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81.
AB Chang NC Cox J Purcell JM Marchant PJ Lewindon GJ Cleghorn LC Ee GD Withers MK Patrick J Faoagali 《Respiratory research》2005,6(1):1-5
Background and methods
Human metapneumovirus (hMPV) is a recently discovered respiratory virus associated with bronchiolitis, pneumonia, croup and exacerbations of asthma. Since respiratory viruses are frequently detected in patients with acute exacerbations of COPD (AE-COPD) it was our aim to investigate the frequency of hMPV detection in a prospective cohort of hospitalized patients with AE-COPD compared to patients with stable COPD and to smokers without by means of quantitative real-time RT-PCR.Results
We analysed nasal lavage and induced sputum of 130 patients with AE-COPD, 65 patients with stable COPD and 34 smokers without COPD. HMPV was detected in 3/130 (2.3%) AE-COPD patients with a mean of 6.5 × 105 viral copies/ml in nasal lavage and 1.88 × 105 viral copies/ml in induced sputum. It was not found in patients with stable COPD or smokers without COPD.Conclusion
HMPV is only found in a very small number of patients with AE-COPD. However it should be considered as a further possible viral trigger of AE-COPD because asymptomatic carriage is unlikely. 相似文献82.
83.
It often is assumed that more distant allopatry should reflect reduced rates of contemporary gene flow and/or greater divergence in mate recognition systems. This assumption, however, is rarely tested and may not always be appropriate. Here we investigated female preference for local and foreign males in a morphologically variable Australian freshwater fish, the Pacific blue-eye Pseudomugil signifer. Using a multidisciplinary approach that combined molecular phylogeography with conventional mate choice experiments, we found female blue-eyes spent more time in association with local males only when the alternative was a foreigner from a geographically and genetically more distant population. When offered the choice between two foreign males, females associated more with males from the population that was more closely adjacent to their own. Our results suggest that female preference for local over foreign males in blue-eyes may depend on how genetically and geographically separated populations are from one another. 相似文献
84.
Martijn F Schenk Jan HG Cordewener Antoine HP America Wendy PC van't Westende Marinus JM Smulders Luud JWJ Gilissen 《BMC plant biology》2009,9(1):24
Background
Bet v 1 is an important cause of hay fever in northern Europe. Bet v 1 isoforms from the European white birch (Betula pendula) have been investigated extensively, but the allergenic potency of other birch species is unknown. The presence of Bet v 1 and closely related PR-10 genes in the genome was established by amplification and sequencing of alleles from eight birch species that represent the four subgenera within the genus Betula. Q-TOF LC-MSE was applied to identify which PR-10/Bet v 1 genes are actually expressed in pollen and to determine the relative abundances of individual isoforms in the pollen proteome. 相似文献85.
van Beers JJ Raijmakers R Alexander LE Stammen-Vogelzangs J Lokate AM Heck AJ Schasfoort RB Pruijn GJ 《Arthritis research & therapy》2010,12(6):R219
Introduction
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) frequently involves the loss of tolerance to citrullinated antigens, which may play a role in pathogenicity. Citrullinated fibrinogen is commonly found in inflamed synovial tissue and is a frequent target of autoantibodies in RA patients. To obtain insight into the B-cell response to citrullinated fibrinogen in RA, its autoepitopes were systematically mapped using a new methodology. 相似文献86.
87.
88.
