (5) and in vivo (57) studies with mice support this conclusion. In vitro studies with human MHC II vaccines further demonstrate that the absence of Ii facilitates the activation of MHC II-restricted tumor-specific CD4+ type 1 T cells of HLA-DR-syngeneic healthy donors and cancer patients, and that the vaccines activate CD4+ T cells with a distinct repertoire of T cell receptors (812). A critical negative role for Ii is also supported by studies of human acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). High levels of class II-associated invariant chain peptide (CLIP), a degradation product of Ii, by leukemic blasts is associated with poor patient prognosis (13, 14), whereas down-modulation of CLIP on AML cells increases the activation of tumor-reactive human CD4+ T cells (14, 15).We have now used mass spectrometry to identify MHC II-restricted peptides from MHC II+Ii and MHC II+Ii+ human breast cancer cells to test the concept that the absence of Ii facilitates the presentation of unique immunogenic MHC II-restricted peptides. We report here that a subset of MHC II-restricted peptides from HLA-DR7+ breast cancer cells are unique to Ii cells and are derived from source proteins not used by Ii+ cells. Ii peptides have high binding affinity for HLA-DR7 and activate tumor-specific T-cells from the peripheral blood of healthy donors and breast cancer patients. This is the first study to compare the human tumor cell MHC II peptidome in the absence or presence of Ii and to demonstrate that MHC II+Ii tumor cells present novel immunogenic MHC II-restricted peptides that are potential therapeutic reagents for cancer patients.  相似文献   
975.
Tumor hypoxia induces epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), which induces invasion and metastasis, and is linked to cancer stem cells (CSCs). Whether EMT generates CSCs de novo, enhances migration of existing CSCs or both is unclear. We examined patient tissue of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA) along with carcinomas of breast, lung, kidney, prostate and ovary. For in vitro studies, five established PDA cell lines classified as less (CSClow) and highly aggressive CSC-like cells (CSChigh) were examined by single and double immunofluorescence microscopy, wound-, transwell-, and time-lapse microscopy. HIF-1α and Slug, as well as HIF-2α and CD133 were co-expressed pointing to a putative co-existence of hypoxia, EMT and CSCs in vivo. CSChigh cells exhibited high basal expression of the mesenchymal Vimentin protein but low or absent expression of the epithelial marker E-cadherin, with the opposite result in CSClow cells. Hypoxia triggered altering of cell morphology from an epithelial to a mesenchymal phenotype, which was more pronounced in CSChigh cells. Concomitantly, E-cadherin expression was reduced and expression of Vimentin, Slug, Twist2 and Zeb1 enhanced. While hypoxia caused migration in all cell lines, velocity along with the percentage of migrating, polarized and pseudopodia-forming cells was significantly higher in CSChigh cells. These data indicate that hypoxia-induced EMT occurs in PDA and several other tumor entities. However although hypoxia-induced EMT signaling occurs in all tumor cell populations, only the stem-like cells acquire high migratory potential and thus may be responsible for invasion and metastasis.  相似文献   
976.
Increasingly, large data sets pose a challenge for computationally intensive phylogenetic methods such as Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC). Here, we investigate the performance of common MCMC proposal distributions in terms of median and variance of run time to convergence on 11 data sets. We introduce two new Metropolized Gibbs Samplers for moving through "tree space." MCMC simulation using these new proposals shows faster average run time and dramatically improved predictability in performance, with a 20-fold reduction in the variance of the time to estimate the posterior distribution to a given accuracy. We also introduce conditional clade probabilities and demonstrate that they provide a superior means of approximating tree topology posterior probabilities from samples recorded during MCMC.  相似文献   
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