Functional Characterization of Phospholipid N-Methyltransferases from Arabidopsis and Soybean 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Matthew R. Keogh Polly D. Courtney Anthony J. Kinney Ralph E. Dewey 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(23):15439-15447
Phospholipid N-methyltransferase (PLMT) enzymes catalyze the S-adenosylmethionine-dependent methylation of ethanolamine-containing phospholipids to produce the abundant membrane lipid phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho). In mammals and yeast, PLMT activities are required for the de novo synthesis of the choline headgroup found in PtdCho. PLMT enzyme activities have also been reported in plants, yet their roles in PtdCho biosynthesis are less clear because most plants can produce the choline headgroup entirely via soluble substrates, initiated by the methylation of free ethanolamine-phosphate. To gain further insights into the function of PLMT enzymes in plants, we isolated PLMT cDNAs from Arabidopsis and soybean (Glycine max) based upon primary amino acid sequence homology to the rat PLMT, phosphatidylethanolamine N-methyltransferase. Using a heterologous yeast expression system, it was shown that plant PLMTs methylate phosphatidylmonomethylethanolamine and phosphatidyldimethylethanolamine but cannot utilize phosphatidylethanolamine as a substrate. Identification of an Arabidopsis line containing a knock-out dissociator transposon insertion within the single copy AtPLMT gene allowed us to investigate the consequences of loss of PLMT function. Although the accumulation of the PLMT substrates phosphatidylmonomethylethanolamine and phosphatidyldimethylethanolamine was considerably elevated in the atplmt knock-out line, PtdCho levels remained normal, and no obvious differences were observed in plant morphology or development under standard growth conditions. However, because the metabolic routes through which PtdCho is synthesized in plants vary greatly among differing species, it is predicted that the degree with which PtdCho synthesis is dependent upon PLMT activities will also vary widely throughout the plant kingdom.Phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho)2 is the most abundant phospholipid in most non-plastid membranes of eukaryotes. PtdCho biosynthesis has been studied intensively in plants not only because of its importance as a structural membrane lipid, but also because of its role as a precursor to important lipid-based signaling molecules, such as phosphatidic acid, and phospholipase A2-derived free fatty acids (1). The choline headgroup of PtdCho serves multiple functions as well. In addition to being an essential human nutrient (2), in many plant species choline can be oxidized to produce the potent osmoprotectant glycine betaine (3, 4).For over 2 decades it has been apparent that there are fundamental differences between the manner in which PtdCho is produced in plants versus how it is synthesized in mammals and fungi. In the latter two systems, PtdCho can be formed through two distinct pathways as follows: (a) the “nucleotide pathway” in which free choline is incorporated in PtdCho using CDP-choline as an intermediate, and (b) the “methylation pathway” whereby PtdCho is produced directly from phosphatidylethanolamine (PtdEtn) via three sequential methylation reactions using S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) as the methyl donor (5, 6). In contrast, PtdCho biosynthesis in plants occurs through a branched pathway that utilizes components of both the nucleotide and methylation pathways (7). The greatest distinction between the contrasting mechanisms of PtdCho biosynthesis can be attributed to the presence of plant enzymes that are capable of converting ethanolamine headgroups to choline at the phospho-base level, activities that are absent in mammals and yeast. Conversely, mammals and fungi possess methylation enzymes that act directly on PtdEtn, a reaction that cannot be detected in most plant systems investigated (reviewed in Ref. 7).A diagram of the most widely accepted model of phosphoamino alcohol biosynthesis in plants is shown in Fig. 1. Similar to animals and yeast, free choline can be directly incorporated into PtdCho via nucleotide pathway enzymes in plants. In the absence of choline, however, the methylation of Etn-phosphate represents the first committed step in PtdCho biosynthesis. The resulting monomethylethanolamine-phosphate (MMEtn-P) metabolite can be further methylated at the phospho-base level to produce Cho-P. Alternatively, MMEtn-P can be incorporated into phosphatidylmonomethylethanolamine (PtdMMEtn) via the cytidylyltransferase and amino alcohol phosphotransferase activities of the nucleotide pathway and then methylated at the phosphatidyl-base level to complete the synthesis of PtdCho (Fig. 1). The extent with which PtdCho is formed by the flow of metabolites through phospho-bases as opposed to phosphatidyl-bases varies greatly among different plant species. In most higher plants, it is likely that the methylation of the phosphoamino alcohol headgroups involves the flow of metabolites through both branches of the pathway, as has been shown in species such as barley, carrot, and tobacco (3, 8, 9). Nevertheless, examples have also been reported where only one of the branches appears to be utilized. In Lemna paucicostata, for example, the methylation steps in PtdCho biosynthesis were shown to occur almost exclusively at the phospho-base level (10). At the other end of the spectrum is soybean, where all methylations beyond the initial formation of MMEtn-P were reported to occur on phosphatidyl-bases (8, 11). The tremendous variability observed among plants with regard to PtdCho formation is also exemplified by a study conducted by Williams and Harwood (12) where it was shown that the predominant route of PtdCho synthesis in olive culture cells involved the first two methylation reactions taking place at the phospho-base level (producing dimethylethanolamine phosphate) and the final methylation occurring on a phosphatidyldimethylethanolamine (PtdDMEtn) substrate.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Phosphatidylcholine biosynthetic pathways. Steps common to plants, mammals, and yeast are indicated by black arrows. Dashed arrows indicate pathways specific to plants. Methylation of PtdEtn, which occurs in mammals and yeast, is indicated by on open arrow. Enzymes catalyzing phosphoamino alcohol methylation reactions in plants, mammals, and yeast are indicated.Our understanding on the mechanisms by which plants synthesize PtdCho and regulate its accumulation has been further enhanced as the genes encoding the various steps of the phosphoamino alcohol pathway have been isolated and characterized. For example, molecular characterizations led to the conclusion that all of the amino alcohol phosphotransferase reactions depicted in Fig. 1 can be mediated by the product of a single gene (designated AAPT1) that displays a broad substrate specificity (13, 14). Similarly, it was the isolation of the phosphoethanolamine methyltransferase (PEAMT) genes from Arabidopsis and spinach that led to the discovery that all three phospho-base methylation reactions could be catalyzed by a single enzyme (15, 16). Inhibition of PEAMT gene function in Arabidopsis through T-DNA insertion or co-suppression revealed unexpected associations between the phosphoamino alcohol pathway and root development, salt hypersensitivity, and male sterility (17, 18).Although most of the reactions depicted in Fig. 1 have been characterized at the molecular genetic level, conspicuously absent is information on the plant genes/enzymes responsible for the methylation reactions conducted at the phosphatidyl-base level. In contrast, these reactions are among the most well characterized in animals and yeast, catalyzed by enzymes commonly referred to as phospholipid N-methyltransferases (PLMTs). In mammals, the 18-kDa integral membrane protein phosphatidylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PEMT) is a PLMT that is expressed primarily in the liver (19). PEMT catalyzes all three of the methylation reactions needed to convert PtdEtn to PtdCho. Yeast uses two distinct PLMT enzymes to catalyze the three methylation reactions as follows: Cho2p/Pem1p that mediates the direct methylation of PtdEtn to produce PtdMMEtn (20, 21), and Opi3p/Pem2p, an enzyme homologous to the mammalian PEMT, that primarily catalyzes the methylation of PtdMMEtn to PtdDMEtn and PtdDMEtn to PtdCho, the final two steps of the methylation pathway (20, 22). PLMT activities are critical in both of these systems. Mice possessing pemt knock-out mutations are completely dependent on dietary choline for survival, and they display abnormal levels of choline metabolites within the liver and develop hepatic steatosis even when fed diets supplemented with choline (23). Yeast lacking PLMT activities (cho2/opi3 double mutants) are obligate choline auxotrophs, unable to synthesize PtdCho de novo in the absence of exogenous choline.To gain a greater understanding of the specific function of PLMT reactions in higher plants, and their contribution toward PtdCho biosynthesis, we cloned and characterized PLMT homologs from Arabidopsis and soybean. By expressing the candidate cDNAs in yeast, we were able to confirm that they encoded functional PLMT activities as well as to establish their substrate specificities. We also identified a mutant Arabidopsis line containing a knock-out allele in the single copy PLMT gene found in the Arabidopsis genome, allowing us to characterize the consequences of loss of gene function in this model species. 相似文献
89.
Luis AJ Mur Amanda J Lloyd Simona M Cristescu Frans JM Harren Michael A Hall Aileen R Smith 《Plant signaling & behavior》2009,4(7):610-613
The hypersensitive response (HR) is a cell death phenomenon associated with localized resistance to pathogens. Biphasic patterns in the generation of H2O2, salicylic acid and ethylene have been observed in tobacco during the early stages of the HR. These biphasic models reflect an initial elicitation by pathogen-associated molecular patterns followed by a second phase, induced by pathogen-encoded avirulence gene products. The first phase has been proposed to potentiate the second, to increase the efficacy of plant resistance to disease. This potentiation is comparable to the “priming” of plant defenses which is seen when plants display systemic resistance to disease. The events regulating the generation of the biphasic wave, or priming, remains obscure, however recently we demonstrated a key role for nitric oxide in this process in a HR occurring in tobacco. Here we use laser photoacoustic detection to demonstrate that biphasic ethylene production also occurs during a HR occurring in Arabidopsis. We suggest that ethylene emanation during the HR represents a ready means of visualising biphasic events during the HR and that exploiting the genomic resources offered by this model species will facilitate the development of a mechanistic understanding of potentiating/priming processes.Key words: hypersensitive response, biphasic patterns, potentiation, defense priming, ethylene, ArabidopsisThe Hypersensitive Response (HR) is a cell death process which occurs at the site of attempted pathogen attack and which has been associated with host resistance.1 Much work on the regulation of the HR has indicated the importance of H2O2,2 and NO.3 A feature of H2O2 generation during the HR is its biphasic pattern (Fig. 1A). The first rise reflects elicitation by pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs)4 and the second reflects the interaction between a pathogen-encoded avirulence (avr) gene product with a plant resistance (R) gene. A key aspect of the first rise is the initiation of salicylic acid (SA) synthesis which potentiates the second rise and hence the potency of plant defense and the HR.5Open in a separate windowFigure 1Patterns of defense signal generation during the Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola elicited-hypersensitive response in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum). Generation of (A) H2O2 (●, Mur18); (B) nitric oxide (◇; Mur12 (C) salicylic acid (SA, ■19) and (D) ethylene (○ Mur9) during a HR elicited by Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola (Psph) in tobacco cv. Samsun NN. In (A) a phase where SA acts to augment the second rise in H2O2—the potentiation phase—is highlighted. The potentiation phase is likely to be similar to defense “priming”.6 Methodological details are contained within the appropriate references. (E) A possible model for biphasic defense signal regulation during the Psph-elicited HR in tobacco. During an initial phase NO and H2O2 act to initiate SA biosynthesis, where SA and NO act to initiate a “H2O2 biphasic switch”. This could initially suppress both SA and the H2O2 generation but subsequently acts to potentiate a second phase of H2O2 generation. This in turn increases SA biosynthesis which could act with NO to initiate the “C2H4 biphasic switch” to potentiate ethylene production. These (and other) signals contribute to initiation of the HR and SAR.This potentiation mechanism appears to be similar to defense priming; when whole plants display systemic resistance to disease as opposed to a localized resistance against pathogens. Priming can be initiated (the “primary stimulus”) following attack with a necrotizing pathogen (leading to “systemic acquired resistance”, SAR) or non-pathogenic rhizosphere bacteria (to confer “induced systemic resistance”, ISR). In the primed state a plant stimulates a range of plant defense genes, produces anti-microbial phytoalexins and deposits cell wall strengthening molecules, but only on imposition of a “secondary stimulus”.6 Such secondary stimuli include SA3 or PAMPs7 and is likely to be mechanistically similar to the potentiation step in the biphasic pattern of H2O2 generation (shaded in Fig. 1A). Accordingly, the two phases in the biphasic wave represent primary and secondary stimuli in priming.Highlighting a similarity between local HR-based events and priming, adds further impetus to efforts aiming to describe the underlying mechanism(s), however both phenomena remain poorly understood. Besides SA, both jasmonates and abscisic acid (ABA) have been shown to prime defenses as have a range of non-plant chemicals, with β-aminobutyric acid (BABA) being perhaps most widely used.6,8 Mutants which fail to exhibit BABA-mediated potentiation were defective in either a cyclin-dependent kinase-like protein, a polyphosphoinositide phosphatase or an ABA biosynthetic enzyme.8We have recently investigated biphasic ethylene production during the HR in tobacco elicited by the nonhost HR-eliciting bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola.9 As with H2O2 generation, this pattern reflected PAMP-and AVR-dependent elicitation events and included a SA-mediated potentiation stage. Crucially, we also showed that NO was a vital component in the SA-potentiation mechanism. When this finding is integrated with our other measurements of defense signal generation in the same host-pathogen system the complexity in the signaling network is revealed (Fig. 1). NO generation (Fig. 1B) appeared to be coincident with the first rise in H2O2 (Fig. 1A) which initiated SA biosynthesis10,11 and together would contribute to the first small, but transient, rise in that hormone (Fig. 1C). In line with established models5 this momentary rise in SA coincides with the potentiation phase (shaded in Fig. 1A) required to augment the second rise in ROS. However, ethylene production seems to be correlated poorly with the patterns of NO, H2O2 and SA (Fig. 1D). Nevertheless, biphasic ethylene production was found to reflect PAMP and AVR-dependent recognition and included a SA-mediated potentiation step.9 Hence, ethylene production could be used as a post-hoc indicator of the potentiation mechanism. Therefore, our discovery that the second wave of ethylene production—a “biphasic switch”—is influenced by NO acting with SA could also be relevant to the H2O2 generation. Significantly, the second phases in both H2O2 and ethylene production occur exactly where SA and NO production coincides; in the case of H2O2 generation 2–4 h post challenge and with ethylene 6 h onwards (Fig. 1E).Thus, ethylene production represents a readily assayable marker to indicate perturbations in the underlying biphasic and possible priming mechanisms. As we have demonstrated, laser photoacoustic detection (LAPD) is a powerful on-line approach to determine in planta ethylene production in tobacco9,12 but any mechanistic investigations would be greatly facilitated if the genetic resources offered by the model species Arabidopsis could be exploited.To address this, Arabidopsis Col-0 rosettes were vacuum infiltrated with either Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato (Pst) avrRpm1 (HR-eliciting), the virulent Pst strain and the non-HR eliciting and non-virulent Pst hrpA strain. Ethylene production was monitored by LAPD (Fig. 2A). Significantly, Pst avrRpm1 initiated a biphasic pattern of ethylene production whose kinetics were very similar to that seen in tobacco (compare Figs. 2A with with1D).1D). Inoculations with Pst and Pst hrpA only displayed the first PAMP-dependent rise in ethylene production. Thus, these data establish that Arabidopsis can be used to investigate biphasic switch mechanism(s) in ethylene production during the HR and possibly defense priming. When considering such mechanisms, it is relevant to highlight the work of Foschi et al.13 who observed that biphasic activation of a monomeric G protein to cause phase-specific activation of different kinase cascades. Interestingly, ethylene has been noted to initiate biphasic activation of G proteins and kinases in Arabidopsis, although differing in kinetics to the phases seen during the HR.14 Further, plant defense priming has been associated with the increased accumulation of MAP kinase protein.6Open in a separate windowFigure 2Ethylene in the Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato elicited-hypersensitive response in Arabidopsis thaliana. (A) Ethylene production from 5 week old short day (8 h light 100 µmol.m2.sec−1) grown Arabidopsis rosette leaves which were vacuum infiltrated with bacterial suspensions (2 × 106 colony forming units.ml−1) of Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato (Pst) strains detected using laser photoacoustic detection (LAPD). Experimental details of the ethylene detection by LAPD are detailed in Mur et al.9 The intercellular spaces in leaves were infiltrated with the HR-eliciting strain Pst avrRpm1, (■), the virulent strain Pst (△) or the non-virulent and non-HR eliciting derivative, Pst hrpA (◇). (B) The appearance of Arabidopsis Col-0 and etr1-1 leaves at various h following injection with 2 × 106 c.f.u.mL−1 with of Pst avrRpm1. (C) Explants (1 cm diameter discs) from Arabidopsis leaf areas infiltrated with suspensions of Pst avrRpm1 were placed in a 1.5 cm diameter well, bathed in 1 mL de-ionized H2O. Changes in the conductivity of the bathing solution, as an indicator of electrolyte leakage from either wild type Col-0 (◆), mutants which were compromised in ethylene signaling; etr1-1 (□), ein2-2 (▲) or which overproduced ethylene; eto2-1 (●) were measured using a conductivity meter. Methodological details are set out in Mur et al.9A further point requires consideration; the role of ethylene as a direct contributor to plant defense.15 The contribution of ethylene to the HR has been disputed,16 but in tobacco we have observed that altered ethylene production influenced the formation of a P. syringae pv. phaseolicola elicited HR.9 In Arabidopsis, cell death in the ethylene receptor mutant etr1-1 following inoculation with Pst avrRpm1 is delayed compared to wild type (Fig. 2B). When electrolyte leakage was used to quantify Pst avrRpm1 cell death, both etr1-1 and the ethylene insensitive signaling mutant ein2-1 exhibited slower death than wild-type but in the ethylene overproducing mutant eto2, cell death was augmented (Fig. 2C). These data indicate that ethylene influences the kinetics of the HR.Taking these data together we suggest that the complexity of signal interaction during the HR or in SAR/ISR could be further dissected by combining the genetic resources of Arabidopsis with measurements of ethylene production using such sensitive approaches as LAPD. 相似文献
90.
S Schneider-Jakob N Corazza A Badmann D Sidler R Stuber-Roos A Keogh S Frese M Tschan T Brunner 《Cell death & disease》2010,1(10):e86
Although death receptors and chemotherapeutic drugs activate distinct apoptosis signaling cascades, crosstalk between the extrinsic and intrinsic apoptosis pathway has been recognized as an important amplification mechanism. Best known in this regard is the amplification of the Fas (CD95) signal in hepatocytes via caspase 8-mediated cleavage of Bid and activation of the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway. Recent evidence, however, indicates that activation of other BH3-only proteins may also be critical for the crosstalk between death receptors and mitochondrial triggers. In this study, we show that TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) and chemotherapeutic drugs synergistically induce apoptosis in various transformed and untransformed liver-derived cell lines, as well as in primary human hepatocytes. Both, preincubation with TRAIL as well as chemotherapeutic drugs could sensitize cells for apoptosis induction by the other respective trigger. TRAIL induced a strong and long lasting activation of Jun kinase, and activation of the BH3-only protein Bim. Consequently, synergistic induction of apoptosis by TRAIL and chemotherapeutic drugs was dependent on Jun kinase activity, and expression of Bim and Bid. These findings confirm a previously defined role of TRAIL and Bim in the regulation of hepatocyte apoptosis, and demonstrate that the TRAIL–Jun kinase–Bim axis is a major and important apoptosis amplification pathway in primary hepatocytes and liver tumor cells. 相似文献